City
Epaper

Philippine vice president Robredo to run in 2022 elections

By ANI | Published: October 07, 2021 11:38 AM

Philippine Vice President Maria Leonor Robredo said on Thursday that she will run for president in the May 2022 elections in the Southeast Asian country.

Open in App

Philippine Vice President Maria Leonor Robredo said on Thursday that she will run for president in the May 2022 elections in the Southeast Asian country.

"I will fight. We will fight. I am running for president in the 2022 elections," Robredo, 56, said in an online announcement.

The opposition coalition 1Sambayan endorsed Robredo to be its presidential candidate.

Robredo had delayed her announcement after trying to forge a united opposition slate with other presidential contenders, but her efforts failed.

Robredo is expected to file her certificate of candidacy before Friday, the deadline for the week-long submission of certificates of candidacy for politicians who plan to run in next year's elections. (ANI/Xinhua)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Leni Robredo
Open in App

Related Stories

PoliticsDuterte's daughter sworn in as Philippines' vice president

NationalThe Philippines Presidential Election: A consequential one for its domestic politics and foreign policy

PoliticsFerdinand Marcos Jr. wins Philippines prez election: Preliminary results

PoliticsFerdinand Marcos Jr. takes big lead in Philippine presidential poll

InternationalFerdinand Marcos Jr. takes big lead in Philippine presidential election

International Realted Stories

InternationalUN says heavy rains, flash floods affect 1.6 mn in Africa

InternationalUN chief calls for urgent measures to halt environmental decline

InternationalPhilippines healthcare worker gap rises to 190,000

InternationalZaporizhzhia nuclear power plant under Ukrainian attack: Press service

InternationalBiden says two-state solution for Palestine should come through direct talks, not 'unilateral recognition'