Archived Justice: The Senate’s Gift To Sara Duterte

Spotlight

In a country where the Constitution is often wielded like a shield for the powerful, the Senate’s decision to archive the impeachment case against Vice President Sara Duterte is less about “upholding the rule of law” and more about preserving the status quo. This is a status quo where accountability is perpetually postponed, and the public is left watching another episode in our long-running telenovela of impunity.

Let’s call this what it is: a political sleight of hand.

The Supreme Court already ruled that the impeachment complaint violated the one-year bar rule. Fair enough. But the Senate could have at least sent a message that allegations as grave as misuse of confidential funds and threats to assassinate the President deserve more than being quietly filed away in some legislative cabinet. Instead, nineteen senators, many of them eager to keep their fingers on the Marcos-Duterte pulse, chose the easy way out.

“Archiving” sounds harmless, almost bureaucratic. But in Philippine politics, we know what that word really means: bury it deep enough, and the public will forget.

Yet here’s the twist: this isn’t just a gift to Sara; it’s also a win for Marcos.

If the impeachment had gone full throttle, it would have risked making Duterte a martyr: a rallying point for her still sizable Mindanao bloc and loyalists across the country. By shelving the case, Marcos avoids inflaming her base, keeps her weakened but alive, and buys himself time. For now, Sara stays in political limbo. Bruised, isolated, and unable to mount a credible challenge, while Marcos consolidates his grip and nurtures his own 2028 successor.

For the Vice President, archiving is a reprieve, not vindication. She remains in office, constitutionally insulated from fresh impeachment attempts for another six months, but her name remains entangled in controversy. The cloud of suspicion lingers.

And for the rest of us? We’re left with another chapter in the Philippines’ long running saga of procedural victories over substantive justice. Yes, the Senate honored the Supreme Court. Yes, they followed the Constitution. But when procedure becomes a shield for evasion, when “archiving” is a euphemism for shelving truth, we should ask: who truly wins?

In February 2026, the window for accountability reopens. But in the Philippine political calendar, that’s a lifetime away.

In the end, archiving didn’t just bury Sara Duterte’s impeachment. It buried, once again, our hope that accountability in this country can outrun politics.