Detained Duterte wins Davao mayoral race from Hague – initial tally

Former President Rodrigo Duterte is seen on a screen in the courtroom during his first appearance before the International Criminal Court (ICC) on charge of crimes against humanity over his deadly crackdown on narcotics, in The Hague on March 14, 2025. FILE PHOTO/Agence France-Presse
MANILA, Philippines — Former President Rodrigo Duterte, detained at the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity, regained the mayorship of family stronghold Davao City in a landslide election on Monday, an initial tally showed.
With 74 percent of election returns transmitted as of 10:45 p.m. on Monday, Duterte garnered 619,899 votes against his closest rival, former Civil Service Commission Chair Karlo Nograles who got 76,349.
But what role, if any, Duterte will play in governing the city of nearly 1.8 million from his cell in the Netherlands is unclear.
LIVE UPDATES: Voters await 2025 election results as precincts close
His daughter, impeached Vice President Sara Duterte, told reporters after casting her vote earlier in the day that plans were already underway to ensure he would officially become mayor.
“His ICC lawyers and his Filipino lawyers are discussing how to have him take his oath of office as winner of the mayoral contest here in Davao city,” she said, noting they had until June 30.
Duterte, 80, was arrested at Manila’s international airport on March 11 and flown to The Hague the same day to face charges tied to his crackdown on drugs that killed thousands of mostly poor men.
His communication since has come sporadically and through surrogates, mainly Sara.
READ: Duterte camp mulls oath-taking options as detained ex-president runs for Davao mayor
“I don’t think he will ever be able to assume the office if he’s still in The Hague,” said Michael Henry Yusingco, a senior research fellow at the Ateneo School of Government, said Monday.
There is precedent for governing from a prison cell in the Philippines, with former Senator Leila de Lima — jailed by Duterte on what rights groups say were trumped-up drug charges — a prime example.
During six years behind bars, de Lima still consulted regularly with allies and even cast votes via proxies.
Duterte’s ability to remotely call the shots in Davao, however, may be more compromised given the distance and potential Hague restrictions on communication, Yusingco said.
“If you cannot (be at City Hall) because of your circumstances, then I think it only logically follows that you have to be treated as incapacitated for the moment, and therefore the vice mayor will take over,” he said.
Duterte’s youngest son Sebastian, who is the current city mayor, is also set to win by a landslide in the vice mayoral race with 609,328 votes against closest rival Bernie Al-ag with 74,476 votes.
But while residents of Davao have a level of familiarity with the 37-year-old Sebastian, his father cannot be so easily replaced, Yusingco said.
“The Duterte magic solely belongs to him… it’s not transferable to his children,” he said. With a report from Ryan Rosauro, Inquirer Mindanao