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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 27 January 2025. Filipino politician (b. 1971) In this Philippine name, the middle name or maternal family name is Fuentes and the surname or paternal family name is Trillanes. Antonio Trillanes Trillanes in 2015 Senator of the Philippines In office June 30, 2007 – June 30, 2019 Chair of the Senate ...
Antonio Trillanes, a former senator and candidate for the Senate in 2022, expressed his interest in challenging Malapitan for the mayoralty in January 2024, signaling a 95% likelihood of running for the office in an interview with ANC.
Leila de Lima , former senator and secretary of justice De Lima declined to run for senator. [18] She is running for House representative for Mamamayang Liberal party-list instead. [19] Chel Diokno , chairman of the Free Legal Assistance Group and senatorial candidate in 2019 and 2022 Diokno declined to run for senator. [20]
People may have loved matinee idol Aga Muhlach in the 80s and 90s but many aren’t as thrilled about him today, especially after what he recently said about opposition Senator Antonio Trillanes IV.
Former Senator Antonio Trillanes, who ran under TRoPa in the 2022 Senate election, proposed that the Liberal Party and its allies "set aside sensitivities for a larger cause" and align with the Marcos administration in the Senate race to ensure "obliteration of the Duterte forces". [66]
In 2018, Duterte signed Proclamation No. 572, revoking Trillanes's amnesty. [34] [35] However, the Makati Regional Trial Court denied the government's petition to have Trillanes arrested, saying the coup d'état case against the senator was already dismissed following his amnesty in 2011, and that the dismissal was "final and executory". [33]
The 2022 Philippine Senate election was the 34th election of members to the Senate of the Philippines for a six-year term. It was held on May 9, 2022. The seats of the 12 senators elected in 2016 were contested in this election, and the senators that will be elected in this election serve until June 30, 2028.
Now let him enforce it.’” Scholars say that commonly invoked line, attributed to Jackson of Chief Justice John Marshall after the 1832 Worcester v. Georgia ruling, is likely apocryphal.