SENTRO
@SENTROLabor
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Sentro ng mga Nagkakaisa at Progresibong Manggagawa (SENTRO)
Manila, Philippines
Joined September 2013
Makiisa, sama-sama at sa Makati ay mag martsa! White ribbon walk against corruption. Kung kayo po ay sa Makati naka duty pwede po kayong lumahok after ng inyong shift sa trabaho. Tara sa biyernes! Takits!
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Mabuhay ang Peminista!! đź’ś
#ICI:MakeItTransparent Brave feminists from the World March of Women Pilipinas conducted the first action at the heavily guarded Independent Commission on Infrastructure (IFI) to demand for transprency and full accountability!! đź’śđź’śđź’ś
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We demand full accounting, full restitution, and full prosecution—not political gimmicks. #jailtheplunderers #trillionpesomarch
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Workers and ordinary Filipinos paid for these funds with their sweat and their lives. Returning a portion of what was stolen cannot erase years of neglect, corruption, and betrayal.
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What about the billions in unremitted sin tax revenues meant for health care? And most importantly, what about the billions plundered during the Duterte administration at the height of COVID-19?
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It’s about time—but it’s not enough. While we welcome the return of the ₱60 billion sequestered from PhilHealth, the bigger questions remain unanswered: What about the funds that should have been given to PhilHealth this year?
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billionaires, landlords, and oligarchs over the dignity and survival of the working class.* To all workers of the Philippines, brace yourselves. We have three more years with him. History will judge him harshly.
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*Marcos Jr. has the power to uplift workers—but he refuses to use it. He could end contractualization, raise wages, defend unions, build decent housing, lower the cost of electricity and protect public health. But he won’t. Because time and again, he chooses to protect
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This isn’t a failure due to mere incompetence. This is a failure from his dereliction of duty. Marcos Jr. has the means and the capabilities to accomplish his so-called “promises.” He just simply has zero intentions to genuinely fulfill them.
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he’s dragging us closer to the deadly rivalry between superpowers. Instead of pursuing an independent foreign policy, he’s turning the Philippines into a pawn in a dangerous geopolitical game—at the expense of our workers, our sovereignty, and our future.
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groveling at Trump’s feet, has all but sold out—not just the jobs of Filipino workers, especially in the automotive and possibly agricultural sectors — but our very national security. By drawing the country deeper into the grip of the U.S. military-industrial-tech complex,
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faithfully executed. His failure to deliver on even these thin promises—ending contractualization, improving wages, providing housing, protecting workers’ rights, and safeguarding public health—amounts to gross neglect of duty and betrayal of public trust. And now Marcos Jr.,
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with no effective means to cover such costs. Instead of strengthening social services for the working class, Marcos Jr. has presided over their dismantling. As President, Marcos Jr. is constitutionally bound to uphold the public trust and ensure laws protecting workers are
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protections, leaving millions of workers and their families vulnerable to catastrophic medical expenses. One significant medical expense is all it takes for those living paycheck to paycheck to be thrown into the vice grip of poverty, yet Marcos Jr. and his lackeys have left them
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Adding insult to injury, Marcos Jr.’s administration, with the help of his minions in Congress, has overseen the systematic defunding of PhilHealth, the country’s primary health insurance provider. This deliberate gutting of PhilHealth’s budget has weakened public health
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the failures of his administration. He also pledged to provide 1 million housing units per year, but after three years, only 259,365 units have been delivered—a far cry from the goal and an admission of failure. Millions still lack safe and decent shelter.
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at least 4 of those happened under his administration, makes him complicit to the crimes even of the previous administration. Marcos Jr does not care about the economic standing of our workers, and he is apathetic towards the immediate dangers they face when they dare criticize
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Trade union repression lingers, with no effort to dismantle the NTF-ELCAC that enables red-tagging harassment. His silence on these abuses speaks volumes, and his failure to ensure justice to 72 trade union leaders killed from 2016-2023,
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have become. He can’t even address the floods that endanger lives, destroy livelihoods, and spread disease—despite spending ₱1.4 billion a day on flood control. All Marcos Jr. can offer is a shrug, telling Filipinos to accept it as the “new normal.”
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