Vice President Sara Duterte has addressed the nation in response to the impeachment case against her, stating, “God save the Philippines,” and reassuring her supporters, saying, “Have faith because victory belongs to the people (Manalig kayo dahil sa taumbayan ang tagumpay).”
During the media interview that followed her address, VP Duterte was asked if she had spoken with her father, former President Rodrigo Duterte, about the impeachment.
She shared that she had sent him a message through his assistant, telling him that everything would be alright. In a surprising response, the former president replied not with words of political guidance, but with a video of himself singing MacArthur Park by Richard Harris.
It was a cryptic but telling response.
For those unfamiliar with the song, it is a haunting ballad about loss, regret, and things that can never be restored. Its vivid imagery—of a cake left out in the rain, of a love that will never return, of opportunities lost forever—feels almost too fitting for the political situation surrounding the Duterte family.
But the deeper one looks, the more it becomes apparent that this song is not just about one person. It is about the slow, inevitable collapse of the Uniteam alliance—the once-powerful tandem of the younger Duterte and President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
Looking at the deeper meaning behind former President Rodrigo Duterte sending Sara Duterte a video of him singing MacArthur Park, and considering her political history with President Marcos under the Uniteam message, several connections emerge.
“Spring was never waiting for us, girl”
The Uniteam tandem of Marcos and Sara in 2022 was built on the promise of continuity, stability, and unity. However, in hindsight, it appears that unity was never truly meant for them.
Their alliance, which seemed strong at first, has steadily unraveled. The lyrics suggest inevitability—like their political partnership was doomed from the start, and no amount of effort could have kept it together.
“MacArthur’s Park is melting in the dark”
The song paints a picture of something once grand but now crumbling. This could symbolize the collapse of Sara Duterte’s influence within the Marcos administration and the political system she was once part of.
The Uniteam brand, which once looked invincible, is now breaking apart, much like a cake left in the rain—melting, irreparable.
“Someone left the cake out in the rain”
This could be a metaphor for betrayal or abandonment. Sara Duterte may feel that she was left vulnerable, possibly by Marcos himself or by political allies who once sought her endorsement and help during the campaign, needing her support.
These allies, who relied on her influence, have now distanced themselves as the impeachment process unfolded. The line suggests that her struggles weren’t just the result of her own actions—it was also influenced by decisions made by others, by people who could have protected her but chose not to.
“I will drink the wine while it is warm… and never let you catch me looking at the sun”
This line speaks to fleeting power—of how influence must be seized while it lasts, because it never does. Perhaps it is a warning from the older Duterte to his daughter: the window of opportunity is closing, and no amount of looking back will bring it back.
Marcos Jr. is in power now, and he has no reason to hold on to old alliances. The line about avoiding the sun could imply a refusal to directly acknowledge this fall from power—or a sense of pride in not showing weakness.
“After all the loves of my life, you’ll still be the one”
If the song is taken as a message of personal loyalty, it suggests that despite all betrayals and lost battles, some bonds remain unbroken. This may be Duterte’s way of telling his daughter that, no matter what happens, she still has him. Politics may shift, but family remains.
“I’ll never have that recipe again”
Perhaps the most telling line of all. This line suggests something lost forever. The Uniteam was a rare, carefully crafted formula for political success—one that won them the presidency and vice presidency in a landslide.
But as the older Duterte seems to suggest, this recipe will never be recreated. The conditions that allowed it to succeed no longer exist. The Marcos-Duterte alliance is over, and the path forward will not be the same.
Former President Rodrigo Duterte sending this song to his daughter Sara, rather than directly expressing anger or defiance, suggests that he sees this moment as a significant, irreversible turning point. Instead of rallying support for a fight, he chose a song about nostalgia, loss, and things that can’t be undone.
This song choice feels like a poetic, almost melancholic acceptance of the Uniteam’s downfall and Sara Duterte’s political struggles. Her father might be telling her: This is how it is, we can’t change it, and we may never get back what we lost.
It is a striking moment in Philippine politics: the once-mighty Duterte family, now on the defensive, the Uniteam shattered, and a former president who, amidst the political chaos, simply sings.
MacArthur’s Park is melting in the dark. And Rodrigo Duterte knows it.