Duterte scores landslide win in local elections. But can he be mayor from The Hague?New Foto - Duterte scores landslide win in local elections. But can he be mayor from The Hague?

In the gripping game of thrones of Philippine politics, voters have delivered former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte a sweeping mayoral victory in his hometown stronghold of Davao – predictable for a family that has held the job for more than 20 years. But this latest landslide win creates a predicament for the Philippines, as the mayor-elect is thousands of miles away behind bars awaiting trial on charges of crimes against humanity. Prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hagueaccusethe 80-year-old political patriarch of carrying out a brutal war on drugs that killed possibly thousands of people, including many innocents and bystanders. Though he openly boasted about the crackdown, Duterte has long denied accusations of human rights abuses and has repeatedly said he will not kowtow to a foreign court. His next hearing is in September, but before then experts say he faces a new, complicated legal battle between the ICC and Philippine jurisdiction over whether he will be allowed to take the oath of office. Duterte can potentially be sworn in by proxy or in absentia – possibly by a video call, but only if The Hague-based court allows it, experts say. If he's allowed to assume the role, questions will be asked about how he could administer the southern city from a detention center in another time zone, where he has access to a computer and phone calls to family, but no internet. Under Philippine law, day-to-day duties could fall to his youngest son, Sebastian Duterte, who was elected as vice mayor of Davao City. If the senior Duterte isn't allowed to take the oath, experts say the role of mayor could fall to election runner-up Karlo Nograles, of the Nograles political dynasty, longtime Duterte rivals in Davao, where both families tussle for influence. Ramon Beleno, a political analyst and former professor from Ateneo de Davao University, said handing the job to Nograles could trigger a separate legal challenge from the Dutertes. Duterte remains a powerful yet divisive figure in the Philippines. In Davao City, where he served as mayor for over two decades before becoming president in 2016, fervent supporters credit his iron grip over the city with bolstering law and order. Duterte's lawyer, Nicholas Kaufman, wasquoted by Philippine news outlet ABS-CBNas saying the "overwhelming" support for Duterte in the 2025 midterm elections showed the public's "total rejection" of the national government's "attempt to stamp out" the former president's legacy. In a reply to CNN, Kaufman said "any swearing in ceremony would be dictated by and conform to the law of the Republic of the Philippines. Accordingly, a decision on this issue will be taken in the very near future after all options have been discussed with the former President's Filipino lawyers." Beleno said voters saw this election as Duterte's "last hurrah" and cast their ballot as a final tribute to the aging former strongman leader. Duterte's arrest had only galvanized voters, he said. Support for Duterte extended to his family, who re-emerged in the vote with sweeping control of their political stronghold. All five Duterte family members who ran in this election won by a landslide. Duterte's son Paolo was re-elected to congress and two of Paolo's sons also won public office: Omar won as congressman for Davao City's second district and Rodrigo II, who goes by the nickname "Rigo," was elected as first district councilor. Sebastian Duterte, the vice mayor-elect – who could be mayor in his father's absence – is not as outspoken as the elder Duterte and a lot of political responsibilities are already weighing against him at home, Beleno said. The main legal hurdle Duterte faces, despite his landslide mayoral win, is whether he would be allowed to swear the oath during his enforced absence. All elected public officials are supposed to take their oath within 30 days of their supposed assumption of office on July 1, according to Joel Butuyan, an ICC-accredited lawyer and president of human rights NGO CenterLaw. Unable to be sworn in at home, Duterte would need to take the oath in the presence of a Philippine ambassador or consul in The Hague, which seems unlikely, Butuyan said. "I don't think he's going to be allowed to get out just to take office because it's not in the enumerated rights of an accused (person) in the ICC," he said. If the ICC grants Duterte permission, the oath will be recognized in the Philippines, but he "will not be able to perform his functions because he's out of the country and he's in detention," Butuyan said. "It's not ideal at all," Butuyan added, of the election result. "It does not serve the interests of the people of Davao that they voted for someone who will not be able to perform his functions as a city mayor." The mayor is the face of the city, with administrative tasks such as attending meetings and functions, signing documents and authorizing payrolls – all difficult to do effectively if Duterte is sitting halfway across the world, said Beleno, the political analyst. Even before the final votes were cast, Duterte's daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio, said that her father's ICC lawyer and Philippine legal team were discussing how he can take the oath. "The ICC lawyer said that once we get proclamation papers, we'll discuss again how former President Rodrigo Duterte can take the oath," she said. CNN has reached out to the ICC and Kaufman, Duterte's legal counsel. In acourt filingto the ICC earlier this month, Kaufman said there is no legal basis for the case against Duterte because the Philippines is no longer a member of the Rome Statute. Duterte withdrew the Philippines from the ICC, but under the court's withdrawal mechanism, it keeps jurisdiction over crimes committed during the membership period of a state – in this case, between 2016 and 2019, when the country's pullout became official. The closely watched midterm election was considered a proxy battle between President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Vice President Duterte-Carpio as ties disintegrate between the former allies turned enemies. The vice president is facingimpeachment complaintsin the House of Representatives amid allegations of corruption, which she denies. A two-thirds vote in the Senate is required to convict her, remove her from public office, and ban her from seeking any public post. To stay in office, Duterte-Carpio needs nine of 24 senators to vote for her acquittal. And neither the Marcoses nor the Dutertes dominate the Senate after the May 2025 vote. The race yielded a three-way stalemate between Marcos-endorsed candidates, Duterte-allied politicians, and liberal-leaning figures, said Maria Ela Atienza, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines. "The vice president has more breathing room now … but she should also be careful with how the public perceives her," Atienza said. "Her popularity ratings have recovered a bit … but we have seen she can make mistakes that can affect the sentiments of the people." In reality, the Filipino public is also becoming impatient with the drama in high places, Atienza said. "They're getting tired of having the Dutertes always fighting with the Marcoses," she said. For now, political bickering is in gridlock. But Rodrigo Duterte's stronghold still stands and his supporters long for the day he is officially declared mayor and comes back to serve his home country. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Duterte scores landslide win in local elections. But can he be mayor from The Hague?

Duterte scores landslide win in local elections. But can he be mayor from The Hague? In the gripping game of thrones of Philippine politics,...
Families of 737 MAX crash victims to object to deal allowing Boeing to avoid prosecutionNew Foto - Families of 737 MAX crash victims to object to deal allowing Boeing to avoid prosecution

By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Families of some of the 346 people killed in two fatal Boeing 737 MAX crashes plan to object to a tentative nonprosecution agreement between the planemaker and the U.S. Justice Department, a lawyer said on Saturday. The Justice Department outlined the tentative deal in a more than two-hour meeting with families on Friday and said in a court filing on Saturday that they would have until Thursday to file written objections. Paul Cassell, a lawyer for the families, said they would object "to any deal along the lines described by DOJ yesterday, because it fails to hold Boeing accountable for the 'deadliest corporate crime in U.S. history,'" citing the prior comments of U.S. District Judge Reed O'Connor. The Justice Department said in its filing "it has not decided whether to enter into the agreement or to proceed to trial, and would not make the decision until after finishing conferring with the families." The agreement would forestall a June 23 trial the planemaker faces on a fraud charge it misled U.S. regulators about a crucial flight control system on the 737 MAX, its best-selling jet. The agreement would allow Boeing to avoid being branded a convicted felon and would be a blow to families who lost relatives in the crashes and had pressed prosecutors to take the U.S. planemaker to trial. "The new deal is a step backward from last summer, when Boeing was going to plead guilty," Cassell added. "Under the new arrangement, they don't plead guilty." Boeing declined to comment. Boeing agreed in July to plead guilty to a criminal fraud conspiracy charge after the two fatal 737 MAX crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia, spanning 2018 and 2019, and to pay a fine of up to $487.2 million. Boeing and DOJ officials have not yet exchanged papers to negotiate final details of any nonprosecution agreement, the department said Saturday. The Justice Department told families on Friday that Boeing would be asked to pay an additional $444.5 million into a crash victims' fund that would be divided evenly per crash victim, lawyers for the families said, on top of $500 million Boeing paid in 2021. Boeing has faced enhanced scrutiny from the Federal Aviation Administration since January 2024, when a new MAX 9 missing four key bolts suffered a mid-air emergency losing a door plug. The FAA has capped production at 38 planes per month. (Reporting by David ShepardsonEditing by Rod Nickel)

Families of 737 MAX crash victims to object to deal allowing Boeing to avoid prosecution

Families of 737 MAX crash victims to object to deal allowing Boeing to avoid prosecution By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Families ...
Russian attack on bus in Sumy region kills nine, Ukraine says, hours after peace talksNew Foto - Russian attack on bus in Sumy region kills nine, Ukraine says, hours after peace talks

A Russian drone attack on a bus in northeastern Ukraine killed at least nine people and injured seven others, Ukrainian officials said Saturday, just hours after the two countries met for thefirst direct peace talksin three years. While the two sides discussed a possible meeting between the two countries' leaders, a ceasefire and agreed a prisoner swap, there was no major breakthrough and since then Russia's aerial assault continued. The drone attack took place Saturday morning in the city of Bilopillia in theSumy region, local authorities said, with Oleh Hrihorov - head of Sumy's military administration - saying that seven people were injured, three of whom were in critical condition. "This is not just another shelling – it is a cynical war crime," Ukraine's National Police also said on Telegram. Police and local authorities said Russia had struck a civilian target. Moscow has not yet responded to Ukraine's claims it struck a civilian bus. However, Russia's state news agency TASS reported around the same time, citing a statement from the defense ministry, that Russian forces did strike a Ukrainian equipment staging site in the Sumy region with drones. Russia and Ukraine have both accused each other of targeting civilians, which each denies. An image shared by Ukraine's national police showed a heavily damaged van bearing massive holes in the right and top side of the passenger seats. Its windows, as well as the windshield, were shattered. Overall in Ukraine, Russian attacks killed at least 13 people and injured over 38 in the past 24 hours, which includes the attack in Sumy, Ukrainian authorities say. Two were killed in Donetsk region, and one person was killed in both Kharkiv and Kherson regions. Friday's talks marked the first face-to-face meeting between the two sides since the early weeks of the war. But the meeting – which took place in Istanbul chaired by Turkey – was not attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who had first proposed the talks but instead sent a junior delegation. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also stayed away, having said he would not meet any other Russian official but Putin. During the talks, Russia demanded that Ukraine must cede land still under Kyiv's control, a source familiar with Friday's negotiations told CNN, a position that Ukraine has long dismissed. The leaders of the UK, France, Germany and Poland called Russian demands in the talks "unacceptable." On Saturday, the Kremlin said that a meeting between Zelensky and Putin could happen, but only if certain conditions are met. "Such a meeting is possible as a result of the work of the delegations of both sides in reaching certain agreements," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said. Peskov also spoke about preparing a list of "conditions" for a ceasefire agreement, that would then be exchanged with the Ukrainian side. Kyiv and its allies have repeatedly called for an unconditional truce and accuse Russia of deliberately holding up peace efforts. US President Donald Trump said in a social media post that he will call Putin at 10 a.m. on Monday in an effort to clinch a ceasefire deal. Trump added that he would call Zelensky and various leaders of NATO countries afterward. Trump told reporters earlier this week that he did not think peace talks would move forward unless he and the Russian president speak directly. "I don't believe anything is going to happen, whether you like it or not, until he and I get together," Trump said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Russian attack on bus in Sumy region kills nine, Ukraine says, hours after peace talks

Russian attack on bus in Sumy region kills nine, Ukraine says, hours after peace talks A Russian drone attack on a bus in northeastern Ukrai...
Hayley Erbert Celebrates Husband Derek Hough's 40th Birthday by Listing 20 Things She Loves About HimNew Foto - Hayley Erbert Celebrates Husband Derek Hough's 40th Birthday by Listing 20 Things She Loves About Him

Hayley Erbert/Instagram Hayley Erbert celebrated her husband Derek Hough's 40th birthday on Saturday, May 17, by listing 20 things she loves about him in a touching Instagram tribute She also included photos and videos of the couple together over the years Hough shared his own birthday post, showing off his physique in a mirror selfie Hayley Erbertis celebratingDerek Hough's birthday with a bang! In honor of her husband's 40th birthday on Saturday, May 17, Erbert decided to list 20 reasons why she loves theDancing with the Starsjudge — while joking that she was constrained by Instagram's 20-media limit. "Happy 40th Birthday to my favorite person ever!" Erbert, 30, wrote in thepost's caption. "This world has been blessed for 4 decades with your presence and I'm lucky to have had you in my life for one of those. 🥰 Today, I wanted to do a photo dump/list of 40 reasons why I love you but Instagram will only allow 20, so that'll have to do." Hayley Erbert/Instagram She shared various photos and videos ofthe couple's time together over the years, including cuddling with their pets, dancing — both on land and underwater — and going on adventures. She also showed sweet moments between the pair, such as a shot of Hough feeding her in a hospital bed, seemingly followingher medical emergency in December 2023. Some of the things she listed that she loves about Hough include his "sense of adventure," the way he "takes care" of her and their relationship — which she described as "what I always dreamed of." She also noted that she loves that he brought his dog Romie into her life and that he said "yes" to adding four more pets to their family. Erbert also praised Hough for being "extremely thoughtful," which was especially evident during their engagement and wedding as he made sure it was "what dreams are made of." She highlighted his "talent," "sweetness," "weirdness" — and even his "gardening obsession." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Hayley Erbert/Instagram "You reignited my spark for performing. I love you endlessly for that 🤍," the professional dancer wrote, adding, "You always give your everything when you are performing. You care so deeply about people, you want to give them your all…" "I love your heart. Your love for our babies makes my heart explode!" Erbert continued. "I can't imagine my life without you… Thank you for always choosing me, even when I might not deserve it in the past 10 years. Also yes, it has been 10 years 🤯." Erbert said she could "go on and on," but wanted to send a "cheers" to Hough for "40 years of life." "To all the laughter, the lessons, the milestones, and the love that just keeps deepening… Whatever it brings, wherever it leads us, I'm excited to be right by your side. Always and forever," she concluded her sweet post. Hayley Erbert/Instagram Hough celebrated a new decade of his life in his own way onInstagram, sharing a mirror selfie showing off his dancer's abs and nodding to a years-old joke between himself and Erbert. "For the past 5 years, I've been looking in the bathroom mirror and telling@hayley.erbert, 'Not bad for 40!' She'd always laugh and remind me, 'You're not 40 yet, you can't say that.' Well, today's the day I can officially say it: 'Hey, not bad for 40,' " he wrote. Read the original article onPeople

Hayley Erbert Celebrates Husband Derek Hough's 40th Birthday by Listing 20 Things She Loves About Him

Hayley Erbert Celebrates Husband Derek Hough's 40th Birthday by Listing 20 Things She Loves About Him Hayley Erbert/Instagram Hayley Erb...
The Biggest Bombshells from "My Mom Jayne" — Mariska Hargitay's Documentary About Her Hollywood Icon Mother

John Nacion/Variety via Getty; Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Mariska Hargitay reveals surprising and shocking truths about her life that she's never shared before in her feature film directorial debut My Mom Jayne, a documentary about her late mother Jayne Mansfield's life, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 17 Among the revelations in the new film are details surrounding Hargitay's biological father and the car wreck that killed Mansfield Fifty-seven years after the death of Jayne Mansfield,Mariska Hargitayset out on a mission to rediscover the Hollywood legend — not as a siren of the screen, but as her mom. Hargitay, 61, the fourth of Mansfield's five children and beloved for her record-breaking role as Olivia Benson onLaw & Order: SVU, has now made her feature film directorial debut withMy Mom Jayne, a documentary about her mother's life. When Hargitay was just three years old, she, along with her two older brothers, survived the car wreck that killed Mansfield, then just 34, in 1967. My Mom Jayne, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 17, features never-before-seen photos and home videos of Mansfield as Hargitay seeks to better understand the mother she barely knew. The documentary also reveals surprising, and some shocking, truths about Hargitay's life that she's never shared — until now. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Getty For the very first time, Hargitay reveals a family secret that she's kept for more than 30 years. Her biological father is not Mickey Hargitay, the man who raised her, but rather a man named Nelson Sardelli, with whom her mother had a short-lived affair. When Hargitay was 25, the actress first learned of Sardelli, a former Las Vegas entertainer. Upon seeing a photo of him, she was struck by their obvious physical resemblance. After confronting Mickey Hargitay, Hargitay was left even more confused when Mickey insistedhewas her father. Hargitay grappled with the question of whether she was Hungarian like Mickey or Italian like Sardelli. By the time she was 30, Hargitay decided to drive to one of Sardelli's shows to meet him. "I've been waiting 30 years for this moment," Hargitay recalls Sardelli saying to her when they first met. Sardelli is still alive today and is in his late eighties. Hargitay has two half-sisters via her biological father, both of whom are featured in the documentary. J. Countess/WireImage Hargitay's brothers, Zoltan and Mickey Jr., share their recollections of the car accident that claimed their mother's life, including how Hargitay, then only 3 years old, wasn't immediately rescued. A tiny Hargitay had sustained a head injury, and she ended up lodged under the passenger seat where emergency personnel missed her when they pulled her brothers from the wreckage. After being driven away from the crash site, Zoltan looked around only to find his sister was missing--and she was quickly rescued. Zoltan also recalls how, just prior to the crash, Mansfield had been sitting in the backseat of the car with her three children. She then moved up to the front passenger seat beside her lawyer, Sam Brody, who was also killed in the crash. Had Mansfield only remained in the backseat, she might have survived the accident along with her children. Bettmann Hargitay also briefly interviews her younger brother, Tony Cimber, from her mother's third marriage to Matt Cimber, who may have physically abused their mother. While they don't go in depth, Hargitay's brother Mickey Jr. shares memories of Mansfield wearing sunglasses, even indoors, only to find that his mother was hiding two black eyes. UPI/Bettmann Archive/Getty Mansfield lost her father in an eerily similar way: in a car crash at the age of 3. Hargitay opens up about how, while she didn't truly get the chance to know her mother, losing a parent in that way at that age was something they had in common. My Mom Jaynewill also premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 13. Read the original article onPeople

The Biggest Bombshells from “My Mom Jayne” — Mariska Hargitay's Documentary About Her Hollywood Icon Mother

The Biggest Bombshells from "My Mom Jayne" — Mariska Hargitay's Documentary About Her Hollywood Icon Mother John Nacion/Variet...

 

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