Key Takeaways
• Political division in the Philippines remains strong because identity politics replaced real issue-based debate.
• Corruption gets reframed as partisan, not systemic, making unity against it almost impossible.
• Social media rewards outrage, helping troll networks keep old political wounds fresh.
• Elites benefit from political division in the Philippines because it keeps citizens distracted from deeper reforms.
• Filipinos unite fast during crises but struggle to sustain that unity in calmer years.
Quick Gist (Taglish)
• Labanan pa rin ng kulay sa 2025, pink vs red vs DDS. Pero sa totoo lang, pareho lang tayong pagod sa gulo.
• Hindi lang troll farms ang may kasalanan. Yung sistema mismo, parang gusto tayong hatiin.
• Sa social media, mas viral ang galit kaysa solusyon. Kaya tuloy, tribal loyalty pa rin ang nananaig.
• Kaya bang magkaisa ng mga Pilipino kahit walang krisis? Yan ang totoong tanong.
Why Filipinos Stay Stuck in the Red vs Pink vs DDS Divide
The political division in the Philippines didn’t start with Duterte or Leni, but 2016 made it louder and harder to ignore. What began as a clash of ideas turned into a war of identities. Being “DDS” became a badge of loyalty. Being “pink” became shorthand for decency and reform. Over time, it stopped being about policies, it became about belonging.
Instead of issue politics, we now have identity politics. Supporting Duterte once meant endorsing a tough stance on drugs and crime. Today, it signals loyalty, toughness, and defiance against what supporters call the “elitist Dilawan.” On the other side, the pink movement grew from people tired of corruption and impunity, a symbol of hope for reform and transparency.
The result? People defend their camp, not the truth. If a Duterte ally is accused of graft, supporters say it’s a smear campaign. If an opposition figure slips, critics scream hypocrisy. The labels have become so personal that every political discussion feels like a personal attack.
This is why political division in the Philippines is not just emotional, it is structural. It affects how people form opinions, how they vote, and even how they define patriotism.

Corruption and Division: A Toxic Cycle
If there’s one thing everyone claims to hate, it’s corruption. But here’s the catch: corruption in the Philippines isn’t treated as a structural issue, it’s personalized.
When someone from your side is corrupt, it’s “fake news.” When someone from the other side is corrupt, it’s proof that their entire camp is evil. This moral flexibility is why corrupt politicians survive. They wrap themselves in color-coded loyalty and weaponize division to escape accountability.
As of 2025, political families remain entrenched in Congress and local governments. Many of them openly shift alliances depending on who holds power, proving that color politics is mostly theater for the masses. Behind closed doors, elites collaborate. On social media, their followers tear each other apart, feeding the endless cycle of political division in the Philippines.
Trolls, Algorithms, and the Machinery of Outrage
You can’t talk about political division in the Philippines without talking about troll farms and algorithmic bias.
Duterte’s era institutionalized troll networks. Even after he left Malacañang, those networks didn’t just disappear. They evolved. Some rebranded as influencers or vloggers, others shifted to defending new patrons. According to reports cited by Rappler and Reuters, troll operations now target both old political camps and new reform groups.
Platforms like Facebook, TikTok, and X thrive on outrage. Posts that trigger emotion spread faster than those that inform. A call to end corruption won’t go viral unless it attacks someone. This is why nuance rarely survives online. It’s easier to say, “DDS ka kasi” than to unpack why fuel prices remain high or why government transparency reports stall.
In effect, social media doesn’t just reflect division. It amplifies it. And by doing so, it strengthens the roots of political division in the Philippines across generations.
The Role of Poverty and Patronage
For many ordinary Filipinos, corruption feels like an abstract enemy. What feels real is the barangay captain who hands out ayuda, the mayor who gives scholarships, or the congressman who sponsors basketball uniforms. The same people who perpetuate the system are also the ones providing relief.
So when reformists call for structural change, it sounds distant. Fighting corruption feels like fighting the only system that helps you survive. This moral paradox keeps the cycle intact. Loyalty gets rewarded faster than reform. This mindset quietly sustains political division in the Philippines, as voters feel tied to their benefactors, not to ideals.
Why Division Feels Worse Now
Filipinos have always been divided, Marcos vs Ninoy, Erap vs Gloria, GMA vs Trillanes. But 2025 feels different because digital warfare made division permanent.
Troll farms now have successors, content creators who blend propaganda with entertainment. The same meme that makes you laugh also shapes your worldview. Add algorithmic filters, and people no longer see opposing ideas. They just see reinforcement of what they already believe.
Meanwhile, trust in institutions has collapsed. When courts, COA, or the Ombudsman issue rulings, many Filipinos don’t interpret them as justice but as politics. It doesn’t matter if there’s evidence, what matters is who benefits.
This breakdown in trust deepens political division in the Philippines, because truth itself becomes negotiable.
The Paradox of Filipino Unity
Filipinos are actually great at unity, just not the sustained kind. We unite in bursts, after a tragedy, after an exposé, after a scandal. EDSA I and II proved that collective power works. But when the dust settles, we go back to our camps.
It’s not because Filipinos don’t care. It’s because unity in a noisy democracy requires patience, and patience is hard when the system rewards outrage. Add social media noise, economic struggles, and mistrust of leaders, and division becomes the default mode.
If we truly want to end political division in the Philippines, we have to normalize empathy, accountability, and honest dialogue — not just when it’s convenient, but especially when it’s uncomfortable.

Who Benefits From the Noise?
It’s easy to say trolls divide us, but the truth is, the noise serves the political elite. When people argue over colors, no one talks about pork barrel, campaign finance reform, or dynasty laws. Division is not just a side effect. It’s a political survival strategy.
By keeping Filipinos busy fighting online wars, elites buy themselves time to stay in power. Every minute spent arguing about pink vs red is a minute not spent organizing for electoral reform or demanding better governance.
Moving Forward: Choosing Principle Over Color
Here’s the hard truth. Unity won’t come from another EDSA moment. It will come from building civic habits in everyday life. It starts with choosing facts over tribes, engaging in real conversations, and holding all sides accountable, even the ones we voted for.
We can’t wait for a perfect leader to unite us. We build unity when we decide that decency, fairness, and dignity are bigger than colors. If that happens, we might finally begin to weaken the hold of political division in the Philippines.

FAQs About Political Division in the Philippines
1. Is political division in the Philippines worse now than before?
Yes. The rise of social media and algorithm-driven platforms amplified existing divisions. People are more exposed to echo chambers than ever before.
2. Are troll farms still active in 2025?
Yes. According to media watchdogs, many troll networks that started in 2016 evolved into influencer-style accounts that continue to shape political narratives.
3. Why don’t Filipinos unite against corruption?
Because corruption is personalized. Supporters excuse wrongdoing within their own camp while condemning others. It’s no longer a moral issue, it’s partisan, and that feeds political division in the Philippines.
4. What role do politicians play in keeping division alive?
They benefit from it. Division keeps people distracted while elites consolidate power, share deals, and switch alliances behind the scenes.
5. Can ordinary Filipinos make a difference?
Yes. Unity starts small, in how we discuss issues online, hold leaders accountable, and reject blind loyalty. Even small acts of fairness can chip away at political division in the Philippines.
References:
- Rappler: Troll networks and disinformation monitoring
- Reuters: Digital propaganda in Southeast Asia
- Transparency International: Corruption Perception Index
Want to understand what’s really shaping today’s headlines? Visit our Current Issues section for grounded explainers on the stories dividing and defining the Philippines right now.




