Duterte's appointees in OP can stay until Dec. 31, says Palace
Employees and officials appointed by former president Rodrigo Duterte to the Office of the President (OPS) may remain in their posts until the end of the year unless they are sooner replaced, or their appointments are revoked, a Palace document showed.

Based on Memorandum Order No. 7, the move to keep appointees whose terms were coterminous to Duterte's was to ensure the continuity of operations of the OP.
Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin signed the said memorandum on September 27, when he assumed the post and officially replaced long-time Marcos ally, Vic Rodriguez.
"In the exigency of the service and to prevent any disruption in the delivery of government services, all employees and officials in the Proper, whose issued appointments were coterminous with the previous appointing authority, shall remain in service and continue to perform their duties and functions until 31 December 2022," the new memorandum read.
The concerned employees and officials can stay in their posts until the end of the year "unless their appointments are sooner revoked, resignations accepted, replacements appointed, or reappointments issued."
LOOK: Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin has extended the term of coterminous employees and officials of the Office of the President. They may stay in their posts until December 31, 2022. @manilabulletin pic.twitter.com/3hhf9hsDJz
— Argyll Cyrus Geducos (@argyllcyrus_MB) October 10, 2022
Before this, the Marcos Administration released Memorandum Circular No. 1 on July 1. This deemed the following separated from service, and all positions held by them in the departments, offices, agencies, and bureaus of the Executive Department are declared vacant:
- All Presidential appointees who are coterminous
- All Presidential appointees occupying positions created over the authorized staffing pattern
- All non-Career Executive Service Officials (CESO) occupying Career Executive Service (CES) positions
- Contractual and casual employees
By July 28, the Palace took back the controversial memorandum circular and said that all affected employees and officials were to stay until December 31, 2022, until they are replaced, whichever came first.
"All officials and employees covered by this Memorandum Circular are mandated to lawfully perform their duties and functions, and submit bi-monthly performance reports to their respective heads... otherwise, they will be held accountable," the amended memorandum read.
However, the affected officers in charge of departments, offices, agencies, instrumentalities, and bureaus are not allowed to enter into new contracts or projects or disburse extraordinary funds.