First Lady Liza hands off DavNor gov's suspension
At A Glance
- President Marcos had explained that the decision of the Office of the President (OP) to suspend Jubahib for two months stemmed from the cases filed against him that had been long pending even before he took office.
First Lady Liza Araneta-Marcos denied allegations that she had a role in the suspension of Davao del Norte Governor Edwin Jubahib, saying she did not even know him.

Araneta-Marcos said this in an interview with broadcaster Anthony Taberna which aired Friday past midnight, April 19.
"Do I even know that governor? I am the worst politician. Even Bong calls me the ambassador of bad will," she said.
"Kasi yung mayor... yung pangalan mismo (Even a mayor's name), I get it wrong," she added,
According to the First Lady, politics was not her playing field.
"You know, politics, you have to like it, eh," she said.
"You have to make bola (flatter people). Hindi ako ganoon, eh (That's not me)," she added.
President Marcos explained that the decision of the Office of the President (OP) to suspend Jubahib for two months stemmed from the cases filed against him that had been long pending even before he took office.
He likewise challenged anybody to investigate the legal process undertaken for the preventive suspension.
"Matagal na 'yan (That was a long time ago). And so it’s taking close to two years because it went through the process," Marcos said early this month.
"So I’m confident. Let anybody investigate. You. Kayo yung mga abogado ninyo, papuntahin niyo, tingnan niyo iyong records namin kung anong nangyari (Your lawyers, let them come, check our records about what happened)," he added.
Jubahib’s suspension was a result of a complaint filed by Board Member Orly Amit, who accused the governor of grave abuse of authority and oppression after the governor took a capitol-owned vehicle assigned to the board member and reassigned it to the Provincial Engineering Office.
The vehicle was assigned back to Amit after a month.
The governor refused to follow Malacañang's suspension order and described it as political harassment and was heavily influenced by his political enemies in the province, particularly Antonio Lagdameo Jr., the Special Assistant to the President.