Marcos abolishes office of presidential adviser on military, police affairs
President Marcos has issued an executive order abolishing the Office of the Presidential Adviser on Military and Police Affairs (OPAMPA).
President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. spearheaded the bell-ringing ceremony at the Philippine Stock Exchange in Taguig City on July 1, 2025, to celebrate the rollout of the Capital Markets Efficiency Promotion Act (CMEPA). (Mark Balmores)
Marcos abolished the office through Executive Order No. 89 dated July 11.
The President named several relevant agencies to perform the functions of the office after its abolition.
“The OPAMPA is hereby abolished. In accordance with their respective mandates, the Office of the Executive Secretary, Department of National Defense, National Security Council, Philippine National Police, National Police Commission, and such other relevant agencies, shall perform the duties and functions of OPAMPA, subject to existing laws, rules and regulations,” Marcos said in the order.
All records, documents, resources, office spaces, and other properties being used by the OPAMPA shall be turned over to the Office of the Deputy Executive Secretary for Support Services and Auxiliaries, Marcos ordered.
Memorandum Order (MO) No. 75 (s. 1993), as amended by Executive Order (EO) No. 138 (s. 2002), created the Office of the Presidential Consultant on Police Affairs.
It was later renamed to Office of the Presidential Adviser on Police Affairs, to expedite coordination in the handling of police matters and provide police staff assistance within the Office of the President (OP).
The Office of the Presidential Adviser on Military Affairs was established to provide military staff assistance within the OP and to facilitate policy formulation and decision making on national security concerns and military affairs.
In 2022, under Marcos' first EO, he ordered that OPAMPA shall be under the Office of the Special Assistant to the President, stressing that “it is imperative to revisit the need for a separate office in charge of military and police affairs within the OP, consistent with the streamlining and rightsizing policy of the administration.”