President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. holds a press conference at the Malacañan Palace on Nov. 24, 2025. (Mark Balmores)
In order for the accusations of resigned lawmaker Zaldy Co to "mean something," he must come home and face the cases against him, President Marcos dared.
As Marcos downplayed the new allegations made by Co on Monday, Nov. 24, linking him to the flood control anomalies, he challenged the resigned solon to stop hiding and throw his accusations in person.
"Anyone can go online and make all kinds of claims and say all kinds of things, paulit-ulit, but it means nothing," Marcos said in a press conference on Monday afternoon.
"For it to mean something, umuwi siya rito. Harapin niya yung mga kaso niya. Kung meron siyang gusto sabihin, sabihin niya. Malalaman naman ng tao 'yan, e. Patunayan (he should come home. Face the cases. If he wants to say something, he must say it here. The people would eventually know. Prove it)," Marcos dared Co.
The President also told Co to play fair and face all the allegations and the filed cases against him in person, like what he was doing.
"Come home. Come home. Ba't ka nagtatago sa malayo? Ako hindi ako nagtatago. Kung meron kang accusation sa akin, nandito ako (Why are you hiding? I’m not hiding. If you have an accusation against me, I’m right here)," Marcos said.
"Gawin niyang pareho. Para patas lang naman (Tell him to do the same. Just to be fair)," Marcos added.
The Chief Executive also questioned the quality of the statements of Co, which he has been releasing through videos on social media.
"Well, look at the quality of the statements. Alam mo, mahaba na ang naging mga usapan natin tungkol sa fake news (You know, we have already had long discussions about fake news)," he said.
In his recent video statement, Co claimed that he delivered P56.4-billion cash from 2022 to 2025 to the residences of Marcos and his cousin, former House Speaker Martin Romualdez.