The Philippines held elections Monday seen as crucial for President Benigno Aquino's bold reform agenda, as deadly violence and graft-tainted candidates underlined the nation's deep-rooted problems.
Aquino has called for the mid-term polls, in which thousands of local leaders plus national legislators will be elected, to be a referendum on his efforts to transform a corrupt political system and an underperforming economy.
"The president is asking voters to put their confidence in those on the administration slate to help him carry out the rest of his reform agenda," presidential spokeswoman Abigail Valte told Agence France Presse.
Aquino swept into power in 2010 on a promise to fight corruption that he blames for crushing poverty in the country of 100 million people.
Opinion polls show he remains one of the country's most popular presidents, with the Philippines enjoying economic growth faster than every other nation in the Asia-Pacific except for China.
But, with presidents only allowed to serve one term of six years, Aquino is in a rush to implement more ambitious reforms while making an enduring impact on graft.
Monday's elections -- in which more than 18,000 positions, from town councilors up to provincial governors and members of the legislature, are being contested -- are vital to shore up support for his efforts.
Most crucial is control of both houses of Congress.
Aquino is confident of securing big majorities in both houses from an alliance of a wide range of parties, enabling him to pass legislation much more easily than his first three years when he did not have control of the Senate.
One of Aquino's biggest reforms is a planned peace deal with Muslim rebels to end a decades-long insurgency in the south that has claimed an estimated 150,000 lives and curtailed economic growth.
The peace accord would require parliamentary endorsement.
Aquino's aides have also said he is focused on passing legislation that would expand the tax base, including from the mining sector, to pay for more social security services.
Nevertheless, amid the hope, the elections highlighted the enduring nature of many of the darkest traditions that have smothered Philippine politics since the end of Ferdinand Marcos's dictatorship in 1986.
The Philippines is infamous for a brutal brand of democracy where politicians -- particularly at local and provincial levels -- are willing to bribe, intimidate or kill to ensure they win.
On Monday, one person died when gunmen ambushed a busload of voters in the south, and another in clashes between rival politicians, according to local police. More than 60 people had been killed in pre-poll violence.
Meanwhile, a host of candidates with links to corruption or violence ran as candidates, part of a "culture of impunity" in which powerful figures easily skirt around the justice system.
Among them was Imelda Marcos, 83-year-old wife of the ex-dictator, who was widely expected to win a second term in the lower house representing a northern province which has for decades remained a family stronghold.
Joseph Estrada, a former president evicted in a popular uprising in 2001 and later convicted of committing plunder while in office, was running to become mayor of Manila, the nation's capital.
The Philippines is ruled by remarkably few families -- with roughly 70 percent of the members of current Congress belonging to a dynasty -- and polls showed the elite were set to become even more dominant.
Two of Aquino's relatives were among the 33 Senate candidates.
Reflecting sentiments across the country, voters at a Manila polling station said they would decide according to who could help them the most economically.
"I know he has a soft spot for the poor and if I need his help... I could approach him," Flordeliza Pastoral, 55, an emaciated slum dweller said of her plans to vote for Estrada.
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