The Duterte-Model of Authoritarianism

https://portside.org/2025-09-27/duterte-model-authoritarianism
Portside Date:
Author: Scot Nakagawa
Date of source:
anti-authortarian playbook

Summary: The Duterte Model in America

The September 25, 2025 executive actions represent a dramatic escalation toward the “Duterte model” of authoritarian control - using terrorism designations to systematically target political opposition while creating legal cover for vigilante violence. The memorandum directs the FBI, DOJ, Treasury, and IRS to investigate “domestic terrorism networks” specifically targeting left-leaning progressive nonprofits, while designating “Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization” despite its decentralized nature.

This mirrors Duterte’s strategy in the Philippines where “police involvement in the killings of drug suspects extends far beyond the officially acknowledged cases” with “planning and coordination by the police and in some cases local civilian officials” while maintaining plausible deniability through vigilante groups that were “likely supported by or under the control of Duterte’s regime, despite their unofficial status”.

The danger is immediate: Stephen Miller’s declaration that “This is the first time in American history that there is an all-of-government effort to dismantle left-wing terrorism” combined with his characterization of “the Democratic Party as ‘not a political party. It is a domestic extremist organization’” creates the ideological framework for systematic political violence.

Part I: Understanding the Duterte Model

How the Philippines Model Works

The Duterte drug war demonstrated how authoritarian leaders can orchestrate mass violence while maintaining legal cover:

1. Ideological Dehumanization: Duterte made “repeated calls on the public to kill drug addicts” instructing “If you know of any addicts, go ahead and kill them yourself” while police were told “My order is shoot to kill you. I don’t care about human rights”.

2. Coordinated State-Vigilante Operations: The “simultaneous fall” in both state and vigilante violence when operations were suspended “indicates both the impressive level of control of the government over the War on Drugs as well as suggests coordination between state forces and unofficial agents”.

3. Plausible Deniability Through Outsourcing: Violence was attributed to vigilantes who were “carried out by members of law enforcement in plain clothes who took measures to make the killings appear as having been perpetrated by private actors”.

4. Financial Incentives for Violence: Police received “financial incentives for police who kill people allegedly involved with the drugs trade” with payments “per head.”

5. Legal Impunity: “Not a single police officer has been prosecuted or dismissed from duty in relation to killings during police drug operations” with Duterte promising “police and soldiers will never go to prison, not on my watch”.

Results: 12,000-30,000 Killed

Human rights organizations estimate “12,000 to 30,000 civilians have been killed in the ‘anti-drug operations’ carried out by the Philippine National Police and vigilantes” while “An average of 34 people a day died during the first six months of Duterte’s presidency”.

Part II: The American Adaptation

Current Escalation Indicators

Terrorism Infrastructure Creation: The executive actions establish comprehensive government machinery targeting political opposition through “the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Taskforce” with coordination across “Treasury Department” to “identify and disrupt financial networks that fund domestic terrorism”.

Targeting Opposition Infrastructure: The order “directs the Internal Revenue Service to withdraw tax-exempt status from any organization it identifies as funding political violence” while specifically naming “billionaires George Soros and Reid Hoffman” without evidence.

Ideological Framework for Violence: The designation of a decentralized movement as a “terrorist organization” combined with claims that “Antifa recruits, trains, and radicalizes young Americans to engage in this violence” creates justification for broad targeting.

County Sheriff Strategy: Another threat vector is the likely use of county sheriffs as the mechanism for deputizing right-wing groups, replicating how Duterte used local officials to coordinate vigilante violence.

The Deputization Danger

County sheriffs represent the perfect mechanism for implementing the Duterte model because:

Part III: Immediate Defense Strategies

1. Legal Rapid Response Infrastructure

Pre-positioned Legal Teams:

Documentation Systems:

2. Organizational Security Overhaul

Immediate Organizational Protections:

Coalition Protection Networks:

3. Community Defense Infrastructure

Neighborhood Protection Networks:

Information Warfare Defense:

Part IV: Strategic Counter-Offensi

1. Expose the Coordination

Target the Sheriff-Vigilante Nexus:

International Exposure Strategy:

2. Corporate Accountability Campaigns

Target Enabling Infrastructure:

Financial System Pressure:

3. Political Isolation Strategy

Electoral Consequences:

Legislative Countermeasures:

Part V: Mass Mobilization for Ungovernable Response

1. Economic Disruption Strategy
Corporate Pressure Points:

Economic Sanctuary Creation:

2. Mass Civil Disobedience

Governmental Ungovernability:

Crisis Moment Creation:

3. International Solidarity

Global Democratic Alliance:

Information Warfare:

Part VI: Long-term Strategic Vision

1. Democratic Institution Building
Alternative Governance Structures:

Independent Monitoring Systems:

2. Cultural and Narrative Transformation

Counter-Hegemonic Messaging:

Historical Memory Projects:

Part VII: Tactical Recommendations by Sector

For Progressive Organizations
Immediate Actions:

Medium-term (30-90 Days):

For Community Groups

Immediate Actions:

Medium-term:

For Legal and Professional Networks

Immediate Actions:

Medium-term:

Takeaway: Preventing the American Duterte

The September 25 executive actions represent a clear escalation, likely toward the Duterte model of authoritarian control through legalized vigilante violence. The Philippines experience shows that once this system becomes operational, it can kill thousands while maintaining legal cover through plausible deniability.

The window for prevention is rapidly closing. The pro-democracy movement must immediately implement comprehensive defense strategies while building capacity for sustained resistance. This requires understanding that we are no longer facing normal political opposition but a systematic attempt to eliminate democratic opposition through state-sanctioned violence.

The choice is stark: build the infrastructure for effective resistance now, or face the Philippines scenario where “More than 6,000 people have been killed” by “vigilantes, hired guns and likely cops too” with victims who “do not enjoy due process” and are “always killed at night, sometimes inside their own homes.”

The Duterte model succeeded in the Philippines because civil society was unprepared for systematic state-vigilante coordination. American democracy’s survival depends on learning from that tragedy and building the defensive infrastructure necessary to make political violence ungovernable rather than inevitable.

The infrastructure, relationships, and capacity building outlined here must begin immediately. The crisis moments that will determine whether America follows the Philippines path are not distant possibilities—they are emerging now. The movement that acts strategically and at scale can still prevent the American Duterte. The movement that waits for institutions to provide protection will face the same fate as Philippines civil society: systematic elimination under legal cover.

Democracy’s survival requires treating this threat with the urgency it demands and the strategic sophistication it requires. The time for half-measures and institutional faith is over. The time for comprehensive resistance infrastructure is now.

This analysis draws on Human Rights Watch documentation of the Philippines drug war and contemporary reporting on the September 25, 2025 executive actions.


Source URL: https://portside.org/2025-09-27/duterte-model-authoritarianism