2025 Philippine cabinet reshuffle
Following unfavorable results in the 2025 Philippine midterm elections, President Bongbong Marcos issued a directive on May 22, 2025, asking for the courtesy resignations of his cabinet secretaries, heads of agencies, presidential advisers, undersecretaries, assistant secretaries, regional directors, provincial directors, etc.
This was the first cabinet reshuffle in the Philippines since the Hello Garci scandal under then president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
Background
The Marcos-backed Alyansa para sa Bagong Pilipinas underperformed expectations in the Philippine Senate election, only winning six of the twelve seats up for election, the lowest for an administration-backed ticket since 2007. Political groups opposed to the administration—DuterTen and KiBam—gained seats in upset victories. In the House of Representatives, the Lakas–CMD remained the largest party with 104 of its congressional candidates winning in local races, albeit with fewer seats at the end of the outgoing 19th Congress. President Bongbong Marcos deemed the results a rejection of his governance.Courtesy resignation directive
In response to the elections, President Marcos issued a directive on May 22, 2025, asking all members for their courtesy resignations to allow for the assessment of each department and to adjust his administration in line with its "recalibrated priorities". As of June 28, 2025, all cabinet secretaries, heads of agencies, and presidential advisers and assistants tendered their courtesy resignations.On May 28, 2025, the Governance Commission for GOCCs extended the courtesy resignation directive to all non-ex officio chairpersons, chief executive officers and appointive members of government-owned and controlled corporations.
Changes in the Cabinet
First phase
On May 23, 2025, Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin announced the initial lineup in the cabinet reshuffle. The resignations of the Secretaries of Foreign Affairs, Environment and Natural Resources and the Human Settlements and Urban Development were accepted and replaced. The resignations filed by the Executive Secretary, the Secretaries of Finance, Budget and Management, Trade and Industry, Economy, Planning and Development and the Special Assistant to the President for Investment and Economic Affairs were rejected and retained in the current positions.Second phase
On May 29, 2025, Executive Secretary Bersamin announced the second wave of the Cabinet reshuffle, with the resignations of the Solicitor General and the Chairperson of the Commission on Higher Education accepted. Meanwhile, the resignations tendered by the Secretaries of National Defence, Justice, and the Interior and Local Government were declined, and they will remain in their current posts.Third phase
On June 3, 2025, Executive Secretary Bersamin announced the third phase of the cabinet reshuffle. The resignations of the Chairman of the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor and the Presidential Assistant for the Visayas and the Presidential Adviser on Muslim Affairs were accepted. While the Presidential Adviser for Special Concerns was dismissed. Meanwhile, the resignations submitted by the remaining Cabinet Secretaries and heads of key agencies—including those in Customs, Internal Revenue, the Bureau of the Treasury, and the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority—were not accepted, and they will remain in their posts.The ongoing “performance review” of the remaining Cabinet-rank Secretaries including the National Security Adviser, and the Secretary of the Presidential Communications Office, continued with all concerned officials remaining in their current positions for the time being. Later on, the National Security Adviser was retained on June 10, 2025.
On June 17, President Marcos reappointed Jay Ruiz as Secretary of the Presidential Communications Office and Henry Aguda as Secretary of Information and Communications Technology, thereby nullifying their earlier courtesy resignations, which followed their being bypassed by the Commission on Appointments.
Fourth phase
Then, on June 19, as part of the fourth phase of the ongoing reshuffle, President Marcos accepted the courtesy resignations of the Secretary of the Presidential Legislative Liaison Office, the Presidential Adviser for Police and Military Affairs, and the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Philippine National Oil Company Renewables Corporation. However, he retained the heads of key agencies, particularly those overseeing government-controlled financial institutions such as the Development Bank of the Philippines, the Land Bank of the Philippines, and the Government Service Insurance System, as well as prominent government-owned and controlled corporations, including the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office.On June 28, Executive Secretary Bersamin announced the courtesy resignation of the Chairperson of the Philippine Sports Commission was accepted announced the new appointment of Patrick Gregorio as its head.
On June 30, President Marcos subsequently replaced the Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs, although no reason was provided at the time.
Fifth phase
On July 10, 2025, President Marcos carried out another round of Cabinet reshuffles, replacing Jay Ruiz as Secretary of the Presidential Communications Office with Dave Gomez, a former marketing executive and communications director at PMFTC Inc., the Philippine affiliate of Philip Morris International. Ruiz was subsequently appointed to the Board of Directors of the Manila Economic and Cultural Office, the Philippines’ de facto embassy in Taiwan. In the same shake-up, Marcos also appointed Sharon Garin appointed as a full-term Secretary of Energy, who previously served as Officer-in-Charge of the department.Sixth phase
Following public outrage over the flood control projects controversy, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. conducted a Cabinet reshuffle on September 1, 2025. Giovanni Z. Lopez was appointed Acting Secretary of Transportation, while former Transportation Secretary Vince Dizon was transferred to the Department of Public Works and Highways following the resignation of Manuel Bonoan. Following the appointment of Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla as the new Ombudsman on October 10, 2025 after the retirement of Ombudsman Samuel Martires, DOJ Usec. Fredderick Vida is hereby appointed as the Officer-in-Charge of the Department of Justice.Seventh phase
Following the death of Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Sec. Juan Ponce Enrile on November 13, 2025, the position of the Chief Presidential Legal Counsel is hereby vacated. On November 17, 2025 following the resignation of Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin and DBM Secretary Amenah Pangandaman after their names were tagged in the involvement of flood control projects controversy, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. appointed Finance Secretary Ralph Recto as the new Executive Secretary and Special Assistant to the President for Investment and Economic Affairs Secretary Frederick Go was appointed as the new Secretary of the Department of Finance. The position of the Special Assistant to the President for Investment and Economic Affairs is hereby vacated. The Department of Justice Officer-in-Charge Usec. Fredderick Vida is hereby appointed as Acting Secretary of Justice. On November 17, 2025, DBM Usec. Rolando Toledo was appointed as the Officer-in-Charge of the Department of Budget and Management and was hereby took his oath on December 9, 2025 as the Acting Secretary of DBM.Changes in the executive departments
Changes in the agencies, authorities and offices under the Office of the President and executive departments
Reactions
Philippine government officials
House Committee on Dangerous Drugs Chairman and Surigao del Norte Representative Ace Barbers remarked that the President's directive paves the way for the removal of underperforming senior officials—particularly those who fail to defend him when he or his administration comes under fire from critics or the opposition.In response to President Marcos Jr.’s call for Cabinet courtesy resignations following the midterm elections, ML party-list Representative-elect Leila de Lima welcomed the move as a potential reset—if carried out with resolve. It reflects an awareness that the public expects more—more coherence, more competence, and more decisive leadership,” she noted. De Lima warned, however, that without genuine intent and firm governance, the perception of Marcos as a lame-duck president would only deepen.