A reader asked me what happens if the Senate minority tries to block the trial. The honest answer is that "block" is doing a lot of work in that question. There is not one blocking play. There are several. Some are legal. Some are gray. Some succeed. Some fail loudly.
Walk through them with me. I will tell you what each one looks like, when it has been used before, and what it would mean if it is used again on Sara Duterte's case.
FIRST, A NOTE ON WHO THE "MINORITY" ACTUALLY IS
The reader's question used the word minority, and that is the word everyone is using. But it is worth pausing on what minority means inside the 20th Congress Senate today.
The Senate Minority Bloc has nine members, sworn in on September 9, 2025, and it is one of the largest minority blocs in Senate history. It is led by Minority Floor Leader Alan Peter Cayetano. The deputies are Rodante Marcoleta and Joel Villanueva. The full roster also includes former Senate President Francis "Chiz" Escudero, former Senate President Pro Tempore Jinggoy Estrada, Bong Go, Ronald "Bato" dela Rosa, Imee Marcos, and Robin Padilla.
That is the bloc. Now read it carefully.
Five of the nine — Padilla, Go, dela Rosa, Imee Marcos, and Marcoleta — are publicly identified as the Duterte bloc, a label dela Rosa himself used in 2025 to name his core allies on the impeachment vote. Padilla committed to a "no" vote on Sara Duterte's impeachment on January 13, 2025, at the INC's National Rally for Peace, before any evidence had been presented in any forum.
The remaining four — Cayetano, Villanueva, Escudero, and Estrada — are not Duterte loyalists in the same direct sense. They are senior opposition figures with longer establishment histories, in the bloc partly because they lost the leadership fight to Sotto in September 2025. Their votes in the impeachment trial are less predictable than the five Duterte-aligned senators, but their procedural posture in the bloc shapes which motions get filed and which lines of attack get pressed.
So when you read "minority bloc moves to block impeachment," do not picture a unified anti-impeachment voting machine. Picture nine senators with overlapping but not identical incentives, five of whom are likely solid "not guilty" votes and four of whom are still in play.
That changes how you read every blocking scenario below.
SCENARIO ONE: THE MOTION TO DISMISS
What it looks like: a senator-judge stands up after the impeachment court is convened and moves to dismiss the case before any evidence is presented.
This was tried on June 10, 2025. Senator Bato dela Rosa raised it as a floor motion. The argument was that the case was procedurally defective and the impeachment court should not even hear it.
Former Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Carpio called the move unconstitutional. His point: the Constitution requires the Senate, sitting as an impeachment court, to "hear and decide" the case. There is no provision allowing dismissal before a single witness is called or a single document is presented. To dismiss without a trial would be grave abuse of discretion and a denial of due process to the prosecution.
Senator Ping Lacson made a procedural version of the same point in a separate August 2025 plenary debate. The Senate Impeachment Rules do not include a motion to dismiss. There are no guidelines for ruling on one. So even if a senator files it, the court has no clean way to act on it.
The verdict on this scenario: legally weak, but politically usable as a stalling maneuver. Even a doomed motion can eat session days while it is debated.
SCENARIO TWO: THE MOTION TO REMAND
This is the one that worked in 2025.
After Dela Rosa's dismissal motion ran into procedural objections, Senator Alan Peter Cayetano modified it. Instead of dismissal, the motion became a remand — send the Articles back to the House and require the lower chamber to certify that the case did not violate the one-year bar rule.
The Senate voted 18-5 in favor on June 10, 2025. The yeses included Cayetano, his sister Pia, Dela Rosa, Ejercito, Escudero (then Senate President), Estrada, Go, Lapid, Legarda, Imee Marcos, Padilla, Revilla, Tolentino, Tulfo, Villanueva, Cynthia Villar, Mark Villar, and Zubiri. The noes were Binay, Gatchalian, Hontiveros, Pimentel, and Poe.
The remand was framed as procedural caution. The effect was months of delay. The House had to certify, then re-transmit, and by then the Supreme Court had taken up the constitutional question and nullified the entire round.
This is the most viable blocking scenario for the 2026 trial because it has a working precedent. A procedural pretext is found, the Articles are bounced back to the House, and the calendar runs out.
The counter to this scenario is the Supreme Court's April 29, 2026 ruling on "forthwith." The Court said the Senate must avoid undue delay. A remand without a real procedural defect would now invite a separate constitutional challenge.
But — and this is the part to watch — the SC also said the Senate is a co-equal body and the judiciary cannot compel it without grave abuse of discretion. So the Senate gets the benefit of the doubt unless the abuse is obvious.
SCENARIO THREE: THE MOTION TO TERMINATE
Filed by Senator Robin Padilla on June 9, 2025. It sought to formally end the impeachment proceedings.
This is the cleanest version of "stop the trial." It does not dismiss on the merits. It does not remand. It just ends the case.
Padilla's motion did not move forward in 2025 because the Senate had not yet convened as an impeachment court. The court has to exist before it can be terminated. Once the court is convened, a termination motion would face the same Carpio objection as outright dismissal: the Constitution requires hearing and deciding, not stopping.
Lower probability of success. Higher probability of being filed anyway for the cameras.
SCENARIO FOUR: THE MOTION TO ARCHIVE
This one is the trickiest because it has actually succeeded.
On August 6, 2025, the Senate voted 19-4-1 to archive the Articles of Impeachment as moot. The trigger was the Supreme Court's July 25, 2025 ruling that the case was unconstitutional under the one-year bar. Once the SC ruled, the Senate had no jurisdiction over the case. Archiving was the procedural way to close the file.
The lone abstention was Senator Lacson, who wanted to wait for the SC's final ruling on the motion for reconsideration before voting.
This scenario only works if there is an external trigger. The Senate cannot archive a live case as moot because someone wants it gone. There has to be a court ruling, a defect in the Articles, or some other event that makes the proceeding no longer live.
The 2026 round does not currently have such a trigger. Sara Duterte has filed a new petition with the Supreme Court, but as of this writing, no ruling has come down nullifying the new Articles.
If the SC issues another ruling against the impeachment, archiving becomes available again. If not, this scenario stays parked.
SCENARIO FIVE: THE SLOW WALK
This is the most realistic and the hardest to call out.
The SC said "forthwith" means within a reasonable time. The Senate has discretion over its calendar. Pre-trial proceedings to organize evidence are allowed. Pleadings are filed under specific deadlines. Recesses happen. Holidays happen. Motions are debated. Debates eat session days.
None of this is unlawful on its face. Every individual step has a legitimate procedural reason. But strung together, they can stretch a trial timeline by weeks or months.
Sotto's stated calendar is the prosecution-friendly version: House transmits the Articles on June 2, the impeachment court convenes June 3, the trial begins by the last week of June. That assumes nothing eats time.
A determined slow walk would push the trial start past July, into August, then September. The longer the case sits, the more political alignments inside the Senate move around. The more senators reconsider. The more witnesses become unavailable. The more public attention drifts.
Sotto has said publicly that the public will see who is causing delays. That is the warning shot. It is also a recognition that delay is the most likely tactic.
SCENARIO SIX: PROCEDURAL ATTACKS DURING TRIAL
Once the trial actually begins, the toolkit expands.
Motions on evidence admissibility. Motions to exclude witnesses. Motions to strike portions of the Articles. Objections to documents. Subpoena fights. Each of these takes time. Each requires the impeachment court to rule. Each ruling can be the basis for an objection that takes more time.
A defense team that wants to drag a trial out has dozens of legitimate procedural motions available. The 2012 Renato Corona impeachment ran for over four months and produced 41 trial days. The Estrada trial was halted before it could even reach a verdict because the prosecution walked out over a single evidentiary ruling.
The presiding officer, Senate President Sotto in this case, controls the pace through how he rules on these motions. The defense will test those rulings constantly.
SCENARIO SEVEN: THE WALKOUT
This is the nuclear option, but only the prosecution can pull the trigger.
In 2001, during the Estrada impeachment trial, the Senate voted 11-10 not to open the second envelope of evidence the prosecution wanted to introduce. The prosecution panel walked out. Private prosecutors resigned. House prosecutors followed.
The trial collapsed. EDSA II followed within days. Estrada was forced from office not by Senate verdict but by mass mobilization.
If the impeachment court in the Sara Duterte trial issues a ruling the prosecution finds intolerable, a walkout is on the table. The political cost is enormous. The political effect is unpredictable. And as Estrada showed, an aborted trial does not always save the accused.
This scenario does not come from the Senate side. It comes from the prosecution choosing to abandon the forum. But it ends the trial, and in any taxonomy of "how a trial ends without a verdict," it has to be listed.
SCENARIO EIGHT: THE VOTE ITSELF
The simplest block. No procedural maneuver. No motion. No constitutional challenge.
Conviction requires 16 senator-judges to vote guilty on at least one impeachable offense. Acquittal requires the prosecution to fall short of 16 on every single article.
Former Senate President Franklin Drilon's read of the current Senate: 19 of the 24 senators sit somewhere in the pro-Marcos or pro-Duterte camps, and about 9 of them would vote for acquittal of Sara Duterte. If those nine hold, only 15 senators remain whose votes are in play. The prosecution needs 16 to convict. Sixteen from a pool of fifteen is mathematically impossible.
That math is not destiny. Senators can move. Public pressure changes through a long trial. Evidence presented under oath can change minds. The Corona conviction in 2012 happened in a Senate where the outcome was not assumed before testimony began.
But the math is the math. If the votes hold where Drilon thinks they hold, the simplest blocking scenario is the one that requires nothing procedural at all. Just nine "not guilty" votes on every article.
And once the Senate enters its verdict, the rules forbid any motion for reconsideration. The decision is final. There is no appeal of an acquittal.
SCENARIO NINE: THE CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE
While the trial is ongoing, the defense can keep filing petitions with the Supreme Court alleging procedural irregularities, due process violations, or constitutional defects in the Articles themselves.
This is exactly what happened in the 2025 round. Multiple petitions were filed. Sara Duterte herself filed one on February 18, 2025, asking the SC to nullify the impeachment. The cumulative effect of those petitions, combined with the one-year bar argument, eventually produced the July 25, 2025 ruling that ended the round.
In 2026, Duterte has already filed a fresh petition with the SC. If it succeeds at any point during the trial, the Senate may have to suspend or terminate proceedings.
This scenario does not require any senator to do anything. It is a defense-side play with the SC, and the Senate is just along for the ride.
SCENARIO TEN: THE LEADERSHIP CHANGE
This one is internal to the Senate and rarely discussed in plain terms. It also has the largest single-stroke impact of any scenario in this list, because the presiding officer of an impeachment court has more procedural power than the public realizes.
For a Vice President's impeachment trial, the presiding officer is the Senate President, not the Chief Justice. The Chief Justice only presides when the President of the Republic is on trial. So in this case, whoever sits as Senate President sits as the head of the impeachment court.
Former Senate Minority Leader Koko Pimentel has warned that any deliberate move to derail the trial could trigger a change in Senate leadership. The current Senate President, Sotto, has publicly committed to no delays. If Sotto holds that line and the majority bloc loses confidence in his pro-trial stance, the majority could elect a new Senate President. The reverse is also possible. If pro-Duterte and pro-Marcos senators consolidate enough majority defectors, they could elect a Senate President who would slow-walk the case from the chair.
So what does the chair actually control? More than most readers realize.
The presiding officer rules on motions in the first instance. Under Rule VI of the Senate Rules of Procedure on Impeachment Trials, every motion, objection, or application during the trial must be addressed to the presiding officer first. The presiding officer's ruling stands as the ruling of the entire Senate unless a senator-judge objects and demands the question be put to a chamber vote. That default is enormous. A hostile chair can rule against the prosecution on every motion they want to lose, and force the prosecution to either accept the ruling or burn time pulling the chamber into a roll call vote.
The chair rules on subpoenas. In the Corona impeachment trial in 2012, then-Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile denied the prosecution's request to subpoena Corona himself, citing the constitutional right against self-incrimination. The Senate upheld the ruling. That single decision shaped the evidence the prosecution could present. A pro-defense chair facing a similar request could deny it the same way — with similar effect.
The chair rules on objections during testimony. Admissibility of evidence, relevance, scope of cross-examination, whether a witness can be compelled to answer. Each of these rulings happens in real time and shapes what enters the record. A chair who consistently sustains defense objections and overrules prosecution objections can starve the trial of damaging evidence without doing anything obviously irregular.
The chair sets the calendar. Order of business, when motions are scheduled for hearing, the daily session start and end, the use of recesses. Sotto's stated June 2-3 timeline is a chair's calendar. Replace the chair, and the calendar replaces itself.
The chair enforces time limits. The rules give each senator-judge two minutes to question a witness and one hour per side to argue preliminary issues. The chair decides whether to enforce those limits strictly, loosely, or selectively. A defense-friendly chair can let defense counsel run long and cut prosecutors off at the buzzer.
The chair frames the question for the final vote. Under the rules, the presiding officer states the question for each article of impeachment separately during the roll call. How the question is phrased — plain, technical, or with a built-in qualifier — can shape borderline votes.
The constraint on all of this is Rule VI's override mechanism. Any senator-judge can demand a chamber vote on a presiding officer's ruling, and a majority of senator-judges can overturn the ruling. So a chair cannot single-handedly dictate every outcome. But forcing a chamber vote on every contested ruling is slow, exhausting, and politically costly for the senators who keep doing it. The chair's default rulings shape the trial in dozens of small ways that never get overridden because no one wants to fight every ruling on the floor.
This is why the leadership question is consequential even when there is no current public move to unseat Sotto. Every contested impeachment trial in Philippine history has produced moments where the chair's discretion changed the trajectory. The Estrada walkout was triggered by an evidentiary vote on the second envelope, but the path to that vote went through a series of presiding officer rulings. The Corona trial's evidentiary architecture — what got subpoenaed, what got admitted, what got excluded — was shaped at every step by Enrile's chair.
Senate leadership changes are rare during high-profile proceedings. They are not unheard of. The senator holding the gavel of an impeachment court has more influence on the outcome than the senator casting any single not-guilty vote.
WHAT TO ACTUALLY WATCH FOR
If you are tracking this trial in real time, here is the short list of warning signs.
Watch for any motion filed in the first few days after the impeachment court convenes. Dismissal, termination, or remand motions in the first week are the early-stalling plays.
Watch the trial calendar. If Sotto's June 2-3 transmittal-and-convening dates slip, that is a signal. If pre-trial proceedings run more than two weeks, that is another.
Watch for new petitions to the Supreme Court from the defense team. The 2025 playbook was to file in parallel with the trial, hoping the SC would intervene.
Watch the senator vote tallies on procedural motions. Drilon's "solid 9" theory will be tested by every floor vote that happens before the verdict. If those nine vote together against the prosecution at every turn, the math is locking in.
And watch for any leadership talk. Even rumors of a Senate President move during a trial are a significant signal.
THE BOTTOM LINE
There is more than one way for the Senate side of this case to end without a guilty verdict. Some require votes. Some require motions. Some require external rulings. One requires the prosecution to walk out.
None of them require anything illegal. All of them have happened in Philippine impeachment history before, in one form or another.
The constitutional bar to convict — 16 of 24 senators — is high enough that even a prosecution with strong evidence has to win the procedural fight, the political fight, and the calendar fight at the same time.
The trial itself is the contest. Everything described above is what each side is allowed to do inside that contest.
What it gets called depends on who is doing it and which side you are reading from.
Sources
[1] Impeachment in the Philippines — Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impeachment_in_the_Philippines
[2] Impeachment of Sara Duterte — Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impeachment_of_Sara_Duterte
[3] Senate rules do not include motion to dismiss — Lacson — GMA News https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/topstories/nation/955008/vp-sara-duterte-impeachment-senate-rules-ping-lacson/story/
[4] Carpio: No provision in the law that Senate can dismiss impeachment case — One News PH https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0Z-NRBlTLA
[5] Minority boycotts impeach court caucus — Daily Tribune https://tribune.net.ph/2026/04/30/minority-boycotts-impeach-court-caucus
[6] Tito Sotto warns vs delays in impeachment trial — Inquirer.net https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2222478/sotto-warns-vs-delays-in-impeachment-trial
[7] No delay: Senate impeachment court to convene day after House transmits — politiko.com.ph https://politiko.com.ph/2026/04/30/no-delay-senate-impeachment-court-to-convene-day-after-house-transmits-case-vs-sara-duterte-sotto/politiko-lokal/
[8] Philippine Senate buries impeachment motion against Sara Duterte — Anadolu Agency https://www.aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/philippine-senate-buries-impeachment-motion-against-vice-president-sara-duterte/3652525
[9] Rules of Procedure in Impeachment Proceedings — Lawphil https://lawphil.net/congress/house/impeachment_2010.html
[10] Article XI, 1987 Constitution — Official Gazette https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/constitutions/1987-constitution/
[11] Senate minority to move to convene impeachment court in plenary — Philippine News Agency https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1251728
[12] Sotto warns against delays in a possible Duterte impeachment trial — Inquirer.net https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2222263/sotto-warns-against-delays-in-a-possible-duterte-impeachment-trial
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