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Johnny Pimentel

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Johnny Ty Pimentel (born March 29, 1956)[1] is a Filipino politician who served in the House of Representatives of the Philippines as the representative of Surigao del Sur's 2nd district from 2016 to 2025. He previously served as a deputy speaker of the House from 2019 to 2020. He also served as vice governor of Surigao del Sur from 1995 to 1998 and later governor from 2010 to 2016.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Pimentel was born on March 29, 1956, in Tandag, Surigao to Vicente Pimentel Sr., the governor of Surigao from 1946 to 1951, and Felicidad Ty.[1] His siblings include Vicente Pimentel Jr. and Alexander Pimentel.[2]

He graduated from Ateneo de Manila University with a Bachelor of Science in Management degree.[1]

Political career

[edit]

Pimentel first entered politics in 1995 when he became the vice governor of Surigao del Sur, occupying the position until 1998.[1] He ran for governor in the 1998 local elections under the Laban ng Makabayang Masang Pilipino party but lost to incumbent Primo Murillo.[3] From 2001 to 2010, during the gubernatorial term of his brother, Vicente Pimentel Jr., he served as the provincial administrator.[1]

From 2010 to 2016, Pimentel served as governor of Surigao del Sur.[4] In the 2010 gubernatorial elections, he ran under the Lakas-Kampi-CMD party. He then ran under the Liberal Party (LP) during the 2013 elections.[5] During his first two years in office, he helped facilitate the release of people captured by the New People's Army including two mayors of Lingig, Roberto Luna Jr. who was captured in May 2010[6][7] and Henry Dano who was captured in August 2011.[8]

Pimentel taking his oath of office as Deputy House Speaker on July 27, 2019

In 2016, Pimentel, running as the LP candidate, won a seat at the House of Representatives. He officially transferred his voter's registration to Bislig.[9] He secured a second term in 2019 in which he ran under the ruling PDP–Laban party. In July 2019, he was elected Deputy House Speaker and was the designated PDP–Laban spokesperson in the lower house.[10][11] On December 7, 2020, he was ousted as deputy speaker but then became the chairman of the House Special Committee on Strategic Intelligence, a post formerly occupied by Representative Fredenil Castro of Capiz's 2nd District.[12]

Pimentel was elected governor in 2025.[13]

Personal life

[edit]

Pimentel is married to Rosalinda Cabreros Cruz. They have four children.[1]

On July 27, 2020, Pimentel announced that he tested positive for COVID-19. This was after he underwent RT-PCR testing as part of the health protocols instituted for the 5th State of the Nation Address of President Rodrigo Duterte.[14] He eventually recovered and received his negative swab test results on August 27.[15]

Pimentel was the Grand Master of the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines from 2022 to 2023.[16][17]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Johnny Ty Pimentel (born March 29, 1956) is a Filipino politician serving as Governor of Surigao del Sur since June 2025.[1][2] A member of the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino (PDP–Laban), he previously represented the province's second congressional district in the House of Representatives for three consecutive terms from 2016 to 2025.[3][4] Pimentel was born in Tandag, Surigao del Sur, and attended Ateneo de Manila University, where he studied for a Bachelor of Science in Business Management.[5] During his tenure in Congress, he served as Assistant Minority Floor Leader and contributed to legislative efforts, including the passage of measures aimed at regional development.[3] His election as governor in the 2025 midterm elections marked a continuation of the Pimentel family's political influence in the province alongside rival political groups.[2]

Early life

Upbringing and family background

Johnny Pimentel was born on March 29, 1956, in Tandag, Surigao del Sur, to Vicente Pimentel Sr., a lawyer and politician who served as the first governor of undivided Surigao from 1946 to 1951, and Felicidad Ty Pimentel, who later held the governorship and earned the moniker "Iron Lady" for her philanthropy and resolute administrative style.[6][7][8] The Pimentel family maintained extensive connections to Surigao del Sur's political sphere, exemplified by his siblings Vicente Pimentel Jr., who became governor of the province, and Alexander Pimentel, who pursued roles in local and provincial government, demonstrating a consistent pattern of intra-family succession in regional leadership.[9][10] Pimentel's upbringing occurred within this dynastic context in a province dominated by mining operations, particularly nickel extraction, alongside agricultural production of crops like rice, corn, and coconuts, providing early familiarity with the concrete demands of resource oversight and rural community sustenance over abstract policy frameworks.[11]

Education

Johnny Pimentel attended Ateneo de Manila University, where he completed undergraduate studies and earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Management.[5][12][7] This degree represents his primary formal academic credential, with no advanced degrees or postgraduate qualifications documented in available records.[5][13] The curriculum at Ateneo de Manila, a Jesuit institution known for rigorous business education, focused on practical management principles, though specific coursework details for Pimentel remain unelaborated in public sources.[14]

Political career

Provincial and local positions

Pimentel entered provincial politics in 1995 upon election as Vice Governor of Surigao del Sur, a role he occupied until 1998.[7] In this capacity, he assisted the governor in provincial administration during a period when the region, abundant in mineral resources such as nickel, grappled with infrastructural and economic development constraints typical of rural Philippine provinces.[14] His tenure emphasized oversight of local executive functions amid entrenched political competition.[8] Seeking elevation, Pimentel ran for governor of Surigao del Sur in the 1998 elections but did not secure victory, underscoring the challenges of breaking into higher office within a landscape shaped by familial political alliances.[7] This bid reflected early persistence in electoral pursuits, setting the stage for prolonged involvement in provincial governance through PDP-Laban-aligned positions over subsequent decades.[3]

Governorship of Surigao del Sur

Johnny Pimentel served as Governor of Surigao del Sur from June 30, 2010, to June 30, 2016, succeeding his relative Vicente T. Pimentel Jr. and focusing on provincial administration amid the region's reliance on mining and agriculture.[12][7] His tenure emphasized oversight of local resource extraction, where Surigao del Sur's mineral wealth, particularly nickel, drove economic activity; Pimentel supported legal mining operations as a key revenue source while addressing illegal activities through provincial regulatory boards.[15][16] In 2014, his administration issued permits for small-scale gold extraction in areas like Barangay Tambis, though such actions drew scrutiny for potential overlaps with farmland and national highways.[17] Pimentel's governance included efforts to stabilize the Caraga region's economy by promoting compliant mining and related infrastructure, leveraging familial business networks in construction and resources for project execution, though specific outcomes remained tied to national allocations rather than provincial innovation alone.[12] He facilitated the release of individuals captured by the New People's Army during his term, contributing to localized security and disaster mitigation in insurgency-prone areas.[7] Infrastructure development under his watch involved coordination on roads and flood controls, with family-linked firms like J&A Construction securing contracts post-2016, indicating continuity in resource allocation patterns.[18] In disaster response, Pimentel's administration prioritized empirical aid distribution, such as post-conflict rescues, setting a precedent for later actions like the 2025 extensions of relief to 26 fire-affected families in Tandag City's Barangay San Agustin Sur via direct provincial assistance.[19] During seismic events, including twin quakes in October 2025 under his renewed leadership, he directed evacuations of coastal areas and bridge inspections, ensuring no immediate structural failures in key provincial links.[20][21] These measures aligned with Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council protocols, emphasizing rapid coordination over expansive claims of prevention.[22]

Service in the House of Representatives

Johnny Pimentel was elected to represent Surigao del Sur's 2nd congressional district in the House of Representatives starting with the 17th Congress on June 30, 2016.[5] He secured re-election in 2019 for the 18th Congress and again in 2022 as a third-term representative for the 19th Congress, taking his oath on June 1, 2022.[4] During the 18th Congress, Pimentel served as Deputy Speaker from 2019 to 2020, contributing to the chamber's procedural leadership.[5][23] In the 19th Congress, Pimentel holds the role of Assistant Minority Floor Leader for the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino (PDP) in the Commission on Appointments (CA).[3][24] As part of the House contingent, he participates in vetting and confirming presidential appointees to executive positions, advocating for rigorous scrutiny to ensure accountability in government staffing.[25] This involvement underscores his influence on executive oversight, with the CA handling hundreds of nominations, such as the 360 pending confirmations noted in June 2025. Pimentel has played a key procedural role in House investigations, notably as vice chairperson of the Committee on Legislative Franchises during the 2023 probe into Sonshine Media Network International (SMNI).[26] The inquiry examined alleged franchise violations, including financial discrepancies and broadcasting of unverified claims, leading to actions like contempt citations.[27] Pimentel emphasized that the proceedings prioritized institutional integrity over partisan interests, rejecting accusations of power plays in December 2023.[28] His leadership facilitated exhaustive hearings, culminating in the House approval of a bill revoking SMNI's franchise on second reading in March 2024.[29]

Policy positions and achievements

Legislative initiatives and district development

During his tenure in the 17th Congress, Pimentel authored House Bill No. 1899, which proposed establishing multipurpose fish breeding farms and related facilities to boost aquaculture and local livelihoods in Surigao del Sur.[30] He also principal-authored House Bill No. 4682, aimed at creating Barangay Comawas in Bislig City, Surigao del Sur, to enhance administrative efficiency and service delivery in the district's rural areas.[31] These measures targeted agricultural and fisheries sectors, key to the province's economy amid its reliance on mining and farming, though specific outcomes like job creation metrics remain undocumented in public records. In the 19th Congress, Pimentel has focused on oversight to improve education infrastructure funding. In October 2024, during a House committee probe, he testified that former DepEd Undersecretary Epimaco Densing III solicited an 18% kickback—approximately PHP30.6 million—on PHP170 million in school building projects for his district, halting bids after Pimentel's refusal and citing non-compliance with guidelines.[32] [33] This advocacy underscored demands for transparent allocation to address infrastructure deficits in underdeveloped areas, aligning with empirical needs in Surigao del Sur where school facilities lag due to geographic challenges.[34] District development efforts include support for economic initiatives like the Credit Surety Fund cooperative in Surigao del Sur, endorsed during his prior governorship but continued through legislative channels to aid small enterprises in mining and agriculture-dependent communities.[35] Such projects aim to build resilience via targeted funding, though critics have noted potential risks of localized favoritism in resource distribution without broader metrics on poverty reduction or employment gains.[18] Empirical data on impacts, such as irrigation or training centers turned over in the province, indicate incremental progress in skills development but lack direct attribution to Pimentel's bills.[36]

Alignment with national security and anti-corruption efforts

Pimentel has consistently defended the Duterte administration's campaign against illegal drugs as a critical national security measure, arguing that its aggressive enforcement led to measurable reductions in crime and disrupted narco-politics. He urged the Marcos administration in February 2023 to provide an "unequivocal defense" of former President Rodrigo Duterte against International Criminal Court probes into the campaign, asserting there was no clear evidence linking Duterte directly to extrajudicial killings.[37][38] Pimentel characterized Duterte's public "kill" remarks as rhetorical deterrence rather than literal orders, countering human rights critiques from groups like Human Rights Watch—which documented over 6,000 deaths in police operations—by emphasizing empirical public safety gains, including Philippine National Police data showing a 73.7% drop in overall crime rates from 2016 to 2021.[39][40] This stance aligns with first-principles analysis of causation in crime reduction: official statistics from the Department of the Interior and Local Government indicated sharp declines in index crimes such as murder (down significantly) and theft during the campaign's peak, attributed to dismantled syndicates and lowered recidivism through sustained pressure on drug networks, despite international narratives prioritizing death tolls over these outcomes.[40] Pimentel has dismissed unsubstantiated claims of systemic excesses as politically motivated, positioning the policy's deterrence effect as necessary to combat entrenched narco-influence in local governance, where drug lords previously evaded accountability. However, his February 2023 assertion that Duterte "never" ordered suspect killings was contradicted by the former president's own admissions of authorizing police action against threats, though Pimentel maintained these did not equate to endorsements of vigilantism.[41] In anti-corruption efforts, Pimentel has positioned himself as a legislative watchdog, contributing to House probes exposing graft in public institutions. In August 2024, during Quad Committee hearings on drug war-related deaths, he alleged a "grand conspiracy" behind the custody killings of 32 Chinese nationals charged with drug offenses between 2016 and 2019, with three confirmed murders at Davao Prison and Penal Farm; he advocated deeper investigation to uncover potential high-level orchestration aimed at silencing witnesses to larger syndicates, framing it as a threat to institutional integrity.[42] In October 2024, Pimentel testified in a House education committee probe that former Department of Education Undersecretary Epimaco Densing solicited kickbacks from lawmakers for school infrastructure projects, drawing from his experience with similar procurement irregularities and calling for accountability to prevent systemic leakage in education funds.[33] Pimentel's broader contributions include sponsoring a 2022 bill to abolish the Procurement Service of the Department of Budget and Management, labeling it a "breeding ground for corruption" due to repeated scandals in centralized purchasing, and pushing probes into misuse of confidential funds, such as the Social Security System's 2010s stock trading anomalies where executives allegedly profited irregularly.[43][44] These actions underscore his emphasis on structural reforms to curb executive-branch graft, prioritizing verifiable probes over deference to implicated officials, though critics from affected agencies have questioned the probes' partisanship amid ongoing political tensions.[45]

Controversies and criticisms

Allegations of political dynasty dominance

The Pimentel family has maintained significant influence in Surigao del Sur politics for decades, with multiple members holding provincial governorships and congressional seats. Their father, Vicente L. Pimentel Sr., served as governor of Surigao (predecessor to Surigao del Sur) from 1946 to 1951, while their mother, Felicidad Ty-Pimentel, also held the governorship. Among the siblings, Vicente Pimentel Jr. governed Surigao del Sur from 1998 to 2007, Johnny Pimentel from 2010 to 2016, and Alexander Pimentel from 2019 onward until his shift to the House of Representatives. In the May 2025 midterm elections, Alexander Pimentel secured the second congressional district seat with a margin of approximately 10,000 votes over his opponent, while Johnny Pimentel was elected governor, consolidating family control over both executive and legislative roles in the province.[2][46][47] Critics, including political opponents such as allies of former Representative Prospero Pichay, have alleged that this familial entrenchment constitutes a dynasty that stifles electoral competition and perpetuates elite capture, potentially enabling corruption through unchecked power. Such claims often appear in coverage by outlets sympathetic to rival clans, framing the Pimentels' repeated victories as evidence of suppressed challengers rather than broad voter support. However, these allegations lack substantiation from widespread corruption scandals involving the family, with Surigao del Sur exhibiting relatively fewer high-profile graft cases compared to other Philippine provinces dominated by non-dynastic or fragmented leadership, where turnover has correlated with instability in sectors like mining regulation.[48] Proponents, including Johnny Pimentel himself, argue that family continuity provides practical advantages, such as specialized knowledge transfer on regional challenges like mining disputes and infrastructure development in Surigao del Sur's resource-dependent economy, leading to empirical stability and consistent electoral mandates from local voters. Pimentel has publicly stated that political dynasties benefit constituents by ensuring experienced governance tailored to provincial needs, a view supported by the family's successive wins, including overwhelming margins in uncontested or low-controversy races. This contrasts with abstract anti-dynasty ideals, as voter preferences in repeated elections demonstrate preference for perceived competence over outsider novelty, with no constitutional ban enacted despite decades of debate.[49][2]

Disputes over public statements and investigations

In July 2020, amid heightened public scrutiny during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines, Surigao del Sur Representative Johnny Pimentel announced on July 27 that he had tested positive for the virus following a swab test required for congressional attendance ahead of President Rodrigo Duterte's State of the Nation Address.[50][51] Pimentel stated he was adhering to isolation protocols and later confirmed his recovery with a negative test result on August 27, resuming duties thereafter, though the timing drew attention due to limited testing availability and fears of community transmission among lawmakers.[52] No formal investigations ensued, but the incident highlighted challenges in protocol enforcement during the pandemic's initial phase.[53] In February 2023, Pimentel publicly asserted that former President Duterte had never ordered the killing of drug suspects during the anti-drug campaign, emphasizing a lack of "clear evidence" linking Duterte to extrajudicial killings despite over 6,200 reported deaths attributed to the effort.[38] This statement faced fact-checking scrutiny, as Duterte had repeatedly made public remarks encouraging lethal force against resisting suspects, including recorded instances where he urged police to "kill them" in confrontations, though defenders like Pimentel framed these as rhetorical endorsements of self-defense rather than directives for summary executions.[41][54] Empirical outcomes of the campaign, including police operational reports of "nanlaban" (resisted arrest) fatalities, contrasted with Pimentel's denial of explicit kill orders, underscoring debates over intent versus policy implementation.[55] In August 2024, during House probes into drug war-related deaths, Pimentel alleged a "grand conspiracy" behind the systematic killings of at least three Chinese nationals convicted of drug offenses while detained in Philippine jails, suggesting coordinated efforts beyond routine causes like natural death or suicide, potentially tied to broader accountability inquiries.[39][56] He advocated for the House quad committee to substantiate these claims, denying any political motivations and positioning the theory as a counter to narratives implicating past administrations, though accusers in related testimonies had referenced Duterte-era figures without direct evidence against Pimentel.[42][57] The allegation remained unsubstantiated by forensic or official reports at the time, with investigations ongoing into inmate testimonies rather than endorsing the conspiracy framing.[39] Pimentel's October 2024 accusations during a House committee probe into Department of Education (DepEd) infrastructure prompted disputes, as he claimed former Undersecretary Epimaco Densing solicited kickbacks of up to 18% on school building contracts from lawmakers, citing personal conversations but no documentary proof.[34][33] Densing denied the allegations, labeling them baseless and leading Pimentel to retort by calling him a "pathological liar" amid heated exchanges that paused proceedings, with calls for further investigation into the claims versus potential misuse of legislative inquiry for personal vendettas.[58][59] No charges had been filed by late 2024, highlighting tensions between whistleblower assertions and demands for verifiable evidence in anti-corruption probes.[34]

Personal life

Family and marriages

Pimentel has been married to Rosalinda Cabreros Cruz since an undisclosed date, with the couple residing primarily in Surigao del Sur.[5] [7] Their marriage has produced four children, though public records provide limited details on their names and occupations beyond the eldest son, John Paul Pimentel, who has been referenced in family social media posts.[8] [60] The family has not been linked to any documented scandals or legal issues related to personal matters. Pimentel's siblings include brothers Alexander T. Pimentel, who serves as a congressman for Surigao del Sur's second district, and Vicente Pimentel Jr., a former provincial governor.[2] [48] These familial ties reflect common patterns in Philippine provincial politics, where relatives often pursue public office independently.[7] He was born to parents Vicente Pimentel Sr. and Felicidad Ty in Tandag, Surigao del Sur, on March 29, 1956.[8]

Other affiliations and activities

Pimentel is a longstanding member of the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines, where he was initiated as an Entered Apprentice in Red Mountain Masonic Lodge No. 241 on April 15, 1989, and advanced through the degrees, eventually serving as Grand Master starting in 2022.[7] His Masonic involvement includes leadership roles such as issuing edicts, including Edict No. 350 on November 25, 2022, declaring the Grand Lodge of Modern Mixed Masons a clandestine organization, and delivering messages to Masonic districts and events.[61] These activities emphasize fraternal brotherhood and organizational governance outside his legislative duties.[62] In addition to Freemasonry, Pimentel engages directly with constituents through verified social media accounts on platforms like Facebook and Instagram, using them to issue alerts on misinformation attributed to impersonators and to communicate official updates, such as warnings about fabricated quotations in March 2025.[63][64] His Instagram account, @johnnypimentelb, features over 780 posts as of recent activity, focusing on personal and outreach content.[65] This direct digital presence contrasts with traditional mediated public relations, enabling real-time accountability and countering disinformation campaigns targeting him.[63]

References

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