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Maria Corazon Sumulong Cojuangco Aquino
Former President of the Philippines and democracy opposition leader
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
71/100
Raw Score
61/85
Confidence
85%
Evidence
Strong
About
Aquino’s public record is strongest where courage, democratic restraint, and resilience are most visible: she accepted personal risk after her husband’s murder, helped end Ferdinand Marcos’s dictatorship, restored constitutional rule, and left office on schedule. The main cautions are the Mendiola massacre, uneven social reform delivery, and persistent family-land controversies that complicate an otherwise strongly constructive political legacy.
The observable pattern is clearly more good than harmful. Aquino repeatedly chose nonviolent democratic restoration over personal power, endured coup pressure and grief without abandoning constitutional rule, and showed publicly grounded religious discipline. The profile remains below exemplary because the record on helping the rural poor is mixed, and because the state violence and land-reform shortcomings under her administration were serious enough to keep visible.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Aquino scores highest on courage under pressure, democratic restraint, and publicly grounded faith. She does not score near the top because the most vulnerable people in her society did not receive a cleanly convincing reform record, and because the Mendiola killings and land controversies remain real negative evidence rather than footnotes.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Widely documented as a devout Catholic whose speeches and public conduct regularly referenced God and prayer.
Public language about conscience, duty, and moral consequence was steady and explicit.
Her public endurance relied on a clear conviction that history and suffering answered to a higher order.
Practicing Catholic record supports a meaningful positive score for scripture-guided moral life.
Christian witness and nonviolence were framed publicly as examples worth imitating.
Contribution to Others
Public record centers national duties much more than family-specific care.
Some broader family-rights and democratic protections likely helped younger vulnerable people, but direct evidence is thinner.
She pursued land reform and anti-poverty politics, but the results remained mixed and politically constrained.
Restoring civil liberties and political openness materially aided people previously pushed outside public life.
She answered mass public demands for democratic restoration, though not always decisively enough on agrarian justice.
Ending dictatorship and releasing political space is the clearest social-care strength in her record.
Personal Discipline
Multiple sources describe her as deeply prayerful, rosary-centered, and publicly reliant on prayer during crisis.
Public evidence supports disciplined Christian moral giving, though it is less documented than her prayer life.
Reliability
She kept the core democratic promise to step down, but social-justice delivery and command failures keep this score moderate.
Stability Under Pressure
Personal financial-hardship evidence is limited because she came from an elite family background.
Her husband’s assassination and later illnesses are strong evidence of enduring personal hardship without collapse into bitterness.
Repeated coup threats and political violence make this one of the clearest top-tier scores in the profile.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Entered the center of public life after Ninoy Aquino’s assassination
After Benigno Aquino Jr. was assassinated on 21 August 1983, Aquino returned to the Philippines, led the funeral procession, and became the most credible nonviolent rallying point for the anti-Marcos opposition.
→ Turned private grief into public civic leadership and widened the opposition coalition.
highAssumed the presidency after the People Power Revolution
Aquino became the unified opposition candidate in the 7 February 1986 snap election, challenged the fraud-ridden result, and was sworn in on 25 February 1986 after Ferdinand Marcos fled the country.
→ Helped restore democratic rule and reopened political space after dictatorship.
highBrought the 1987 Constitution into force
Aquino’s government moved from revolutionary authority to a ratified constitution that restored a bicameral Congress and put safeguards around emergency power after the Marcos era.
→ Institutionalized a return to constitutional rule instead of keeping indefinite personal power.
highMendiola massacre exposed the cost of delayed land reform and weak command control
Twelve farmers were killed on 22 January 1987 when security forces opened fire during a land-reform march toward Malacanang. Aquino created an investigating commission, but the incident became a lasting negative marker on her record with the rural poor.
→ Undercut trust among poor farmers and remains one of the clearest moral failures associated with her administration.
highLaunched a comprehensive agrarian reform program under heavy pressure
On 22 July 1987 Aquino issued Proclamation No. 131 to announce a comprehensive agrarian reform program and tried to move the issue after months of public anger and elite resistance, including scrutiny of her family’s own estate ties.
→ Demonstrated a real reform commitment, but one that remained compromised by design limits and by Aquino’s own social base.
mediumStayed in office through the December 1989 coup attempt
Aquino faced the most serious of several military coup attempts beginning 1 December 1989. Despite intense danger and political isolation, she remained in office and preserved constitutional government.
→ Confirmed unusual steadiness under direct threat, even as the revolt exposed governance weaknesses around her administration.
highLeft office on schedule and allowed a peaceful democratic succession
Aquino repeatedly ruled out extending her stay in office and left the presidency on 30 June 1992, overseeing the first regular democratic transfer of presidential power since before Marcos’s dictatorship.
→ Strengthened the norm that public office should end on time even when supporters wanted her to stay.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Husband’s assassination and return from exile
1983Aquino lost her husband to political murder and was pulled into public leadership during national turmoil.
Response: She converted grief into disciplined nonviolent opposition rather than retaliatory violence.
positiveMendiola backlash and agrarian justice pressure
1987Her government faced outrage after farmers were killed while demanding land reform.
Response: She ordered investigation and later advanced agrarian reform, but the response did not fully repair the trust loss.
mixedDecember 1989 coup attempt
1989A major military revolt threatened her presidency and the post-Marcos democratic order.
Response: She stayed in office, defended constitutional government, and outlasted the putschists.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Her presidency showed real steadiness under violent pressure but also exposed limits in reform delivery and command control.
mixedcurrent stage
Her historical legacy stays net-positive because she restored democratic institutions and left office peacefully, though not without lasting social-justice criticism.
stableearly years
A private political spouse became a reluctant but credible opposition figure after traumatic loss.
upgrowth years
Her legitimacy rose sharply as she translated moral credibility into a democratic transition.
upStrongest positives
- • Restored democratic rule after dictatorship and did not hold onto revolutionary powers indefinitely.
- • Showed unusual resilience through assassination, repeated coup attempts, and public grief.
- • Stepped down on schedule and reinforced peaceful constitutional succession.
Key concerns
- • The 22 January 1987 Mendiola massacre remains a serious moral and governance failure.
- • Land reform was real but compromised, leaving lasting doubts about solidarity with the rural poor.
- • Family-land and elite-network controversies weakened the integrity signal around social justice promises.
Behavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly preferred nonviolent democratic legitimacy to personal power.
- • Displayed calm religiously framed endurance during bereavement, coups, and political pressure.
- • Accepted leaving office on time rather than stretching constitutional ambiguity.
Concerns
- • Rural-poor solidarity looked less decisive when land reform touched elite family interests.
- • The administration’s command failures around Mendiola remain a durable stain on the record.
Evidence Quality
10
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
Evidence warnings
- • Public evidence for private household-level generosity is limited.
- • The record for routine personal charity is thinner than the record for constitutional and civic conduct.
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person’s soul.