The Christian Science Monitor

In the Philippines, divided politics feed – and feed on – a divided web

Blogger Jover Laurio poses with a fan and a copy of her book at a booth at a rally commemorating the anniversary of the 1986 People Power Revolution in Quezon City, Philippines, on Sunday, Feb. 25, 2018. The book, titled "Resibo" ("receipt"), is a compilation of Ms. Laurio's posts on her site "Pinoy Ako Blog" ("I am Filipino"), where she writes cutting letters to members and allies of President Rodrigo Duterte's administration.

Mocha Uson sweeps into her office at the presidential compound, assistant at her booted heels. She’s late, rushing in from another engagement that ran longer than planned. But she appears composed, almost reserved, as she arranges herself on a faux-leather settee and waits for the interview to begin.

In this setting it’s hard to picture Esther Margaux Uson, known countrywide as “Mocha,” sashaying across a stage in vinyl hot pants or dispensing advice on sex and relationships. Yet for the better part of a decade, provocative entertainment was the core of her career – first fronting for the Mocha Girls, an all-female music group known for racy numbers, and later responding to intimate reader questions via a series of written and video blogs.

Then in 2015, she learned about Rodrigo Duterte.

“He was different from traditional politicians. And at the time … there weren’t any well-known personalities who publicly supported him,” Ms. Uson says in a mix of English and Tagalog. “So I said, ‘I have to make a stand.’ ”

Through the first few months of 2016, she stunned the Philippine political world by converting the Mocha Uson Blog to an online rallying point for

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