Bagong Pilipinas () is the slogan of the administration of Bongbong Marcos, which focuses on an all-inclusive plan for economic and social transformation. After the issuance of Executive Order No. 14 (s. 2023) and the classification of the Pambansang Pabahay Para sa Pilipino as a national program, Memorandum Circular No. 24 was signed, establishing the Bagong Pilipinas as the administration's brand of governance and leadership. The name is derived from a campaign jingle used during Marcos's 2022 presidential campaign.
Rev. Fr. Ranhilio Callangan Aquino, who defines Bagong Pilipinas as the "transformation of the idea of being a Filipino," outlined the key concepts of this governance campaign:
The Bagong Pilipinas concept of government is designed not to preserve the privileged, but to promote inclusivity in both fact and deed. It envisions an enabling government that actively reaches out to the people, dismantling structural barriers by engaging the active involvement of citizens and private groups.
Bagong Pilipinas was officially launched with a kick-off rally on January 28, 2024, at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila, the capital of the Philippines. It was attended by about 400,000 supporters with the participation of Vice President Sara Duterte, other key Malacañang officials, and Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna. The rally was streamed online to engage a wider audience beyond Manila.
The Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) was in charge of traffic management. Several illegally parked vehicles on Mel Lopez Boulevard (R-10) in Tondo were towed in preparation for the rally. Traffic was re-routed around Rizal Park, and around 914 MMDA personnel were deployed to assist motorists and manage traffic.
Several government services were made available for free to the public during the event such as registration for national IDs, civil registration services, PRC exam applications, police clearance for first-time job-seekers, drug tests, neuropsychiatric tests, notary and gun safety seminars, licenses to possess firearms, housing loan applications, etc.
About two weeks before the rally, the Office of the President released Memorandum Circular No. 42, "directing" all national government agencies to "attend, participate, and provide full support to the 'Bagong Pilipinas' official campaign kickoff rally". Each line agency was ordered to send at least 1,000 participants, and several agencies also said compensatory time-offs and/or various benefits would be given to their employees who attend.
During the rally, an interview by the Philippine Daily Inquirer of an attending local official from Laguna cited the January 19 memorandum of Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) Secretary Benhur Abalos "strongly encouraging" local government units in the National Capital Region, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal, Bulacan, Pampanga, Angeles City, and Olongapo to attend the kick-off rally. The Inquirer also overheard some attendees saying "" ("There's no handout").
Senator Risa Hontiveros criticized the rally as a front for the People's Initiative (PI) signature drive to amend the Constitution. The rally was also called by progressive groups a "waste of people's resources" and "an expensive PR blitz to cover up the crisis the country is facing". A few hours after the Bagong Pilipinas rally, a prayer rally dubbed Hakbang ng Maisug was held in Davao City, attended by former president Rodrigo Duterte, his daughter Vice President Sara Duterte, and Marcos Jr's very own sister Senator Imee Marcos, denouncing ongoing PI efforts.
Bagong Alyansang Makabayan criticized the government for allocating nearly for the kick-off rally "like thereâÂÂs no crisis." According to bidding documents, of the budget went to technical equipment rentals, while the remaining went to tokens and collateral. An additional was also initially allocated by the Presidential Communications Office for entertainment services, but the bidding didn't push through.
On June 4, 2024, Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin signed Memorandum Circular No. 52, which directed government agencies and schools to include the singing of the âÂÂBagong Pilipinasâ hymn and the recitation of the âÂÂPanata sa Bagong Pilipinasâ pledge in weekly flag ceremonies, as required by Section 18 of Republic Act No. 8491. The âÂÂBagong Pilipinasâ hymn, which begins with the words Panahon na ng pagbabago (âÂÂIt is time for changeâÂÂ), is a patriotic and nationalistic anthem, bearing a resemblance to the Bagong Pagsilang from the administration of former President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. The circular further directed the Presidential Communications Group to implement the circular.
Earlier, in July 2023, Marcos Jr. also ordered government agencies to include the âÂÂBagong Pilipinasâ slogan in their programs and projects.
The hymn and pledge received criticism from several teachers groups and the advocacy group Campaign Against the Return of the Marcoses and Martial Law (CARMMA); the groups noted the hymn and pledge were reminiscent of the hymn of the Martial law era of Bongbong Marcos' father and that more time would be consumed with the additional ceremonies. The Concerned Artists of the Philippines and ACT Teachers partylist described the hymn and pledge as an "old tune" and a "gimmick" of the government to whitewash its failures.