Lawmakers to resume House hearing with vloggers on Tuesday

Vloggers and social media influencers, including the three personalities who apologized for disseminating fake news on their official accounts, will attend the continuation of the House Representatives’ tri-committee hearing into the proliferation of false information online.

APPEARANCE Several vloggers and social media personalities
invited as resource persons take their oath during the House
tri-committee hearing on the spread of “fake news” and disinformation
in March 2025. —SCREENGRAB FROM THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

MANILA, Philippines — Vloggers and social media influencers, including the three personalities who apologized for disseminating fake news on their official accounts, will attend the continuation of the House Representatives’ tri-committee hearing into the proliferation of false information online.

In a statement on Sunday, Laguna Rep. Dan Fernandez — public order and safety panel head — disclosed that Krizette Laureta Chu, Mark Lopez, Mary Jane Quiambao Reyes, and former press secretary and vlogger Atty. Rose Beatrix “Trixie” Cruz-Angeles is among the vloggers and social media influencers asked to attend the ongoing probe.

READ: Vloggers testify during House hearing on social media misinformation

The tri-committee — panels on public order and safety, information and communications technology, and public information — is currently probing the online spread of disinformation and fake news.

Below is the list of other vloggers and online influencers invited as resource persons:

Aside from these names, Fernandez said the tri-comm also subpoenaed 24 vloggers and influencers to testify during the upcoming hearing. The joint panel likewise warned the following of facing contempt charges and detention if they opt to skip the probe:

During the last hearing, two vloggers apologized to House lawmakers after they were confronted with evidence that ran contrary to their claims.

Quiambao-Reyes apologized to Manila 6th District Rep. Bienvenido Abante Jr. for claiming that extrajudicial killings (EJKs) in the Duterte administration’s drug war were a “hoax,” and that those who criticized former President Rodrigo Duterte were funded by drug cartels, terrorists, and corrupt politicians.

Meanwhile, Chu, who introduced herself as an editor with a political online blog, apologized for claiming that many police officers were about to resign after the International Criminal Court (ICC) took custody of the former president.

Aside from the vloggers, Fernandez said representatives from social media platforms such as Meta (Facebook), TikTok, and Google are also expected to attend the hearing and answer questions about their “content moderation systems and cooperation with government efforts against fake news.”

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