Eduardo Murphy "Danding" Cojuangco, Jr. (born June 10, 1935) is the chairman of San Miguel Corporation, the largest food and beverage corporation in the Philippines, and was a candidate for the Philippine presidency in 1992, ultimately losing to Fidel Ramos. He tested the political waters in 2003, planning to run in the 2004 Presidential and Local Elections, but soon withdrew. He was a close advisor and personal friend to former President Ferdinand E. Marcos, which led him to become estranged from his cousin, Corazon Aquino, who succeeded Marcos as president. Cojuangco is of partial Irish and Chinese descent.
Cojuangco was a member of the Rolex 12, a group of 12 men who were closest to Marcos and allegedly were his enforcers of Martial Law. Cojuangco also was accused by the military men at the scene of the Aquino's assassination, as the leader who orchestrated the crime.
He is currently the chairman emeritus of the Nationalist People's Coalition, the party he founded in 1992 which served as his vehicle to further his aspirations in the 1992 presidential elections.
He was also an advocate for sports in the country through using his company as sponsors for various events. He is notable for supporting hugely on basketball since the 1980's as a basketball godfather for President Marcos with the famed Northern Consolidated teams of coach Ron Jacobs and the three SMC owned teams currently playing in the Philippine Basketball Association (the flagship San Miguel Beermen, Barangay Ginebra, and Purefoods Chunkee Giants).
Thoroughbred horse racing
Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr. is the owner of Gooree Stud at Mudgee, New South Wales, a Thoroughbred racing and breeding operation whose horses compete in Australia and New Zealand. Cojuangco's noted horses includes the American colt Manila, who won the 1986 Breeders' Cup Turf and the 2002 Australian Derby winner, Don Eduardo.
Profile
CHAIRMAN AND CEO, SAN MIGUEL CORP.
Born: June 10, 1935, in Manila, Philippines
Education: Degree in agriculture
Family: Married with four children
Power point: It's nice to have friends in high places. It seems hardly coincidental, after all, that Cojuangco was installed chairman and CEO of SMCone day after his friend Joseph Estrada took the presidential oath. But Cojuangco has made SMC immensely profitable, transforming it into a lean, mean, conglomerate machine. He is also aggressively leading SMC into the Internet economy. One of Estrada's low-key yet influential economic and political advisers, Cojuangco is still enjoying his happy hour.

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