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	<title>NoyPI Ako! &#187; Shalani Soledad</title>
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		<title>She’s that girl &#8211; Valenzuela City Councilor Shalani Soledad</title>
		<link>http://noypi-ako.com/she%e2%80%99s-that-girl-valenzuela-city-councilor-shalani-soledad/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Apr 2010 10:38:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Awie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[NoyPI Blogger]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Election 2010]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Liberal Party]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Noynoy Aquino]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[(Interviewed by RACHEL C. BARAWID, ANGELO G. GARCIA, RONALD S. LIM, JASER A. MARASIGAN, and IVY LISA F. MENDOZA.)
STUDENTS AND CAMPUSES BULLETIN (SCB): What inspired you to enter politics?
SHALANI SOLEDAD (SS): It was my uncle, Tito Mon, who was supposed to run but one time over dinner, out of the blue, he just said matanda [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>(Interviewed by RACHEL C. BARAWID, ANGELO G. GARCIA, RONALD S. LIM, JASER A. MARASIGAN, and IVY LISA F. MENDOZA.)</em></p>
<p><strong>STUDENTS AND CAMPUSES BULLETIN (SCB)</strong>: What inspired you to enter politics?</p>
<p><strong>SHALANI SOLEDAD (SS):</strong> It was my uncle, Tito Mon, who was supposed to run but one time over dinner, out of the blue, he just said matanda na raw siya at ako na lang daw ang tumakbo in 2004. Ako naman, I readily said yes without really thinking how hard the job would be, and I discovered that I enjoy the job. Totoo pala ‘yung sinasabi nila na sense of fulfillment when you can contribute to the development of other people’s lives. That for me, is what makes me stay in this job.</p>
<p><strong>SCB:</strong> How did you view politics before you entered this arena?</p>
<p><strong>SS: </strong>I really had no plans. I was still in school and at the same time, I was with the office of Sen. Ping Lacson as part of his executive staff. I did not have a five-year plan. That just goes to show how destiny works. It is not something you really plan. Masu-surprise ka na lang sa situation na nandun ka na. And thankfully for me, this job has given me so much more.</p>
<p><strong>SCB:</strong> Are you a people person, in a sense that you know most people in your community?</p>
<p><strong>SS:</strong> In that sense, my family is more outgoing than I am. I tend to have a small set of friends. The friends I had in elementary are still my best friends today. Mas nangangapitbahay<br />
‘yung brother ko, mga pinsan ko. Ako mas kilala ako as the kapatid, as the pamangkin, as the cousin. They are very active in sports. Every summer, without fail, meron silang<br />
basketball team, and every summer sasabihin nila hindi ka namin kukuning muse. (laughs) And every summer din, wala silang nakukuha kundi ako din. (laughs)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/251905/she-s-girl" target="_blank">Full interview</a></p>
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		<title>People Power at Araneta &#8211; Siya na Nga!</title>
		<link>http://noypi-ako.com/people-power-at-araneta-siya-na-nga/</link>
		<comments>http://noypi-ako.com/people-power-at-araneta-siya-na-nga/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Mar 2010 10:53:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Awie</dc:creator>
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		<title>A love story people are talking about</title>
		<link>http://noypi-ako.com/a-love-story-people-are-talking-about/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Feb 2010 04:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lito</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[MSM News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Noynoy Aquino]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shalani Soledad]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Thelma Sioson San Juan
Philippine Daily Inquirer
MANILA, Philippines&#8211;She stood at the lanai door quietly, a box of cake in her hands, just waiting for her presence to be noticed. If we didn’t look that way, we wouldn’t have known that our main lunch guest was already there—with the dessert.
Shalani Soledad, 29, joined our lunch the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Thelma Sioson San Juan<br />
Philippine Daily Inquirer</em></p>
<p>MANILA, Philippines&#8211;She stood at the lanai door quietly, a box of cake in her hands, just waiting for her presence to be noticed. If we didn’t look that way, we wouldn’t have known that our main lunch guest was already there—with the dessert.</p>
<p>Shalani Soledad, 29, joined our lunch the way she did the national scene—quietly. Until her presence was noticed, triggering a media frenzy. People were suddenly curious about the beautiful, young woman the elusive bachelor Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III, 50, has been seeing.</p>
<p>Except for a few “ambush interviews,” she stayed low-key, although amply photographed whenever she showed up at official functions. Generally, however, she was unseen and unheard from.<span id="more-3347"></span></p>
<p>That was until this day, when she agreed to join the Thanksgiving turkey lunch our chef/friend prepared upon our request. This was late last year. We’d join Shalani a few times after that—at dinners and in the Inquirer Look magazine cover shoot at Shangri-La Makati last December, when she took the MRT from Valenzuela City to Makati to beat the holiday Edsa traffic and not delay the shoot.</p>
<p>Simple, no-fuss girl, we said as early as then.</p>
<p>It’s a simplicity instantly evident in the way she dressed up. That Thanksgiving lunch, she was in skinny denim jeans and white cotton lace top, with no accessories except for diamond stud earrings—and most obvious of all, a thin black band bracelet with yellow lettering traced in diamond glitter. The lettering reads “Noy.”</p>
<p>Denim jeans, tees or cotton blouses/dresses, that Noy black bracelet—we’d discover later—are her regular style. That, and no makeup, not even lip gloss.</p>
<p>We’d also learn she’s most involved in, if not passionate about, two things—Noynoy and politics, particularly the people it brings. Not only is she not afraid of people, she, relatively young as she is, apparently loves people.</p>
<p>This was why she took up Human Resource Management at the College of Saint Benilde, and, even while in college, worked in the media office of Sen. Panfilo Lacson and the UNTV channel.</p>
<p>As Valenzuela City councilor, she enjoys making the obligatory rounds of wakes, weddings, baptisms and other community socials. She has more than 80 godchildren (from baptism)—and keeps track of each of them.</p>
<p>At a wake, her friends say, she can stay on for hours just talking to the bereaved and joining the table games. Her uncle, former mediaman Mon Soledad, still chuckles at the sight of his niece enjoying lugao served at the wake.</p>
<p><strong>Memorable project</strong></p>
<p>To her, what was memorable in her first years as councilor—she’s on her third and final term—was her project on early child development.</p>
<p>“We studied and monitored the development of kids in the community, starting with nutrition, brain development,” she said. She sounded as if she truly enjoyed the stuff other girls her age (23 at the time) would consider nerdy.</p>
<p>It was also her love of meeting people that led her to a first meeting with Senator Aquino—a very brief encounter the two have almost forgotten. Shalani was an on-cam UNTV reporter covering the impeachment proceedings in the Senate when she joined the media pack interviewing Aquino.</p>
<p>“By the time my turn came,” she recalled, “almost all questions about the impeachment have been asked. So I asked instead about his sister Kris and a brewing controversy—I can’t remember now what it was.”</p>
<p>Shalani laughed at the memory. Of course, Aquino gave the expected I-don’t-meddle-with-my-sister-affairs line. Years later, when Shalani reminded Aquino of that flash interview, the two could only laugh at that “irrelevant show-biz question.”</p>
<p>Yet as early as then, it was obvious who Shalani was initially interested in where Cory Aquino’s family was concerned—Kris. She told Noynoy that when he first brought her to a family lunch, she was excited because she would finally meet Kris.</p>
<p>“I was really starstruck,” she remembered.</p>
<p>The public likes to perceive friction between the hot <a href="http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20100214-253070/A-love-story-people-are-talking-about" target="_top">celebrity</a> sister and the senator’s girlfriend, especially when, immediately after the death of former President Cory Aquino, Kris made her only brother promise to stay single. But that’s an old issue by now. Shalani has long reacted to it—“What matters really is what Noy says.”</p>
<p><strong>Family lunch</strong></p>
<p>Two nights ago, at dinner, we didn’t sense any discomfort about Kris. Shalani said that, contrary to public perception or speculation, “it’s Kris who always makes it a point to invite me to the Sunday family lunch.”</p>
<p>(Especially since Cory’s death, Noynoy and his four sisters, Ballsy, Pinky, Viel and Kris, have made the Sunday lunch a family ritual, and it’s Kris apparently who is usually active at organizing it.)</p>
<p>Today, Valentine’s, is Kris’ birthday, Shalani reminded us, smiling. Kris has invited her to the birthday <a href="http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20100214-253070/A-love-story-people-are-talking-about" target="_top">get-together</a>. So she and Noynoy will spend Valentine’s with Kris.</p>
<p>At the onset of their relationship, Shalani admitted she and Noynoy agreed to some terms, foremost of which was “that family is a nonnegotiable issue.” This means she knew from the start Noynoy’s ties and commitment to his family, and she, hers. And now, his commitment to the presidency and the country.</p>
<p>It’s good that Shalani is not clingy, we (fishing for reaction, of course) told Senator Aquino once. To which he said, “Perhaps it helps that she has her own busy schedule. Palaging hermana mayor yan, may kasal.”</p>
<p>These days, Shalani keeps her own killer-paced campaign itinerary, as re-electionist councilor and Aquino supporter. For the presidential campaign, she’s been to Cagayan de Oro, Davao, Zamboanga, Marinduque, among other stops—separate from the senator’s itinerary. (“Because it’s more efficient that way,” she explained.)</p>
<p>And she seems to thrive in politics.</p>
<p>This was an evolution that was hardly expected of her. Her family wasn’t really a political family, at least not in the Aquino mode.</p>
<p>Her mother Evelyn’s family—the Soledads—hails from Bicol. Her mother’s younger brother Mon married a Bulakeña of a landed family from Valenzuela, so Shalani has lived most of her life in Valenzuela. They’re only two; older brother Carlo is now an entrepreneur living in Antipolo.</p>
<p>She grew up mostly with uncle Mon, his wife Baby and their brood of three boys, since her mother worked as airline attendant and thus was seasonally away. But when Shalani was in high school at Marymount in BF, Parañaque, and in college at St. Benilde, she enjoyed the close-knit extended family.</p>
<p>After her airline stint, Evelyn went into the food business and, not known to many, she was the food director of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo at Malacañang for a time. She quit, however, even before Shalani and Aquino went steady, and now runs her own catering business.</p>
<p><strong>No-fear generation</strong></p>
<p>It was at the family dinner table one night that uncle Mon, who was being asked to run as councilor, turned to his niece and said, “Why don’t you run instead?” Shalani, she of the no-fear generation, agreed, open to new experience.</p>
<p>Her first stint as councilor was tough, especially since she was up against seasoned opponents. Upon learning that a powerful religious bloc would not support her, she ran to her room, crying, and locked herself up.</p>
<p>But uncle Mon told her to come out, stop crying, and face the hurdle “like a grownup.” (She placed fifth that first time. In the next elections, she topped the councilor polls.) Indeed it’s been obvious how the uncle has been protective and nurturing of her.</p>
<p>Now everybody, including her uncle, calls her konsehala. She now told us being a councilor has opened the door to many learnings and opportunities.</p>
<p>“If I didn’t become councilor, I wouldn’t have known the nitty gritty of building a classroom, why leveling this lot would cost this or that, or why tents are so important in the lives of people,” she said.</p>
<p>The poor use tents for wakes and weddings, and Shalani treats tents as if they were God’s blessings she should make available to everyone, any time.</p>
<p>Today, one sees she has learned politics astutely. When we asked her what she thought would take to win over the masa, she noted sadly that, while the masa could be so familiar with a candidate, sometimes at the end of the day, when a poor family is in dire need, it’s the politician who is ready to dole out whom they will remember come election time.</p>
<p>“It’s the Filipino’s sense of utang na loob,” she said.</p>
<p>Even Noynoy observes that Shalani wasn’t always this involved or knowledgeable of politics, not when they first met at least. But then, they have also spent a lot of time the past year and so many months and days (Noynoy has the exact count of days they’ve been going steady) talking about politics, people’s projects and such.</p>
<p>When asked what drew them to each other, Noynoy would always readily say it’s the rapport, and apparently that exchange was mainly about each other’s political involvement. Noynoy was born to politics, Shalani was/is interested in politics. They can spend a date, when Noynoy comes calling amid his hectic schedule, just talking for hours about it.</p>
<p><strong>‘Kilig’ dialogue</strong></p>
<p>As the story is repeatedly told, the two met at Alfredo’s. She was with her colleagues at one table, he with his staff at another table. Each spotted the other, and the rest is stuff of Philippine campaign history.</p>
<p>But of that early romance, what draws fond chuckles now is the recollection of a kilig dialogue. The senator was recalling his brush with death in 1987 when he was ambushed at the height of the coup, when his bodyguards died and he sustained a bullet wound (a fraction of that bullet is still lodged in the left side of his neck, behind the ear, which explains why his head seems to have that perennial tilt).</p>
<p>Touched by that story, Shalani told him there must be a reason he now had a new lease on life, meaning destiny must have a greater plan for him. The senator-suitor replied, “Yes, [the reason being] that I’d meet you 20 years later.”</p>
<p>Talk about a pa-pogi line.</p>
<p>Not only did the two hit it off, the senator-suitor also blended well with Shalani’s younger male cousins. They’d watch movies and go malling. As Shalani’s cousin Martin said, “He’s taong-tao. Funny. Really cool.”</p>
<p>Martin can’t forget one dinner in a restaurant, when Noynoy, out of the blue, bought flowers which he then offered Shalani.</p>
<p>Believing in her boyfriend’s destined role now, Shalani has decided to forego running for Congress and just seek reelection as councilor so she could focus on his campaign.</p>
<p>“If I ran for Congress, I could help my district. But if we work [for Aquino’s candidacy], it’s the greater country that stands to benefit,” she said matter of factly.</p>
<p>Curiously, Noynoy doesn’t show off Shalani. He doesn’t bring her to high-profile functions. Obviously, he believes a sliver of privacy could still be kept at this point.</p>
<p>As to whether or not their relationship will go to a deeper level—marriage, in short, like what many are curious about—Shalani said that like in any relationship, “one waits for defining moments.”</p>
<p>Exactly what those moments are, she couldn’t specify. “You just know they are defining moments.”</p>
<p>When her mother first learned that Shalani was seeing the senator, she sat down with her daughter for a woman talk. Her mother reminded, if not cautioned, her that the Aquinos are a very wealthy and prominent clan.</p>
<p>“Do you know what you’re getting into?” her mother asked her.</p>
<p>Today, more than a year later, apparently, the daughter does know.</p>
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		<title>A Normal Kind of Girl</title>
		<link>http://noypi-ako.com/a-normal-kind-of-girl/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Dec 2009 09:57:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lito</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[MSM News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Noynoy Aquino]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shalani Soledad]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Gigi Muñoz David – Manila Standard
Valenzuela City Councilor Shalani Soledad has not made up her mind about what to give her boyfriend for Christmas.
What is definite is that she will be having Christmas Day dinner with her beloved’s family, just as she did last year. Things will be very different this year, though. This [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Gigi Muñoz David – Manila Standard</em></p>
<p>Valenzuela City Councilor Shalani Soledad has not made up her mind about what to give her boyfriend for Christmas.</p>
<p>What is definite is that she will be having Christmas Day dinner with her beloved’s family, just as she did last year. Things will be very different this year, though. This year, her boyfriend is running for president and, understandably, all activities are centered around it.</p>
<p>If the councilor’s Christmas gifts and arrangements are the subject of much speculation, it is because the boyfriend in question in Senator Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III and his family is one of the most popular clans in politics and show business.<br />
<span id="more-2552"></span><br />
In an exclusive interview with Standard Today, the 29-year-old Soledad reveals that while Christmas dinner will be at the Aquino home in Quezon City, the senator will spend Christmas Eve with her family in Valenzuela.</p>
<p>“It was the same last year, when President Cory was still alive,” she says.</p>
<p><strong>Starstruck</strong></p>
<p>The reserved Soledad will not reveal details of her relationship with her boyfriend’s sisters but says she is not intimidated by them.</p>
<p>“Maybe starstruck is the right word, especially with Kris. I’ve always been a fan, even during my college days and I was pleasantly surprised to learn that she is a very ‘real’ person,” she adds.</p>
<p>“They’re all okay,” is her brief answer to queries about the senator’s other siblings and relatives.</p>
<p>The low-key councilor was formally introduced to the Aquino family by Noynoy in 2008, over lunch at Kris’ house.</p>
<p>These days, however, the sweethearts don’t see much of each other because of Aquino’s hectic campaign schedule. They talk everyday on the phone, Soledad says.</p>
<p>“There are times pag may invitations, nagkikita kami. Though he wants me to be with him in his engagements, I don’t go most of the time. It’s better if he goes with Senator Mar [Roxas],” she explains.</p>
<p>If their schedules allow it, they go out for dinner. Bellisimo, an Italian restaurant, is a favorite. They also love to watch movies but this, the couple does at home.</p>
<p>During the interview at Soledad’s residence, the councilor downplayed all the attention she is getting.</p>
<p>“How the people react to me is an extension of how they see Senator Noynoy. Wherever I go, they ask me where he is,” she reveals.</p>
<p>Soledad reveals that Aquino is very supportive of her vision for Valenzuela City: “He knows how much I love what I do.”</p>
<p>Despite reports that she will seek a congressional seat in next year’s election, Soledad says she will run for her third and last term as councilor.</p>
<p>“I want to help Senator Noynoy in his campaign sorties, in whatever little way I could help the Liberal Party by initially focusing on my community,” she adds.</p>
<p>Soledad became interested in politics after working for the Baras government in 2001 and Senator Panfilo Lacson in 2002.</p>
<p>Despite a very brief stint as a model, Soledad has refused offers to endorse fashion and beauty brands, as she says this is really not her thing.</p>
<p><strong>Just a simple girl</strong></p>
<p>Away from the limelight and politics, Soledad is a simple girl who enjoys hanging out with her cousins Martell, Raynall and Ramonel and playing badminton. She loves the movies and is a big fan of Twilight.</p>
<p>One thing she has in common with her boyfriend’s family is that she is very religious. Soledad hears mass everyday and prays the novena in Baclaran, Tuesday midnight or Wednesday. She loves Baguio and Tagaytay and looks forward to visiting Batanes, once her schedule allows it. She also likes the beach and says her favorites are Boracay and Puraran Beach in Baras, Catanduanes.</p>
<p>Otherwise, Soledad just stays home and reads during the very little free time that she has.</p>
<p>When asked if she and Aquino plan to marry after the 2010 elections, Soledad answers in the negative.</p>
<p>“What is important is, our relationship is healthy and we are working on it together. When the defining moment comes, I hope we could pass it together. It’s not something we could answer readily,” she says.</p>
<p>But if he asks for her hand in marriage, Soledad says she will say yes.</p>
<p>“Mahal ko eh [I love him],” she admits.</p>
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