Pacquiao to use political clout for Olympic goals

MANILA, (Reuters) – Seven-time world champion  Manny Pacquiao made a vow to improve life in his poor southern  hometown and to help the Philippines win a first Olympic gold  medal in his maiden speech as a lawmaker in Congress.

The Philippines has won nine medals, including two silvers  from boxing, since it first attended the Summer Games in 1924.

“I want us all to work together and to work very hard to  win the first Filipino gold medal in the Olympics,” Pacquiao  said in in his speech in the lower house of Congress late on  Tuesday.

The 31-year-old Pacquiao, ranked as the world’s fifth  highest-earning athlete this year by Sports Illustrated,  outlined legislative goals of improving livelihoods, education  and health care for his Sarangani province.

“Forty percent of the people of Sarangani have no adequate  housing, no adequate food and no proper nutrition. For those 40  percent, it’s not just a statistic. It’s their daily experience  of life,” Pacquiao said, adding he had experienced it too.

He promised to use his congressional funds to build  schools, hospitals and provide alternative skills training for  poor farmers and fishermen in his three-year term.

Pacquiao is expected to take some time off from politics to  prepare for a November bout against either Mexican Antonio  Margarito or Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto after failing to reach a  deal for a super fight with undefeated American Floyd  Mayweather.