President-elect Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is naturally allowed to visit the United States, a positioning authority said Thursday.

In a media roundtable, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, said: "This isn't something that should be examined. The truth of the matter is that when you're head of state, you have (conciliatory) resistance in all conditions and are welcome to the United States in your authority job."

Had Marcos been the president at the time Washington DC held the US-Association of Southeast Asian Nations Special Summit last May, Sherman added: "He would have been there."

The assertion came when she was gotten some information about the duly elected president's hatred judgment in the US.

Sherman said President Joseph Biden anticipates working with Marcos and his organization on a scope of areas of collaboration, including wellbeing, energy, and guard and security, among others.

Sherman was the primary high-positioning unfamiliar government official to by and by meet Marcos after he was broadcasted president-elect.

On their two-sided meet, Sherman, said: "We had an exceptionally certain and useful gathering about the expansive scope of issues critical to the respective connection between our nations — including individuals to-individuals ties, clean energy, food security, comprehensive monetary turn of events, diminishing obstructions to exchange and speculation, and keeping up with opportunity of route in the South China Sea and maintaining the standards based global request."

"President Biden anticipates working with President-elect Marcos and his organization when they get down to business in the following couple of weeks," she added.