technically you are considered married in the us, but if you don't tell, nobody will ever know.
If this was the first time the spouse cheated and they are remorseful and want to stay in the marriage then yes, it is worth trying to save the marriage by seeing a marriage counselor who is not there to blame either spouse, but to give them the tools to strengthen their marriage. If the spouse continually cheats then it is best to get a divorce.
because she cheated on him
She cheated on him.
Depends on State laws and your financial circumstances. Please resubmit question , include your State and some more info and put it in the Divorce and Marriage Law category.
No. Civil status (i.e. being single or married) is governed by the law of your citizenship. In this case, a Filipino citizen is governed by Philippine law as regards his/her civil status. Therefore, if he/she wants to be free of those marriage ties, he/she must avail of annulment of marriage in the Philippines. Unless he/she becomes a US citizen later on, he/she may properly file for divorce in the US courts.
The US courts may grant you a divorce but in the Philippines you would still be married. You will need to get an annulment of your marriage in the Philippines.
You have the right to a divorce. But with the advent of no fault divorce, you would have had that right anyway. You may be able to get favorable consideration in custody and in alimony, depending on how the state's laws are written, but generally, it doesn't matter who cheated if the marriage will end in divorce.
He cheated on her
No, the parties to a divorce don't have that kind of leverage.
The divorce rate for the first marriage is 41%. The divorce rate for the second marriage is 60%. The divorce rate for the third marriage is 73%.
he cheated
because he cheated on her