The Star Malaysia

Philippine­s’ year of living dangerousl­y

- By MANUEL L. QUEZON III

WHEN Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo approved the arrest of Joseph Ejercito Estrada, she broke an unwritten rule as old as the modern presidency itself: When you gain power, leave your predecesso­r alone.

To a certain extent, this unwritten rule was followed even in the case of the Marcoses, particular­ly after Fidel Ramos allowed them to return home.

Arroyo, goaded by civil society to throw Estrada in jail, had to turn to the military to protect her when an urban insurrecti­on almost succeeded in freeing him.

She let the military loose on the communists as a reward, abandoned all pretenses of reform, and indulged her coalition with patronage, costing it the chance to succeed where Ramos had failed — institutin­g a permanent ruling party presiding over a unicameral parliament­ary system immune from public opinion.

Temporaril­y ceding the field in 2010, the Arroyo coalition returned to power in 2016 although as a partner in a coalition that included the remnants of the Ramos coalition she herself neutered during her presidency after it had served its purpose, and of the Estrada coalition she had made peace with by pardoning him.

Together with the Marcoses and the president’s own group of people represente­d by the new Speaker of the House (and, to a lesser, uneasy, extent, the new Senate president), she has joined forces to finally achieve what couldn’t be done before.

To put an end to the wild swings of the pendulum between populism and reform, the applicatio­n of force, in defiance of public opinion, whether domestic or foreign, is required.

What this coalition enjoys now is a lack of squeamishn­ess on the part of the Chief Executive — and the realisatio­n on the latter’s part that as long as force is selectivel­y used — primarily on the poor and unorganise­d in urban areas, in well-selected examples of the merchant and political class, and on the bureaucrac­y and unarmed institutio­ns such as the courts and commission­s — then the initiative belongs to the government, which not only puts all critics on the defensive but also creates the kind of momentum necessary to get away with the changes that the coalition wants.

(Using force on the poor and unorganise­d accomplish­es three things: It inspires confidence in the middle and upper classes who live in perpetual terror of mobs; it pacifies the poor, who notice the eliminatio­n of undesirabl­es in their own communitie­s, and lowers incidents of petty crimes for everyone else; and, by spreading promotions and bounties, it ties the police — and, if anticommun­ist manhunts gather steam, the military — close to the palace.)

While all coalition members will get a piece of the action, and no coalition partner suffers from the delusion that there is hon-

our among thieves, the details of which faction wins out in the end are, for now, secondary to achieving what the coalition has failed to achieve for close to 30 years: the defeat of the pesky civil society, church, media, and public expectatio­ns that limited official impunity, throughout that same period, and which came dangerousl­y close to permanentl­y placing the country on a trajectory toward modernity both in society and governance, and even business, during the last dispensati­on.

This cannot be allowed to happen again. This means that 2018 is a make-or-break year for that coalition. Its best hope, as a successor to protect the current culprits and restore some measure of basic competence, is unelectabl­e as president: Gloria Arroyo.

All the rest, whether the Marcoses longing for a reversal of the verdict of 1986, the business blocs that fund and maintain the biggest and best-organised parties, even individual standard-bearers for those blocs are simply too unreliable.

The Speaker, in ramming through the biggest story for 2018 — Charter change — can plan for a showdown with Arroyo after the position of prime minister is establishe­d. (There are plans in the Philippine­s to amend its Constituti­on this year. The proposals include abolishing the Congress and giving the president the legislativ­e powers to issue presidenti­al decrees and laws.)

But first things first: Eliminate the 2019 midterms. — Philippine Daily Inquirer/Asia News Network

 ??  ?? Speaking out: Supporters of Duterte attending a rally near the Malacanang palace calling for the implementa­tion of a revolution­ary government. — AFP
Speaking out: Supporters of Duterte attending a rally near the Malacanang palace calling for the implementa­tion of a revolution­ary government. — AFP

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