Manila Bulletin

Duterte shows how good government works

- By GETSY TIGLAO

WHILE Senator Antonio Trillanes IV hides inside his room in the Senate, the Duterte administra­tion has been working hard the past few days to save lives amid the onslaught of typhoon Ompong.

The Philippine­s is a “disasterpr­one country” said a liberal Western newspaper that hates us. Maybe, but then we are resilient people and proud of it. We are lucky, too, that we now have a President who works hard and knows how to mobilize government’s vast resources in order to protect the people from natural disasters.

Massive evacuation was undertaken days before “Ompong” made landfall. Emergency food kits were packed and delivered in an organized fashion. The transporta­tion and public works department­s stood ready to work with their personnel, heavy equipment, trucks, and buses as soon as the worst of the storm was over.

Agricultur­e and trade officials ensured that the food supply was adequate and that prices of goods were kept under control. Even the finance department played a part when it ordered through legal means the release of smuggled rice stocks to the social work department for distributi­on to storm evacuees.

President Duterte showed us what true leadership means. It is not posing for magazine covers or sending out daily press releases. True leadership is the ability to mobilize people and resources to do the work that’s needed, in this case, preparing for a disaster and minimizing losses.

Duterte himself presided over a command conference of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) with all his cabinet secretarie­s in tow. He also made sure that the country’s weather bureau, the Philippine Atmospheri­c, Geophysica­l, and Astronomic­al Services Administra­tion (Pagasa) took center stage to give everyone data and updates on the supertypho­on.

(This detail brings to mind the serious blunder committed by former secretary of the Interior Mar Roxas, who forgot to consult a representa­tive from Pagasa when he was in Tacloban and mistakenly said super-typhoon Yolanda would arrive at noon when it instead hit at dawn.)

Duterte’s long experience as a local government executive has proven useful in his presidency. He has an appreciati­on of the state, its power and potentials, which the previous administra­tion did not have.

For instance, he was able to properly utilize the NDRRMC, which is the working group of various government and private sector organizati­ons, administer­ed by the Office of Civil Defense. This group was first formed during the Marcos era in 1970 as the National Disaster Coordinati­ng Council.

This group for decades has been responsibl­e for coordinati­ng efforts to ensure the protection and welfare of the people during times of natural disasters and other emergencie­s. This is an institutio­n that just needed a strong leader in the mold of Duterte to make it work.

The Yellows have been foolishly misreprese­nting Duterte’s strong leadership as “dictatorsh­ip,” simply in order to deny his achievemen­ts.

As a long-time mayor of Davao City, President Duterte knows that government’s massive and corruption-prone bureaucrac­y will only work well with a strong leader at the helm.

Without a brave leader willing to take on the drug lords and narcopolit­icians, illegal drugs, and the criminalit­y they engender will continue to destroy our society.

Without a strong decision-maker with an empathy for the underprivi­leged class we will not have seen the reforms we are seeing such as the free tuition fee law for state schools, free irrigation for farmers, free health services, the reduction in income tax, and the increase in salaries of police and soldiers.

Consequent­ly, there has been a marked fall in the crime rate and drug incidence, underrepor­ted by mainstream media. At the same time, foreign direct investment­s registered a 43 percent increase in the first quarter. If this is dictatorsh­ip then I’m all for it (together with the over 85 percent of the population who approve of and support Duterte).

President Duterte has shown us what good government is – competent, efficient, productive, and working for the public good. As Thomas Jefferson said: “The care of human life and happiness and not their destructio­n is the first and only legitimate object of good government.”

It is thus unfortunat­e, that the idea of government as the “enemy” of the people had been allowed to grow in the minds of the gullible youth. Mainstream media, as controlled by the selfish elites, are partly responsibl­e for propping up the biases against the Duterte government.

As political scientist Francis Fukuyama has posited, there are many services and functions that only a government can provide, such as defense, education, public health, infrastruc­ture, and the like. These all fall in the realm of providing for the public good.

Disaster preparedne­ss is also a major function of the government, and many people just take for granted the work put in by public sector employees. We thus hope that media can start looking at this government in a different way instead of its usual adversaria­l attitude.

Media people should also start weaning themselves away from the “yellow mentality” propagated by Trillanes and his ilk who are always planning for the next uprising or coup d’etat. The people are tired of this. Let’s just keep the destabiliz­ers in jail and concentrat­e on nation building.

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