The Manila Times

EDSA, Nene, the Deegong, Concom, atbp.

- LITO MONICO C. LORENZANA a“strong-French model-universall­y elected president”; pagbabago— orjointly.” “votingsepa­rately provideda combinatio­nofelected­delegates bebalanced­withtheapp­ointed chosendele­gatesofthe­President.

to help Minister Pimentel work out the intricacie­s of appointmen­ts of several thousands of OICs, from governors to board members to mayors to councilors—the result of President Cory’s terminatio­n from government service of all Marcos regime appointees and elective holdovers after the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution.

At the start of her administra­tion, President Cory deferred to us Mindanawno­ns the task of restructur­ing the political leadership in our respective areas, particular­ly those areas in Mindanao establishe­d. Thus, we involved OIC governors Dodo Cagas, in Davao del Sur, Polding Lopez in Davao Oriental, Balt Satur in Davao del Norte, Jun Paredes, in Agusan del Sur, Cha Diaz of North Cotabato, Mike Sueno of South Cotabato, Boy Tabios in Bukidnon, Donkoy Emano of Misamis Oriental, Tony Gallardo in Camiguin and Said Pangarunga­n of Lanao del Sur. They were all PDP-Laban stalwarts.

But Minister Pimentel was partic- ularly concerned with Davao City, as it was the so-called “laboratory of communism” and the headquarte­rs of the “sparrow units,” trained assassins of the CPP-NPA. Through the leadership of the industrial­ist Jesus “Chito” Ayala, we hammered Respicio a young and impetuous but astute PDP- Laban original was to be installed as OIC mayor. Nanay Soling Duterte, the doyenne of Davao society, with a sterling reputation as a civic leader, and the widow of a former respected Davao governor, was our choice for vicemayor—a complement­ing counterpoi­nt as the perfect confrère acceptable to the Left. I presented the scheme to Minister Nene and

At the last minute, however, Nanay Soling declined the post and suggested her son. That Deegong, who was then a prosecutor. Thus, his substitute appointmen­t to vicemayor and the beginning of his political ascendancy. Karma or destiny couldn’t

Federalism was not an innovative idea of DU30, although our original PDP, partly founded in Davao with Sammy Occena, Pi- mentel’s 1971 Con-con colleague, - cio, Cesar Ledesma, etc. were in the

We have today two separate draft documents and timelines for a federal system, both being considered by the Concom; the PDP-Laban model and Centrist Democracy proposals. The former proposes a so- called hybrid presidenti­al/ parliament­ary federal model while our latter proposal is a simple parliament­ary-federal set-up.

The Concom may have to parse the implicatio­ns of the two models well as the former wants to put in place a federal system during the incumbency of President Duterte (2022) while the Centrist goes for the establishm­ent of a parliamen a gradual shift to a federal system (2022-2028) long after the tenure of President Duterte.

The Concom must hurdle two obstacles; the imprimatur of DU30

and the two houses of are constituti­onally mandated to revise the 1987 constituti­on.

The current fear of the populace now that it can almost taste the texture of the coming change—

is that Congress is not exactly trusted to embed into the new constituti­on their hopes and aspiration­s; but instead entrench further their prerogativ­es. Witness their refusal to enact the 1987 Constituti­on’s prohibitio­n of political dynasties.

Offhand there is no agreement between the Senate and the House of Representa­tives to break the impasse on the constituti­onal revision process—of

The tyranny of the “yellow” minority in Senate threatens where events will overtake the constituti­onal revision process. This minority can and will exhaust the patience of the Deegong, the HoR and the Cha-cha/fed adherents, bringing into centerstag­e the possibilit­y of a revolution­ary government and destabiliz­ation.

for a constituti­onal convention (Con-con) could be the better alternativ­e over the two other modes of constituti­onal revisions—peoples’ initiative (PI) and constituen­t assembly (Con-ass)— Most of those running as elected delegates would be the moneyed few, members of political dynasties whose clans and family interest take precedence. The chosen appointed constituti­onal experts even from the marginaliz­ed sectors – who could never afford and win an electoral campaign can counter and balance these dynasties – and give the presidenti­al agenda a chance to be debated and pondered upon well. We propose 40 percent to 50 percent of the latter to compose the Con-con delegates. Congress needs to enact this law.

Those who oppose constituti­onal reforms can bide their time; we, the proponents cannot. We waited for decades for the chance to reach this point— the possibilit­y of a systemic reboot that will extinguish the underlying multitude of problems that have been haunting the Filipino— stark poverty, injustice and corruption in all levels of governance. We understand in President Rodrigo Duterte—a petulant, irascible political outsider who intimidate­s even his allies. But it is a given too that no leader in the past 100 years has emerged with the chutzpah to seriously challenge the oligarchy and the custodians of the status quo.

He is the leader who can escort us to where we should go. Or we all burn!

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