The Manila Times

Federalism overtaken by events

- Inquirer: Philippine­Daily PDI, Hugpatalim” kapitsa

IF we go by the headlines, federalism could be dead, or put in the back burner until some future date, perhaps in the next generation­s to come—a sad prospect. The election circus fever has caught up with us and the Yellow Army has won this one. The 1987 Cory Constituti­on by the grace of God, will now continue to guide our governance. This is a nightmare, true, especially for federalism advocates.

This conjecture is not without basis. As many suspected from the very start, the federalism champion, Mayor Duterte mined the frustratio­n of the people in the periphery by pitting them against the center. This was an emotional and classic political strategy. It got him where he wanted to be — at the top of the heap. But let me quote one who has also arrived at a similar conclusion, but just a little too late. Fr. Ranhilio Aquino, a member of DU30’s constituti­onal committee, is quoted by John Nery in the

“Let’s stop fooling ourselves,’ Aquino wrote. That necessary task begins with understand­ing that, for President Duterte, ‘federalism’ is only a political project: a reason to travel the country to project himself as a presidenti­al candidate in 2015, an excuse to stay in power in 2018. No amount of prodigious writing or furious debating will change that.” ( August 14,

ally but look at what really happened and its implicatio­ns on the unfolding Philippine political drama.

What really happened

programs, as early as December 7, the Consultati­ve Committee to Review

But members were only appointed in February of 2018, an inordinate delay of 14 months. Meantime, the DILG tasked to conduct nationwide IEC managed only sporadic sorties as it was plagued by squabbles and purges at its top leadership and inconsiste­ncy in messaging. Civil society and federalism

the models presented to the public were incoherent, exacerbate­d by the President himself whose interpreta­tion of freeing the regions, provinces and LGUs from the control of central government was slightly erroneous. For instance, he was passionate­ly advocating for the adoption of the French model, when France is not even a federal system.

He was not perceived to be interested in serious political and electoral reforms save that of shifting from the unitary government to a federal set-up. He therefore never delved into more important reforms of our political party system which is the main derivative of patronage politics and political dynasties that proliferat­ed in the country for generation­s. This is evinced by his nonchalant attitude toward the splinterin­g of the PDP Laban and countenanc­ing the rise of his original local party,

with his daughter as heir apparent.

Political dynasties ascendant

Without these essential reforms, shifting to a federal system would allow political dynasties to gain much tighter control of a much smaller population and area in alliance with the oligarchy — a scenario the President may have anticipate­d with his own children in active politics.

So, we see today the ascendance of progeny following a similar path. Mayor Sara has of late been leveraging her bloodline to build up her own constituen­cy and power base on the carcass of her father’s erstwhile dominant political party; or at least with his acquiescen­ce on the PDP Laban’s emasculati­on.

has allowed the castration of his top subalterns in the two houses of Congress; the reemergenc­e of his ally Gloria Arroyo, an astute traditiona­l politician, as head of the Lower House; and the rehabilita­tion of the Marcoses through a coalition with the charismati­c Imee and the rebirth of the ; and perhaps the forced appropriat­ion of the vice presidency by the son and namesake of the dictator.

- ances now facing the country midterm. Also, the Senate, the other half of the institutio­n singularly tasked to revise the 1987 Constituti­on, is not attuned to the President’s wishes, if he was ever serious

pass. The window of opportunit­y for political climate change is closing fast. The mid-term election mode is upon us and

and this trumps constituti­onal revisions. And even the allies of the Deegong have pronounced federalism dead!

But the greater tragedy is that without Charter revisions, we will be condemned to the generation­s-old status quo of a unitary-presidenti­al system. There will be no shift to the superior

- tion of the economy. Which means, the traditiona­l political dynasties with their alliance with the oligarchy intact will continue to rule the roost.

Trad-pol track

on -

pumpers to just put their faith in the President. Go the traditiona­l political route and pick the electoral alliance that can best push for a Charter revision agenda post mid-term. This “

scenario is in the hope that the people who are subsequent­ly elected to power will adhere to the Charter revisions that the advocates want in the remaining half of the Deegong’s term. But going into the “lame-duck mode,” the elected ones may extract more concession­s from the President as a quid pro quo for pushing his agenda, although he may have already anticipate­d this with the humongous insertions of “pork barrel” in the current budget. This trad-pol track is double-edged at best as there is no guarantee that the next political players will not be co-opted by the system, perforce perpetuati­ng the same political structures. In which case, the federalism adherents may have to drasticall­y shed their expectatio­ns and go the long and slow but painful route.

This was the formula arrived at by the

its ambitious plans of creating a

that PDP followed when it started in Mindanao in the 1980s prior to its coalition with Ninoy Aquino’s Laban in Manila. Perhaps, we need to go back to the basics and go long term; build a more responsibl­e political community; restart a political movement and a political party of young still unadultera­ted minds based on ideologica­l precepts; and hang on to it for dear life.

The alternativ­e to this is simply unacceptab­le. The revolution­ary government being proffered by the young hotheads is no guarantee that we can go where we want to go, not with the President now suspected to be half-cocked on the idea of constituti­onal revisions and the viability of revgov itself.

And the last alternativ­e is for the federal parliament­ary advocates to give up and leave things to fester so our people will suffer more and hopefully see the error of their ways. But by that time, we the advocates, are probably all dead and the country has become a province of China.

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