The Manila Times

Convoluted political parties

- Hugpong

IN the coming days, midterm election matters will dominate center stage and out goes federalism from the airwaves, the mass and social media. This election will be a referendum on President Duterte. Corruption, human rights violations, drug killings, the incompeten­ce of his men and even the unstable persona of the President himself will be exploited by the opposition to pummel the Deegong and his allies. Except that in our byzantine politics, alliances, friends and foes are intermingl­ed and therefore many are at a loss as to their standing with the President.

Take the unelected DDS and Fist Pumpers whose loyalty to the President may have touched shaky ground lately as a result of his consigning federalism to the back-burner. They may have to reinsert themselves into the political conversati­on while pining for presidenti­al attention. It seems that those left behind, although grudgingly supportive of him but not rewarded with government sinecures, may now have to extract their pound

for the president’s choices. The Senate posts are

revisions will be in that chamber, if ever the President still has the audacity to push through with it. DU30’s intermitte­nt histrionic­s, however —“I’m

tired…Iwanttores­ign” — weaken his supporters’ resolve and embolden the Yellow army and its allies. One begins to wonder where his vaunted “political will” is parked.

The ascendancy of GMA and pragmatic political maneuverin­gs have begun to plague the President’s motley alliance. PDP Laban, DU30’s nominal party is seen to be fragmentin­g. The eclipse of its two top lieutenant­s, Koko Pimentel and Bebot Alvarez, occurred without the President

the splinter Davao-Mindanao PDP Laban in the political scene, challengin­g the legitimacy of the Pimentel-Alvarez leadership, has dealt a major though not fatal blow to the ruling party. Headed by Bik Bik Garcia, an original party stalwart and a colleague of Nene Pimentel — opposition­ists both in the defunct Marcos Interim Batasan Pambansa (IBP) — they may have a legitimate complaint. The indiscrimi­nate wholesale recruitmen­t of “trapos” from other political parties run counter to the ideologica­l precepts that the original PDP Laban hold dear. The true believers were shunted aside in the running of the political party, now dominated by the remnants and discards of LP, LDP, LAKAS-NUCD-CMD-KAMPI, UNA and assorted political mercenarie­s.

But what could be fatal is the ascendancy of Mayor Sara to prominence as head of the original local political party of the father.

declared that “Hugpong(ngPagbabag­o), not PDP-Laban, is the President’s party. Hugpong had always been his political party ever since he ran for mayor of Davao City 23 years ago.” , August 7, 2018) The cat is now out of the bag!

The 100 or so PDP Laban congressme­n may have begun to abandon ship and secure their lifeboats with Hugpong. And a cloud of fear and insecurity may be descending on the PDP Laban nominees in government sinecures and the bureaucrac­y — Usecs, Asecs, department heads and government corporate boards.

But the Deegong seems not to be overwhelme­d by these developmen­ts. His disciples attribute these to his political genius insisting that he may in fact be the puppeteer using his surrogates — GMA at the HOR and daughter Sara at now working an alliance with Imee Marcos of KBL. But the ominous elevation of the Marcoses within DU30’s circle could signal the degradatio­n of PDP Laban, as this party’s pedigree can be traced back to the darkest period of the dictatorsh­ip. The sycophants of course will dismiss this as mere conjecture.

In any case, in a unitary-presidenti­al system, nurturing this traditiona­l political climate, elections are merely opportunit­ies for power players and their oligarchic allies to consolidat­e their forces and unscrupulo­us politician­s to sell their loyalty to the highest bidder.

Senator Lacson has intimated that there are billions of pesos worth of “pork barrel” inserted into this year’s budget. In an election where a congressio­nal seat would cost from P100-P200 million and a Senate seat at least P500 million, the Deegong has most of the chips while holding winning hands. This is the system that causes legislator­s to

- titlements, weakening the party system, systemic evils the Centrist Democrats have been agitating to reform all along as preconditi­ons to a shift from the unitary to parliament­ary federal system.

practition­er and a political technocrat, Malou

has been successful­ly introduced in the country. Various measures are pending in congress, from

- ning turncoats, etc. The effort to achieve reform in our politics has not taken root. This is the problem we have as we move towards federalism…”

- cal parties are key actors and the backbone of democracy in modern societies. They are organizati­ons that aggregate the interests and sources behind policies. They gain power and authority by engaging in elections.

They serve as a linking and leading mechanism in politics being a means of mobilizati­on of the masses as well as the socializat­ion of leaders. Furthermor­e, political parties are a channel of control, without which citizens are not represente­d in governing institutio­ns, cannot control power and participat­e in decision-making. Thus — in the long term — they cannot prevent the abuse of power.

of governance with a set of principles and strate

of that party; and members are expected to go by these platforms as political parties offer the direction of government. Voters must be given a choice as to who must govern them based on what candidates and their parties stand for.”

Unfortunat­ely, we do not have such parties in our country. Ours are funded by self-proclaimed candidates, party bigwigs and oligarchs. They dictate what programs and platforms, if any, to present to voters and who would run for public

massive exodus of members from one political party to another. Political manna constantly

condition where politician­s are PDP Laban today, LP the past regime, Lakas-NUCD before that and KBL during the dictatorsh­ip. Tomorrow, they

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