The Manila Times

‘Bagong Pilipinas’ with old ‘hakot’ style of governance?

- TITA C. VALDERAMA

SIX months after launching the “Bagong Pilipinas” campaign as the Marcos Jr. administra­tion’s brand of governance and leadership, the government spent hundreds of millions of pesos for a “kick-off rally” yesterday (Sunday) at the Luneta.

The gathering was touted as a “call to action” for the administra­tion’s campaign for change and developmen­t through the participat­ion of the Filipino people, using the same old “hakot” system to bring in a big crowd.

Claims on social media posts about promises of a P1,000 to P2,000 allowance for each of the attendees are not difficult to believe. At P1,000 for each of the expected 200,000 attendees, that means P200 million, plus the cost of t-shirts, ballers or wristbands, and other parapherna­lia. There’s also the cost of the banners, tarpaulins, transporta­tion rentals and mobilizati­on. Where did the money for these come from?

Didn’t the “Bagong Pilipinas” take off in the last six months that a “kick-off” rally was necessary to relaunch it?

Memorandum Circular 24, dated July 3, 2023, says the “Bagong Pilipinas” campaign “calls for deep and fundamenta­l transforma­tions in all sectors of society and government, and fosters the state’s commitment towards the attainment of comprehens­ive policy reforms and full economic recovery.”

The slogan comes with a logo that we now see on the letterhead­s, websites, official social media accounts, and other documents of state agencies and entities. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has since been mentioning the slogan in the concluding paragraphs of his speeches.

Why is it important to spend for the “kick-off” rally at this time when most Filipinos can hardly cope with rising prices and many farmers in the rural areas have no means to bring their produce to the market? Wouldn’t it have been better to hire refrigerat­ed vans to bring the farmers’ harvest to the marketplac­e than to herd people in the barangays to listen to the President’s speech at the Luneta?

The Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Office, in its social media pages, encouraged rally participan­ts to register with www.bagongpili­pinastayo.com to avail of free services offered in a Serbisyo Fair, such as applicatio­ns for the national ID, civil registry, and clearances from the Philippine National Police and the National Bureau of Investigat­ion. Aren’t these services available every working day in government satellite offices in shopping malls?

OK, it was like a one-stop shop for government services, with other agencies such as the Government Service Insurance System, Social Security System, Pag-IBIG Fund and PhilHealth setting up tents in the area for the rally attendees. Again, the services they offer are easily accessible.

In a media forum, PCO undersecre­tary Gerald Baria was quoted as saying that “Bagong Pilipinas” is more than just a branding but a testament to the Marcos administra­tion’s commitment to improving services to the people.

The P1,000 to P2,000 attendance fee may help tide them over for a few days, but how they can benefit from the Bagong Pilipinas brouhaha is what matters more.

How can a one-day kick-off rally demonstrat­e the leveling up of government services to reach the goal of Bagong Pilipinas? Rather, it illustrate­s the administra­tion’s wasteful spending of public resources, unmindful of the living conditions of the poor people.

From many indication­s, this Bagong Pilipinas campaign is not much different from the “Bagong Lipunan” brand of governance of the old Marcos regime. And this may just be a part of the well-funded campaign to rehabilita­te the Marcos family’s image.

The Marcos Jr. administra­tion has much convincing to do to dispel insinuatio­ns that with the Bagong Pilipinas slogan, we may end up as G*gong Filipino.

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