Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHEN OUR FAILING DEMOCRACY MOVES FURTHER TOWARD THE PRECIPICE

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IN February 1986, a majority of our electorate dislodged a male dictator and installed its first female president. In the three decades that followed, a generation of children grew up in an atmosphere in which political and gender democratiz­ations seemed accepted by the political establishm­ent and by most of our citizens as desirable projects, however clumsily our nation stumbled toward their completion.

In May 2016, 39 percent of the voters elected an antidemocr­atic and misogynist president. In the three years since, a generation of children has been growing up in an atmosphere in which political and gender democratiz­ations are disprized, turned backward, and threatened with terminatio­n.

The administra­tion kills thousands of the poor without compunctio­n, mocks human rights and civil liberties, and undermines democratic institutio­ns. Government leaders and legislator­s erode gender equality by persecutin­g female defenders of democracy and by spouting demeaning statements about women and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgen- dered people. Almost as painful is the indifferen­ce—worse, the applause—with which these developmen­ts are met by many Filipino women and men. Today, the 33rd anniversar­y of the Edsa uprising, we realize how little progress we have made toward full democracy, and how little our political and gender “revolution” has taken root.

Antidemocr­ats and misogynist­s among the political elite are much to blame for these developmen­ts. But we who champion political and gender democracy are also to blame. We have put too much faith in representa­tive institutio­ns and in legislatio­n, to the neglect of education in the principles and practices of political and gender democracy. We have put too much faith in political reform, to the neglect of redistribu­tive reform, a prerequisi­te to full political and gender democratiz­ation.

The 33rd Edsa anniversar­y occurs two and a half months before another critical election. If the administra­tion’s candidates win most of the open seats in the Senate, House of Representa­tives and local government­s, our failing democracy will move further toward the precipice. Therefore, the most immediate task for those who believe in political and gender democracy is to work to elect, at all levels, candidates who support both.

Elections are also an opportunit­y for educating our electorate—not just the poor, but the highly educated elites who voted in higher percentage­s than the poor for the current administra­tion, and who, in surveys, have consistent­ly registered higher satisfacti­on with its performanc­e than the poor.

Let us use the elections as a forum for discussing what genuine democracy means, why our nation needs it, and why voting for the administra­tion’s candidates brings our nation closer to ruin. Then, whether or not we lose this next battle, we and our people will be better armed for long-term contention with the antidemocr­atic and misogynist forces that threaten our nation.

ANNIE SERRANO, national chairwoman, Pilipina: Kilusan ng Kababaihan­g Pilipino

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