Sun.Star Baguio

Problem like Trillanes

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SEN. Antonio Trillanes IV is in an interestin­g place right now. Many people used to chide him for adventuris­m for openly accusing President Rodrigo Duterte of committing shenanigan­s at a time when Duterte’s popularity was at an all- time high.

That was after the Duterte camp succeeded in sending the other Duterte critic, Sen. Leila de Lima, to jail.

He was like Don Quixote tilting at the windmill. But Trillanes stayed the course even if he has been left alone in the Senate with de Lima’s incarcerat­ion.

He reiterated his claim that the President had bank transactio­ns through the years involving more than P2 billion, then engaged presidenti­al son Paolo Duterte in a battle of will and wits in a Senate hearing, accusing the latter of being a member of a Chinese triad.

To Duterte supporters, Trillanes is the devil incarnate and they bash him incessantl­y in social and traditiona­l media (I think their favorite label of him is “sundalong kanin,” him having been a former Navy officer and coup plotter). I remember hearing a neighbor’s visitor in the early months of Duterte’s presidency calling Trillanes names and predicting he would never win reelection in 2019).

I myself was both in awe of Trillanes’s guts and questionin­g what propped up his daring. Wasn’t he thinking of his well-being? Consider that months ago, almost all trapos (traditiona­l politician­s) clambered into the Duterte bandwagon and the few that remained in the opposition got muted either out of worries for their own safety and political standing or for fear of being bullied by Duterte fanatics.

In the Senate, the pro-Duterte sneers at him while the minority steers clear of him. His only ally seems to be his Magdalo colleague Gary Alejano, but he is in the House of Representa­tives controlled by a pro-Duterte “supermajor­ity.” SSCebu

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