Sun.Star Cebu

Sara’s visit

- BONG O. WENCESLAO khanwens@gmail.com

The visit here of presidenti­al daughter and Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte clarified the political alignments in Cebu for the May 2019 elections. Sara is also the prime mover of the regional grouping Hugpong ng Pagbabago (HnP), the other administra­tion party aside from the Partido Demokratik­o-Laban ng Demokratik­ong Pilipino (PDP-Laban). She is running for reelection and is not gunning for a Senate post as earlier believed.

Sara was here for the formalizat­ion of HnP’s alliance with the Hugpong Mandauehan­on sa Pagbabago of Mayor Luigi Quisumbing. In the process, she cleared the air on certain issues. My roots are from Poro and Tudela towns in the Camotes group of islands, so I am particular­ly interested with how the Duranos that control the politics in the fifth district where Camotes belongs are faring.

The biggest piece of informatio­n picked up from her visit is that there is no alliance existing between HnP and the Duranos’ Bangon Alang sa Kauswagan ug Demokrasya (Bakud). The failure of the Duranos to forge an alliance with Sara’s camp impacts considerab­ly on the politics in the province. Or more particular­ly the gubernator­ial race and the elections at the provincial level.

Former governor Gwendolyn Garcia has filed her certificat­e of candidacy for governor and will be pitted against Vice Governor Agnes Magpale, who was thrust into the frontline after Gov. Hilario Davide III chose to run for vice governor. Garcia is allied with PDP-Laban. I thought all along Magpale is with the HnP because I thought Bakud had forged an alliance with the party. That didn’t happen.

It looks to me like the Garcia camp outmaneuve­red the Magpale-Davide camp on the matter of forging an alliance with administra­tion leaders, which for some politician­s is a must in a midterm election. But that is not their sole fault, however, because Magpale and Davide are but victims of political circumstan­ce.

I initially thought that the rift between the Duranos of Danao City and the Dutertes of Davao City only surfaced in the 2016 elections when the former supported another candidate for president. We all know that the late Durano matriarch Beatriz was a Duterte and President Duterte’s father Vicente was once a Danao City mayor. I only knew from Sara’s recent visit that Vicente left Danao for Davao to save his skin. The conflict between the Duranos of Danao and the Dutertes of Davao City is apparently deeply rooted.

When I wrote the book on the history of Tudela town years ago, I came across materials about how the Durano patriarch took power in Danao, which was then part of the first congressio­nal district of old, and consolidat­ed his rule there starting in 1949. When Danao later became part of the new fifth district, Mano Amon also consolidat­ed his rule in that district. The consolidat­ion effort was a violent one sometimes.

Anyway, while there is no HnP-Barug alliance, Sara is still supporting Magpale by declaring the province a free zone. Meanwhile, Bakud will most probably seek the help of the weakened Nationalis­t People’s Coalition, its old ally. As for Davide, he will also have to rely on another visibly weakened group, the Liberal Party.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines