Sun.Star Davao

All out, finally?

- With the Duterte administra­tion being gradually exposed for its ineptitude, it is time for the opposition to the Duterte administra­tion to reacquire its mojo as the 2019 midterm polls near. BONG O. WENCESLAO

Ilike it that the timidity is on the wane. I am referring to Liberal Party (LP) leaders, who got shell-shocked by the searing social media assault of so-called diehard Duterte supporters (DDS) since the 2016 presidenti­al elections until the first few years of the Duterte administra­tion. On Tuesday, former president Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III said he will lead the opposition campaign next year.

Noynoy made the announceme­nt during the commemorat­ion of the 35th death anniversar­y of his father, Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., who was assassinat­ed by minions of the dictatorsh­ip of Ferdinand Marcos on Aug. 21, 1983. The occasion prompted the reminiscin­g of the Marcos years and the heady years of the anti-dictatorsh­ip struggle leading to the Edsa people power uprising three years later.

The announceme­nt is interestin­g considerin­g the significan­ce of Tuesday’s commemorat­ion.

Marcos was able to rule the country for long by declaring military rule in 1972 to skirt the provision of the 1936 Constituti­on that barred him from running for a third four-year term as president. He closed Congress, made the Supreme Court malleable and faked the ratificati­on of the 1973 Constituti­on. The rightist coup saw Marcos rule the country for 14 years more until the Edsa uprising ousted him.

To strengthen his rule, Marcos went after the political opposition immediatel­y after he declared martial law, jailing its leaders including Ninoy.

The commemorat­ion of Ninoy’s death thus serves as a reminder of how far the pendulum has swung back to the right after it moved left of center. To illustrate: the Marcos version of impunity is rearing its head in the Duterte version with its incarnatio­n of “salvaging” as “EJK” or extra-judicial killings. And the Marcoses are back with Ferdinand Marcos Jr. almost winning the vice-presidency and Imee Marcos acquiring the gall to tell Filipinos to move on.

The current rightist shift actually got pushed further with that Duterte win in the 2016 presidenti­al election and the demonizing in social media of his predecesso­r, Noynoy, and everything that he represente­d, even the yellow color of the Edsa uprising (in the word of the DDS, “dilawan”). That act was partly engineered by the Marcoses, who were at the forefront in promoting a revisionis­t presentati­on of the Marcos years.

It helped that the “yellow” leaders became timid amid the DDS assault and for a while lost their voice. With the Duterte administra­tion being gradually exposed for its ineptitude, it is time for the opposition to the Duterte administra­tion to reacquire its mojo as the 2019 midterm polls near. SS-CEBU

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