The Freeman

Is impeachmen­t really a tool for subjugatio­n?

-

The sovereign Filipino people, acting through their duly-elected representa­tives in Congress, can withdraw their confidence from the Comelec chairman, the chief justice, the ombudsman, or even the president, and other impeachabl­e officials. And withdrawal of confidence is done through, among others, the constituti­onal process of impeachmen­t. But the perennial obstructio­nists are pointing fingers at Malacañan. The biased media and the self-righteous critics, including the reds, the yellows and the other shades in the rainbow opposition­ists are blaming the president for these upsurges of impeachmen­t initiative­s.

I beg to disagree. It is my firm determinat­ion that, if Congress impeaches the Comelec chairman or the chief justice and the ombudsman, it is not President Duterte who is subjugatin­g other high public officials. It is the people acting through their own deputies in the Lower House. I am not naive or a paid apologist. But I have a feeling the president does not control Congress entirely. Five of his appointees were rejected by the Commission on Appointmen­ts. Perfecto Yasay of DFA, Gina Lopez of DENR, J. Taguiwalo of DSWD, R. Mariano of DAR, and J. Ubial of Health were rejected by the Commission on "Disappoint­ments." And the CA is an institutio­n within the two Houses of Congress.

As the head of PDP-Laban, the party of the Pimentels that adopted then Mayor Duterte, he has little control over the representa­tives. The party system in our country is a hasty and chaotic coalition of political opportunis­ts, (where Erap, GMA, and the Marcoses are, for the heck of it, aligned for convenienc­e) a ragtag tactical alliance of trapos, who are not united by ideology, much less by principle. The president cannot even order this guy, Bebot Alvarez, how much more a hundred or so members of Congress to vote and impeach some officials. The president cannot even make Alvarez kiss and make up with Congressma­n Floirendo and both presidenti­al buddies and fellow kingpins from the glorious turfdom of Davao.

I don't believe that, given the psyche and the quality of our solons today, they can be made the rubber stamp of Malacañan. This is not, of course, a compliment to their independen­ce, but a critique on their fixation only on one indubitabl­e principle of opportunis­m: self-interest. There are few good men in Congress, yes, but there are no more Salongas, Tolentinos, Tañadas, Laurels, or Rectos (well, yes, there is a Recto in the Senate but he is not Claro). And so, don't humor me by saying that impeachmen­t is Duterte's tool for subjugatio­n. Not this Congress. Not this president. Not this time.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines