The Philippine Star

Palm Sunday: How fickle we voters are

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TODAY, Palm Sunday, reminds us of the fickleness of us mortal men – how in a week’s time, the cheers of the crowd welcoming the King of Kings to Jerusalem turned to the jeers of the mob crying for his crucifixio­n.

Filipinos are familiar with the liturgy and lessons of Palm Sunday, the exultant scenario that segued quickly to the painful path leading to death on the cross on Good Friday.

Sliding to the political plane, we wonder how many of the 16 million who gave Mayor Rodrigo Duterte a plurality in the 2016 elections to clinch the presidency and are now witnessing his fumbling will be with the mob that will later shout “out with him”?

And how many of Duterte’s followers will keep faith, following him through the via crucis till the dawn of a glorious Easter Sunday?

Our guess is that a substantia­l part of the 16 million will stick with him, considerin­g the pervasive effects of administra­tion propaganda, laced with fake news, without effective counter effort from the opposition.

There is no organized political opposition that could credibly check and call out the administra­tion. There are some scattered figures busy with his/her individual fighting --- but Duterte’s foes still do not have a single rallying figure.

Much of the check and balance, by way of criticisms in mass media (where else?), comes from concerned citizens speaking out on their own and not as part of an organized and focused resistance.

While the opposition has neither identifiab­le leader(s) nor a concerted communicat­ion plan, the well-oiled Duterte machine continues to harass and prosecute its perceived foes and critics, keeping them off-balanced defending themselves.

• Admin’s fumbles: Disaster ahead?

THE ONLY way the opposition can have a fighting chance – first in the 2019 midterm elections and later in the 2022 presidenti­al showdown – is if the Duterte camp continues to fumble and if scattered disenchant­ment spreads and coagulates into one resounding people’s protest.

The fumbles are glaring: Selective prosecutio­n of opposition figures while favored offenders are left off the hook; relentless drive to weaken independen­t constituti­onal agencies standing in the way; ignoring of the stench, not just a whiff, of corruption; failure to stabilize prices in relation to wages; read the news for the rest.

If the administra­tion fails to shape up, the unrest among the youth and the millennial­s could develop into something akin to a mass uprising reminiscen­t of the 1986 People Power Revolt that sent the dictator Marcos scampering to Hawaii.

In this scenario, the role of the armed forces – to whom the Constituti­on has assigned the job of protector of the people and of the state – is crucial. It remains to be seen if Duterte has succeeded in “buying” its loyalty with material benefits and promises.

The political lore hereabouts is that military interventi­on – also known as a coup – is feasible only with the assistance of foreign power(s). This is textbook foreign meddling, but colonial-minded Filipinos can tolerate it when their oppression becomes unbearable.

The demonstrat­ed ineptness and perfidy of the Duterte administra­tion (witness its reneging on its campaign promises and its continued disregard of human rights and common decency), can fuel and facilitate opposition or resistance.

A metaphor is that of a house of light materials having been infested with termites or anay and it has been so weakened that constant shaking alone may be enough to cause its collapse. A badly infested house will fall on its own in time.

If and when we come to that political Biyernes Santo, where will the exultant Domingo de Ramos welcoming crowd be? Where will you be?

• Satur a journalist, not a terrorist

SATUR C. Ocampo, who the administra­tion has included in a list of alleged terrorists, can very well speak for himself, but as a long-time colleague who knows him that well, I feel compelled to add my small voice to the objections to the reckless tagging.

Satur is a fellow PhilSTAR op-ed columnist. He happens to be also a member of the Capampanga­n in Media Inc. (CAMI) based at the Clark Freeport. Unless a journalist’s writings are enough to terrorize this administra­tion, Satur cannot be a terrorist.

I had worked profession­ally with him with the pre-martial law Manila Times – he as assistant business editor and me as political reporter covering the Senate. Martial law in 1972 forced him and other journalist­s known for their progressiv­e ideas to go undergroun­d.

I’m familiar with Satur’s thinking and know of some of his activities and links. He is not a member of the New People’s Army or the Communist Party of the Philippine­s. We his friends were aghast at what we learned about the inhuman torture he had to endure after his capture.

More of his own discussion of his petition to the court to order his delisting can be read in his column yesterday in this op-ed section. * * *

ADVISORY: All Postscript­s can be accessed at manilamail.com. Follow author on Twitter as @FDPascual. Email feedback to fdp333@yahoo.com

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