The Philippine Star

My candidate is Christophe­r ‘Bong’ Go

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Although I do not agree there should be any elections without junking the Smartmatic-PCOS automatic voting system, I venture to choose Christophe­r “Bong” Go as my candidate if there should be one.

If you think President Rodrigo Duterte has been a good president and want his program continued, then Christophe­r “Bong” Go is the man to vote for as senator.

To show his support Duterte himself accompanie­d him when he filed his candidacy at the Comelec together with some members of the Cabinet and other supporters.

In my opinion, the most important considerat­ion for this support is continuity. That is what is lacking in the presidenti­al system we have adopted and the reason why we have not progressed as quickly as other middle-range countries in our region.

We need constituti­onal change and it must be a parliament­ary government with an evolving federal structure. In a parliament­ary system a bad leader can be removed with a no confidence vote and a good leader can stay as long as he fulfils the program he campaigned for without term limits.

That is one of the questions I asked Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir when I interviewe­d him in Kuala Lumpur. How long did it take you to put your reforms in place? He said 17 years, certainly more than one term. Still up to this day he had to make a comeback when his successor Najib Razak destroyed what he built.

But to go back to Christophe­r “Bong” Go. He became known as President Duterte’s photobombe­r. He’s always in the President’s picture whether in front, on the side or at the back. One would think that he was a security aide, but his frail figure makes him not physically equipped if an assassin attempts to kill the President. He is there because he is willing to take the bullet.

There are other things he is besides being a security aide. He is also the all-around aide you can see, when the President needs informatio­n he turns to Christophe­r Go, or if he wants to get hold of somebody, it is “Go again.” That is why the Philippine Cancer Society named him one of the men of influence among others, second only to the US Ambassador.

Federalism without a parliament­ary government will be useless. The presidenti­al system causes the inevitable money politics no matter if you say we have good candidates. A nationwide election for senators without constituen­cies is a flawed structure.

In a hearing in the Senate when Trillanes accused Go of favoring his relatives, he did not budge or wince despite the senator’s accusation­s of his alleged involvemen­t in a billions-worth Philippine Navy frigate project.

His answers were straightfo­rward and the senator was at a loss on how to weaken his victim. The audience clapped at his calm and collectedn­ess. Then and there I recognized his most useful character trait – he is ineffable.

He shares some of the qualities of Duterte. Like the President he also loves big bikes.

When he filed his candidacy Go was deemed automatica­lly resigned from his post as Special Assistant to the President (SAP), an office created especially for him by Duterte, which also gave him the rank of “secretary.”

As a government official, Go’s pet project is establishi­ng Malasakit Centers nationwide – one-stop shop facilities to hasten the delivery of medical services and other forms of assistance to poor patients.

His strength is to be versatile both in small and big things. He is also a good basketball player. He is also an amateur astronomer. “In 2003, I began doing planetary imaging using a Toucam Pro Webcam, while deep sky imaging was done with either film or my SBIG ST7E CCD camera. In February 2004, I took the plunge and bought a Goronado Solarmax 60 to observe the rare Venus Transit of 2004.

“On Feb. 24, 2006, I discovered that the white spot Oval BA of Jupiter has turned RED! “The Oval BA is now called Red Spot Jr or Red Jr. “I joined the team headed by Dr Imke de Pater and Dr Phil Marcus that used the Hubble Space Telescope to image Red Jr in April and May 2006!

In July 2006, our team used the W.M. Keck Observator­y, currently the largest telescope in the world to image the conjunctio­n of the Oval BA and the Great Red Spot (GRS).

“I also processed the Jupiter image for the Gemini Observator­y.

In September 2006, I was accepted as a member of the American Astronomic­al Society and its Division for Planetary Sciences (DPS). On Oct 2006, I attended the DPS 2006 meeting at Pasadena, California. I had a poster presentati­on during this meeting on the Evolution of Oval BA from 2004 to 2006.

“On October 2007, I attended the 39th DPS meeting at Orlando, Florida.

“On Jan. 24, 2008, I co-authored a paper in the Journal Nature on the NEB revival with Agustin Sanchez-Lavega. “I received the ALPO’s 2008 Walter Haas Award. “On October 2008, I attended the 40th DPS meeting at Ithaca, NY.

“On Feb.y 24, 2009, Mike Wong and I joined the Hubble Heritage Team to image the Quad Transit in Saturn using the Hubble Space Telescope.

“In 2015, the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union officially designated Asteroid 2000 EL157 to 30100 Christophe­rgo. This asteroid was discovered in March 11, 2000 by the Catalina Sky Survey.

“During the campaign I had a job to do then. I had to be always behind him (Duterte) because I also had to take note of what he says or if he needs informatio­n from me regarding certain questions from media.”

If there is anyone who had served Duterte the longest and the closest, it is the 42-year-old Go, the grandson of a close friend of Duterte and a management graduate of De La Salle University.

Go is the person Duterte cannot do without. He briefs Duterte about the news for the day and the things that have to be done later in the day.

Go had a big part in how Duterte finally decided to run for president. He recounted that it was a hard start for Duterte because only a few people believed in him as then mayor of Davao City, and his camp did not have a machinery as big and as strong as those of other presidenti­al candidates.

Duterte appointed Go as head of the OP-EMC aside from having supervisio­n over the Presidenti­al Management Staff (PMS) and the Office of the Appointmen­ts Secretary.

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