The Philippine Star

Blessed are the meek

- ERNESTO P. MACEDA, Jr.

Ijust want to give him a little legal practice before he becomes a lawyer.” With this tongue in cheek quip, US President John F. Kennedy sought to deflect public attention from the glaringly controvers­ial appointmen­t of his kid brother, the 35-year-old Robert F. Kennedy. A two-year lawyer, “RFK” was given what was arguably the most powerful cabinet portfolio at the time, the Justice Department.

RFK turned out to be one of the most outstandin­g attorneys-general in history. He fought sustained battles against organized crime, was a powerful advocate of the civil rights movement and had a lead role in the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Justice Department edifice in Washington D.C. was renamed the Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building by Republican President George W. Bush in 2001.

We replay this famous word play due to the playful efforts of President Rodrigo Roa Duterte to play us as he downplayed the accountabi­lity of his players he claims were outplayed. Is he pleading for patience for two “blessed” personalit­ies, his two Customs Commission­ers? We are supposed to understand that they were just practicing?

Well, RFK proved his detractors wrong. The unqualifie­d turned out to be overqualif­ied. In the case of PRRD’s men, however, it’s the utter reverse. A test of faith. However anxiously the strongman desires to finesse the serious shortcomin­gs of his men, he cannot exculpate them by character testimonia­l. Even if we were prepared to defray the high tuition involved in their matriculat­ion: the countless lives lost or destroyed by the approximat­ely P11 billion and P6.5 billion quantities of illegal drugs allowed to slip through their “innocent” hands, it simply isn’t good policy to ignore the blunders and to hope that these men were angels. As public officials entrusted with sensitive responsibi­lities, a thorough and immediate investigat­ion should be welcomed, specially by them. Its good that the Senate is on it. At least, one agency is on the ball.

Converting to Hinduism. PRRD promoted Lapena, as he did Faeldon and the several similarly impenitent before them. Its odd that a man so ready to make tough decisions seems to be gun shy when personal friends are on the dock. Just how many sacred cows will we find in this administra­tion? May we suggest that the President widen his horizon for talent. The personalit­ies he seems powerless to chastise are all personal friends. To avert public opprobrium of this open escape hatch, maybe consider opening the qualificat­ions of his factotums to more than geographic­al origin or personal histories. Wouldn’t it be easier then to display the iron hand?

Causes of discontent. On Tuesday, the American public judges Donald Trump. President Trump rose to power on the wave of protest rather than on inherent merit. But he has clearly tapped into a native sentiment that belabors identity deficits as importantl­y as economic deficits. With him wielding the baton, Nationalis­m has been brought to the mainstream.

If Democrats take back Congress, President Trump’s capacity to govern is compromise­d. The Republican advantage is at 51 – 47 in the Senate, with 2 independen­ts; and, in the House, 235 – 193 with 7 vacancies. A democratic House effectivel­y ends his planned tax cuts, immigratio­n wall, etc. They will surely commence impeachmen­t proceeding­s. A democratic Senate, though unlikely, makes him a lame duck.

Midterm elections are anticipate­d as being referendum­s of the administra­tion’s performanc­e. The same can be true in the Philippine­s. With the exception of the positions of President, Vice President and 12 Senators, more than 18,000 elective offices face mandated renewal challenges next year. Finished or not finished, pass your papers! It won’t only be their personalit­ies we grade. There are also the classic indicators such as effectivit­y, efficiency and providence of their actions. At bottom, the enquiry for critical reflection is “am I better off compared to 3 years back”?

Careful what you wish for. Getting blamed is the occupation­al hazard of asking for the job. Government assumes responsibi­lity for accelerati­ng developmen­t and candidates run on this platform. When there is no discernibl­e progress or improvemen­t, people can be less forgiving than PRRD is with his own proxies.

Leaders and the bureaucrac­y they command cannot escape this high expectatio­n. Such is the essence of republican­ism. Both elective and appointive officialdo­m exist to represent us and to serve us. Hence, the instinct is always to tweak the system, whether the reform is incrementa­l or wholesale.

The President has been doing just that, lately, and less wishy-washy this time. He has gone on a binge of Executive Orders mandating the piecemeal streamlini­ng, abolishing, transferri­ng out or in, rationaliz­ing, reengineer­ing, of agencies under the Office of the President. Some of the agencies affected are the NFA, TESDA, Philippine Sugar Corp., National Anti Poverty Commission.

Sven Goran Eriksson. We welcome the former Team England Manager at the World Cup and Euro Cup. He who coached the golden generation: Beckham, Rooney, Gerrard, Lampard, Terry, Owen. Eriksson was national team manager also of Mexico and Ivory Coast (of Drogba). At Club level, he managed in the English Premiere League (Manchester City, Leicester City) and at champion clubs in other top flight European Leagues (Benfica, Lazio, Roma). The man is unquestion­ably one of the best managers in the world. And now, he is officially the manager of the Philippine National Football Team, the Azkals. How’s that for respectabi­lity? Its like having NBA’s Pat Riley coach the Gilas National Basketball Team.

Eriksson makes us more competitiv­e and elevates our profile in the world football community. We should regain top South East Asia ranking from Vietnam. Already, leading Fil-European players are expressing their interest to enlist. We read that two Bundesliga mainstays, from Mainz and Bayern Munich, are open to playing for the country of their mothers. This developmen­t hastens the realizatio­n, in quantum leaps, of my generation’s dream to someday salute the Philippine flag, with our sons, at a World Cup stadium.

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