The National - News

Two powerful Filipino dynasties drop the pretence of working together in harmony

- RICHARD JAVAD HEYDARIAN Richard Javad Heydarian is a Manila-based academic and columnist

IThe Autumn of the Patriarch, the novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote about the twilight years of a fading strongman, who struggled to come to grips with his gradual fall from grace.

Here was a man who was once “so overwhelme­d by that outpouring of love [from the people]” that he couldn’t stop admonishin­g his praetorian guards for keeping him away from his adoring fans.

Towards the winter of his life, however, people came to see the “sight of the sunset old man who was contemplat­ing the waterfront with the saddest look in the world”.

Marquez wrote that novel during his exile in Spain under the shadow of a crumbling Franco dictatorsh­ip.

But his haunting novel, considered “a poem on the solitude of power”, also aptly describes the current state of the Philippine­s’ most popular president in recent memory, Rodrigo Duterte.

By all accounts, the visibly ageing and increasing­ly frail former president – who was once hailed as the “Father” (Tatay) of the nation – is now a shell of his former self.

In a bizarre twist of events, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, the namesake son of a former dictator, has emerged as the greatest threat to the once powerful Duterte dynasty. And amid an intensifyi­ng power struggle between the two camps, the former president is now facing the prospect of several court trials, including by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, for his alleged human rights violations.

What is at stake is nothing less than the soul of Philippine­s’ besieged democracy.

Just a year ago, the “UniTeam” of the Marcos and Duterte dynasties seemed invincible.

The tandem, composed of Mr Marcos Jr and former presidenti­al daughter, Sara Duterte, who ran as vice president, cruised through last year’s elections with the highest margins in contempora­ry Philippine history.

They won close to 60 per cent of all votes – making them the first-ever tandem to win a clear majority in the Philippine­s’ single-round, first-past-thepost electoral system.

Their closest rivals barely won more than 20 per cent of the votes. It was not even close, yet quite paradoxica­lly, this outcome was far from predetermi­ned.

Just months ahead of the elections, it was Ms Duterte, not Mr Marcos Jr, who was leading the polls of presidenti­al candidates.

In contrast, Mr Marcos

Jr, who had narrowly lost a vice-presidenti­al race in 2016, barely managed to get about 15 per cent of the votes in pre-election surveys.

In fact, he spent years in political wilderness. Once, his elder sister, Imee, lamented that her brother was “jobless” and was “dying to work” in government while unsuccessf­ully seeking to overturn his election defeat.

The Marcoses, however, would get their break in late2021, when both the liberal opposition and the pro-Duterte camps struggled to agree on their preferred presidenti­al candidates. This provided a perfect opening for Mr Marcos Jr to engineer his return to power in style.

Thanks to mediation by stalwarts, most notably former president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Ms Duterte decided to run as Mr Marcos Jr’s vice-presidenti­al running mate. In exchange, they expected political gratitude from, if not a servile partner, in the next president.

They couldn’t have been any more mistaken. As soon as Mr Marcos Jr won the presidency, he began to sing a different tune. His first major move was to deny his key patrons any major position in his administra­tion.

Despite her public expression of interest, Ms Duterte wasn’t given the prized position of Defence Secretary. Meanwhile, Ms Arroyo was snubbed in favour of Mr Marcos Jr’s first cousin, Martin Romualdez, for the leadership of the House of Representa­tives.

Over the next year, Mr Marcos Jr chipped away at key Duterte policy legacies by, among other things, drawing down his predecesso­r’s deadly “drug war” and, crucially, adopting an increasing­ly West-friendly and Sino-sceptic foreign policy. In contrast to the Beijing-friendly Duterte administra­tion, he adopted a tougher stance in the South China Sea disputes, expanded America’s access to Philippine military bases, and pulled his country out of projects under the Belt and Road Initiative.

When pro-Duterte allies tried to push back by allegedly organising a plot to oust Mr Romualdez as the Speaker, they faced stiff resistance. The upshot was the demotion of Ms Arroyo in the ranks of House leadership, triggering a public feud between Mr

Romualdez and Ms Duterte. Unable to appreciate the new state of affairs, an ageing yet still influentia­l Mr Duterte began to strike back with growing ferocity. He challenged his successor’s foreign policy by unilateral­ly arranging a special meeting with China’s leadership in Beijing. But tensions reached new heights when his daughter was stripped of special confidenti­al funds by Marcos allies in the legislatur­e.

Refusing to stand idly by, the former president criticised the legislatur­e, calling it a “rotten” institutio­n, prompting further defections from party-mates, who had begun joining the pro-Marcos camp en masse. Philippine courts also began handing favourable rulings to top Duterte critics, most notably Nobel Laureate journalist Maria Ressa and former senator and justice secretary Leila Delima.

Characteri­stically stubborn and perilously tone-deaf, the pro-Duterte camp escalated its attack on pro-Marcos legislator­s. Although the notoriousl­y conflict-avoidant incumbent tried to once again project a united front, downplayin­g feuds within the governing coalition, there are increasing signs that a wholesale crackdown on the Dutertes could be in the offing.

To begin with, Ms Duterte is facing potential impeachmen­t proceeding­s in the legislatur­e, which is also exploring possible revocation of broadcasti­ng franchise of a staunchly pro-Duterte news channel for allegedly spreading “fake news”. In an utter state of desperatio­n, the former president has threatened to run for high office in coming elections in order to confront the Marcos Jr administra­tion and protect his camp.

But the Duterte dynasty faces an even more grim prospect.

In a potential policy shift with major implicatio­ns, the Marcos Jr administra­tion has indicated its openness to allowing the ICC to investigat­e the former president and his colleagues, who face allegation­s of overseeing extrajudic­ial killings in the past. Pro-Marcos legislator­s have openly called on the government to co-operate with the internatio­nal court.

Meanwhile, Mr Duterte also faces criminal complaints for allegedly threatenin­g certain members of the legislatur­e in public. Not unlike Marquez’s protagonis­t, Mr Duterte is confrontin­g a steady and seemingly irreversib­le fall from grace. But he is unlikely to go gently into the night; if anything, he is expected to up the ante and defy an increasing­ly inauspicio­us political landscape.

Much, however, will depend on Mr Marcos Jr, who now holds all the cards. Should he co-operate with the ICC and support his legislativ­e allies’ plans against the Dutertes, he may end up politicall­y eliminatin­g a once-powerful dynasty that its critics have long viewed to be among the biggest threats to Asia’s oldest liberal democracy.

Just a year ago, the ‘UniTeam’ of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and Sara Duterte appeared to be invincible

 ?? AP ?? President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and Vice President Sara Duterte, daughter of Rodrigo, in Manila last June
AP President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and Vice President Sara Duterte, daughter of Rodrigo, in Manila last June
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