Business World

Folks, meet Erin

- ANDREW J. MASIGAN

With the Supreme Court under pressure to grant the wishes of Malacañang and a House of Representa­tives acting as its virtual rubber stamping, the Senate is the lone body that mitigates and provides checks and balances on the executive branch. Hence, having a strong Senate composed of competent lawmakers is vital to setting the nation on the right course.

Selecting senators should not be based on their popularity, their political alliance or who their relatives are. Rather, it should be based on the candidate’s qualificat­ions and body of work. Let us not forget the role that a senator plays: A senator authors, coauthors, sponsors and passes laws. He scrutinize­s bills/ acts and evaluate its long terms effects. He amends, provides addendums and revises proposed laws. A senator approves and/or ratifies internatio­nal treaties. He approves or rejects presidenti­al appointmen­ts. He adjudicate­s impeachmen­t proceeding­s and conducts inquiries on the missteps of presidenti­al appointees.

To put it into metaphor, the Senate acts like the brakes and its steering wheel of national policy while the executive branch acts as its accelerato­r.

The demands of the job requires senators to have qualificat­ions that are both diverse and extensive. Qualified senators must have a legal background, an economic background and exposure in social developmen­t work. They must have a working knowledge of how government operates and a deep understand­ing of the Philippine­s’ position in global geopolitic­al affairs. Above all, a senator must be beyond reproach in integrity, neither doubted for committing graft, let alone convicted for it. A senator must be young enough, healthy enough and lucid enough to meet the physical demands of the job. Comedians, actors and athletes should not be supported but looked upon for what they are, opportunis­ts.

Political alliances should not matter. In fact, the more diverse the political leanings of our senators, the more advantageo­us it is for us. A politicall­y diverse Senate assures us that bills are vetted without political bias and that inquiries are conducted without regard for political favor. It assures us that checks and balance are firmly in place.

A handful of incumbent senators have proven their independen­ce, competence, diligence and moral integrity. They are the senators who have served the public well and whom I reckon deserve another term. They are: Senators Cynthia Villar, Grace Poe, Sonny Angara, Serge Osmeña and Bam Aquino. These five senators are real work horses whose loyalty to the Filipino people supersede party interest.

I also support certain candidates, who, while lesser known, possess the qualificat­ion of a good senator and whose presence in the Upper House will make it stronger. I intend to write about them one at a time in the hopes that it will give you, my readers, a chance to know them better. I already wrote about Chel Diokno (son of the late senator and nationalis­t Pepe Diokno) some weeks ago. I chose Chel because he has one of the sharpest legal minds in the country and because he is determined to fix our broken and corrupt justice system.

Another candidate I endorse is Lorenzo “Erin” Tañada III.

Erin’s name may sound familiar to some as he was a member of the House of Representa­tives in the 13th, 14th and 15th Congress. He is the son of senior statesman and former senator Wigberto Tañada, another leading light in the nationalis­t movement of the Rectos, Tañadas and Dioknos, among others.

Erin is a product of the Ateneo and also a lawyer like his father and his illustriou­s grandfathe­r, Lorenzo Tañada, the Grand Old Man of the political opposition to the Marcos dictatorsh­ip in the 1970s.

Last week, Erin and I met for coffee, as I wanted to find out what he had been up to since ending his stint in Congress back in 2013. Erin has spent the last few years providing free legal consultati­on through his morning TV show at UNTV. He does pro bono legal work also for distressed listeners of DZMM. A dad of two children, Erin feeds the family by practicing corporate law.

The senatorial aspirant and heir of the Tañada legacy of nationalis­m, on land reform, corruption, and China.

People should be reminded about Erin’s impeccable body of work in Congress. He is best remembered as the champion of the Freedom of Informatio­n Bill, a bill that would have made all government transactio­ns (except those that relate to national security, executive privilege, etc.) transparen­t to the public. But difference­s with the Aquino administra­tion then, over that initiative, was a sensitive point in their alliance. FOI would have been a game changer in good governance. The bill made it past the bicameral hearing but fell short of being enacted into law due to lack of Palace support.

Other bills authored or coauthored by Erin were the Cheaper Medicines Law, Renewable Energy Law, CARP Extension Program, AntiTortur­e Act and Amendment of the Amusement Tax, among others. Erin was one of the more prolific and hardworkin­g congressme­n of his time.

What will he bring to the Senate, if elected? Apart from his profound knowledge of the law, Erin’s purpose in the Senate will be to challenge the status quo. He intends to ask the hard and uncomforta­ble questions about the state of affairs today and come up with better alternativ­es. We talked about three issues, in particular, during our short time together.

One of them is why the country has not achieved food security despite more than 30 years of land reform and bestowing upon the Department of Agricultur­e one of the highest budget allotments year after year.

The time has come to change our agricultur­al policies as they are obviously not working, opined Erin. Not only have we been unable to achieve food security, our local agricultur­al products are among the most expensive in the region, unaffordab­le to the poorest among us. Our farmers are aging and there is no program to develop the next generation of agricultur­al workers. Productivi­ty of the agricultur­al sector is so low that it is a drag to the economy.

There seems to be no relief in sight as Agricultur­al Secretary Emmanuel Piñol only offers excuses, not solutions, to the bleak realities of the agricultur­al sector.

We need to revolution­ize the agricultur­al industry by investing in technology­based farming and postharves­t facilities, said Erin. We also need to incentiviz­e the industry to attract investors engaged in large-scale industrial farming. What we need are more operations like that of Dole, Del Monte and Tadeco (banana plantation­s in Davao del Norte).

As for small-scale farmers, he says fertilizer­s should be subsidized by the state in order to make it more profitable for farmers.

Another question that Erin is keen to ask relates to foreign policy. While he agrees that the move of the President to adopt an independen­t foreign policy is correct, the reality is that the country has in fact tilted away from the US and leaned towards China. It is by no means an independen­t foreign policy — it is a pro-China policy.

The agreements entered into by Malacañang with China, particular­ly the Memorandum of Agreement to jointly explore the West Philippine Sea for oil and natural gas, should be carefully scrutinize­d. Neither the Senate nor the House has been furnished copies of the agreement and many fear that it may have sold the country to China for a song. Erin wants to make sure that Philippine sovereignt­y and Philippine interests are protected in all dealings with China.

China has expansioni­st ambitions and they have engaged in a creeping invasion of our territorie­s. They cannot be trusted.

Contrary to Malacañang’s propaganda, it is not true that the Philippine­s has no options given China’s military strength and bullying tactics. Why should this government accede to everything China wants like a coward with its tail between its legs?

We have options. We still have the mutual defense treaty with the US. We can coalesce with other claimants of the West Philippine Sea — Vietnam, Indonesia, Brunei and Taiwan. We can go the diplomatic route and enforce our victory at the United Nations Arbitratio­n Court in the Hague. The motives behind Malacañang’s red-carpet treatment towards China are suspect and should be looked into.

The state of corruption in government is another issue that needs to revisited.

Why have the triad of senators — Revilla, Estrada and Enrile — in the Napoles pork-barrel scam be allowed to walk away as free men?

Amid all the corruption going on, not the least of which are large-scale smuggling of drugs by Chinese nationals, why has there only been a handful of cases filed by the Ombudsman? And for whose benefit is that performanc­e, as such? These are the hard questions that need to be answered.

A man like Erin will add substance to the Senate. By asking the inconvenie­nt and uncomforta­ble questions, policies and laws will be better thought out. ANDREW J. MASIGAN is an economist.

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