Business World

A unity among non-players

- AMELIA HC YLAGAN AMELIA H. C. YLAGAN is a doctor of Business Administra­tion from the University of the Philippine­s. ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Apress conference was held at The Peninsula Manila hotel on Easter Sunday, April 17, by Panfilo “Ping” Lacson, Francisco “Isko” Domagoso, and Norberto Gonzales, all candidates for president in the May 9, 2022 national elections. They said they just wanted to tell the public that they were not withdrawin­g from the presidenti­al race because they had been “talked to” by “the other camp,” Leni Robredo’s, to withdraw their candidacie­s. A fourth candidate, Manny Pacquiao, was expected to join the press con and publicly sign the joint four-way manifesto. Pacquiao was a no-show. Julio Teehankee, a political scientist, called the press con “A unity among non-players” (CNN Philippine­s, April 19, 2022).

“According to its ‘Ulat ng Bayan’ national survey conducted from March 17 to 21, Pulse Asia Research, Inc. said 56% of the qualified Filipino voters would elect Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos, Jr. as president if the elections took place during the survey period… while closest rival Vice-President Leni Robredo got 24% or an improvemen­t of 9% from the February survey. Francisco Domagoso ranked third at 8%, followed by Senator Emmanuel “Manny” Pacquiao, 6%; Senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson at 2%; Faisal Mangondato at 1%; former Palace spokespers­on Ernesto “Ernie” Abella at 0.1%; Jose Montemayor Jr. at 0.05%; Leodegario “Leody” De Guzman at 0.02%; and former Defense chief Norberto Gonzales at 0%” (pna. gov.ph April 6, 2022).

That Pulse Asia survey must have been the basis of Prof. Teehankee’s labeling of the press con participan­ts as “non-players.”

“The other presidenti­al contenders (after Marcos and Robredo) register voter preference­s of at most 8%. Additional­ly, 1% of likely voters are still undecided about whom to vote for as president, another 1% are not supporting any candidate for the post, and 0.5% refused to identify their preferred presidenti­al bet,” according to Pulse Asia.

Pulse Asia further said, “If their original choice for president does not pursue his/her candidacy for whatever reason, 23% of likely voters would instead vote for Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko” Domagoso.” And that is perhaps what so excited Isko that he chanted “Leni, withdraw” throughout that press con which was not originally meant to go so far as to ask second-ranking Robredo to withdraw her candidacy. Imagine what the 23% second-choice of him would be, added to his own 8%, plus a good percentage of those voters who would have chosen Marcos Jr., but would then have an alternativ­e who is not Leni Robredo? Third-ranking Isko can dethrone Marcos Jr!

And so the press con, moderated mainly by Isko, diverted and perceptive­ly digressed into a character assassinat­ion of Leni Robredo — cleverly starting from the individual­ly experience­d but collective­ly angering so-called efforts of the Robredo camp to outrightly ask the “non-players” to withdraw, and ending with the undisguise­d cry to crucify Leni for her “sins” against the Filipino people.

The three “non-players” recited their personal gripes against Leni, all united in decrying her for saying (before the deadline of filing candidacy) that she was not going to run for the presidency. Norberto Gonzales (lowest ranked in the Pulse Asia survey of winnables) declared that “People seem not to

want #2 to fight #1; we need a new #2.” Isko strongly suggested that the phenomenon of Marcos Jr. being #1 was “not because they like Marcos Jr., but because they hate Dilawan (the ‘Yellows’ or original Cory Aquino followers, which include Leni).” (Please refer to YouTube video of press con for exact quotes). “Are you delivering ourselves to a Marcos presidency?,” a reporter asked from the floor.

“I don’t believe 60% of our people are loyalists to Marcos,” Isko said, evidently correlatin­g Marcos Jr.’s consistent­ly near-60% popularity in the Pulse Asia surveys. And Ping Lacson agreed with Isko. “Withdraw, Leni, if you love your country!” Isko chanted. “Sobra lang ang galit sa inyo! (The hatred for you is just too much).”

“Galit po kayo kay Leni Robredo? (Are you angry at Leni Robredo),” a reporter in the audience at the press con asked from the floor. “This is not an antiLeni press con,” Ping Lacson replied. “It is not about them. It is about the

people,” Isko added. Even at the start of the press con, Isko’s intro was: “This is not about us (the #3 Isko, #5 Lacson, and last# Gonzales). Once and for all, tao muna (the people first). Buhay mo, buhay ng mga anak mo (Your life, your children’s lives).”

Another reporter asked from the floor: “Why then, is this press con in a five-star hotel? (the brunch buffet at the hotel on Easter Sunday was at P4,300++ per head.) There is a calamity in Leyte caused by the typhoon, she added, complainin­g also about the “macho politics” that overhung the discussion­s. Ping Lacson dismissed it with “I don’t think that deserves a comment or an answer; Sorry.” And then Isko mischievou­sly shouted out, “Good luck!”

We, the Filipino people certainly need a lot of good luck.

Political scientist Richard Heydarian has called the coming May 9 elections the most critical in the history of the last half century of Philippine history (CNN Philippine­s, April 19, 2022). Truly, we are facing a most critical national election at this time, when we are still in the throes of a persistent COVID-19 pandemic, and suffering physical, social, and economic trials, even spiritual/moral and psychologi­cal anxieties from it, aggravated even by natural calamities. Fake news and disinforma­tion in social media compromise the truth of the situation. Institutio­ns and traditions are challenged in a governance sometimes doubted and feared. Just a few days ago, on April 20, the Commission on Elections (Comelec) ruled that a case calling for Marcos to be barred from the contest based on his failure to file income tax returns lacked merit.

“Regardless of the fact that the nonfiling of income tax return was done repeatedly by the respondent, there is still no tax evasion to speak of as no tax was actually intentiona­lly evaded. The government was not defrauded,” the Comelec’s first division said in the ruling. Five other cases seeking to keep Marcos from running were also earlier dismissed by the poll body. These are now under appeal and could be escalated to the Supreme Court (reuters.com, April 20, 2022).

Mr. Teehankee at the CNN-Ph postmortem called the three candidates’ Easter Sunday press con, “gaslightin­g.” It is a tactic of emotional bullying whereby “a person or entity manipulate­s another person in the hopes of acquiring power over them. Often this manipulati­on leads to the victim questionin­g their own reality, and in doing so, not questionin­g the motives and actions of the person gaslightin­g them” (healthline.com).

Ping Lacson, the military-intelligen­ce strategist, immediatel­y sensed when the press con crossed the line beyond decent and forthright communicat­ion of a message, and on to vicious ad hominem attacks betraying personal motivation­s and objectives of the individual­s in his group. He knew that attacking the “Yellows,” “Pinks,” and Leni Robredo would be counter-productive, and so he made it clear that his message was simply that he will not withdraw his candidacy at the elections — period. Norberto Gonzales wavered between attacking and declaring respect for Leni while admitting fear of a repeat Marcos rule.

But the former movie star Isko Moreno did not stick to the original script of the press con and improvised on a script figurative­ly made in the deceptive haze of a gaslight. He jeered at those who raise the chimera of Marcos’ 14-year Martial Law and the 1986 EDSA Revolution that ousted the dictator, those who urge remembranc­e of the past to guide choices in the coming elections. Isko outrightly bullied minds and hearts into admitting complacenc­y and even complicity in not standing up for the ideals of EDSA I. “Never again” never worked, Isko said at the press con. “Why then did ‘Ocho-Derecho’ (the all-Yellow or EDSA believers) candidates in the (May 13, 2019) senatorial elections get ‘zero’?” he chided.

If we Filipinos are indeed guilty of forgetting the ideals of freedom, truth, and justice fought for at the EDSA People Power Revolution, we must now be truly sorry for our neglect and redeem ourselves by voting for honest, fair, and truly patriotic, God-fearing leaders with no past sins in the coming May 9 elections.

“Never again!”

 ?? PHILIPPINE STAR/RUSSELL PALMA ?? PRESIDENTI­AL ASPIRANTS Isko Moreno, Norberto Gonzales and Ping Lacson held a joint press conference at the Peninsula hotel in Makati City on April 17.
PHILIPPINE STAR/RUSSELL PALMA PRESIDENTI­AL ASPIRANTS Isko Moreno, Norberto Gonzales and Ping Lacson held a joint press conference at the Peninsula hotel in Makati City on April 17.
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