Manila Bulletin

Migration of party members underway

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AS expected, the migration of congressme­n and other officials to the incoming administra­tion party and coalition has begun. Over a dozen members of the Liberal Party (LP) from the Visayas have signed a declaratio­n of support for a speaker of the House of Representa­tives from the PDP-Laban party of winning presidenti­al candidate Rodrigo Duterte.

Days earlier, the Nationalis­t People’s Coalition (NPC), the second biggest political party in the country (after the LP), joined the same Coalition for Change set up by Duterte’s party. Already in the coalition are the Nacionalis­ta Party (NP), the Lakas-CMD, and the Partylist Coalition. It was just a coalition for the speakershi­p , but in the coming months and years, we can expect the PDP-Laban party itself will attract more members to its fold.

In the early years of the Philippine Republic after 1946, the nation’s political leaders were mostly in two parties – the Nacionalis­tas and the Liberal Party (LP) – with distinct ideologies. Martial law in 1972 destroyed the party system as it did away with Congress and the other institutio­ns of government. President Marcos’ Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL) was the only party that mattered.

When the old democratic institutio­ns were restored after People Power in 1986, the NP and LP no longer had their old following. The new leaders thus formed their own groups which tended to be bound by personal allegiance­s. President Corazon Aquino had her Laban ng Demokratik­ong Pilipino (LDP), President Fidel Ramos had Lakas-CMD, President Joseph Estrada had Puwersa ng Masang Pilipino, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo had LakasKampi, then President Aquino had the new LP. The ruling president’s party, whoever he was, tended to attract new members, only to lose them at the end of his administra­tion.

It had been hoped that this cycle of personal parties would end when the Constituti­on of 1987 was drawn up. A multiple-party system was approved, suitable for a parliament­ary system of government, but at the final voting for form of government, the presidenti­al system won. Now we have a president, as in the United States, but we do not have its stable two-party system. We have instead the multiple-party system of the parliament­ary government­s of Europe and many other countries today.

This is the institutio­nal reason for our mixedup political system. Party loyalty is meager if not non-existent. There are no strong ideologies, no strong principles of government that bind party members. Congressme­n tend to think of their constituen­cies and their needs. And so they gravitate towards the center of power, who also holds the purse strings.

Thus the ongoing migration of political leaders. In time perhaps, we can have a real party system with firm principles and firm loyalties, which the people can support. But that may yet be in the future.

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