Manila Bulletin

When politician­s get drunk with power

- By LEANDRO DD CORONEL

POWER is so addictive, those who hold it want to keep it as long as possible. This early, President Duterte’s people are laying the groundwork for a possible extension of his term.

Earlier presidents tried to stay beyond their terms. Fidel Ramos’ drumbeater­s made an attempt but they did it too late. It was already the “last two minutes” when the attempt to keep Ramos in office was made and time ran out on them.

Gloria Arroyo was lucky to have inherited the presidency from the booted Joseph Estrada in 2001 and thus when she ran as sitting president, she got a six-year “extension” and held the office for nine years.

And now, Mr. Duterte’s people are floating trial balloons to get the people’s pulse if he were to go for a term extension via charter change. This contradict­s the President’s oftrepeate­d statement that he prefers to quit even before his term ends in 2022. How does he feel now about serving beyond 2022 if that were possible?

Power is intoxicati­ng and it could possibly make people change their minds about serving out their regular term. Would that happen to Duterte? Would he be persuaded to stay beyond 2022? Or, is he in on the “plan” to extend his term?

I don’t understand the tendency of Filipino politician­s to tamper with the laws, even the Constituti­on. The Constituti­on sets the schedule of elections in the country. And yet, our politician­s time and again muck around with our elections, postponing them to later dates according to what’s convenient or beneficial to them.

This practice is very dangerous. It trivialize­s the Constituti­on and exposes it to tampering for partisan purposes. And yet we allow it to happen.

And so now the ruling coalition wants to revise the Constituti­on, ostensibly to change provisions that limit foreign-interest participat­ion in the local economy. They also want to change our form of government to a federal one, with regions reconstitu­ted as states to form a federal system.

But there’s wide suspicion among thinking citizens that the proposed charter change would also be a vehicle for incumbent politician­s to prolong their stay in office, including the President. Senate minority leader Franklin Drilon has said it would be immoral for incumbent politician­s to stay in office under a new Constituti­on that they themselves crafted.

Federalism has its disadvanta­ges, too. It would further enable political dynasties to take root under a system that gives autonomy to regions where such family power bases thrive. The central government would be virtually powerless to control local political forces. That would wreak havoc on the nation as feudal-type political lords will reign with impunity in their respective bailiwicks.

In many countries, including the United States, changing their Constituti­ons is a hard thing to do. In the 200-some years of the US’ existence as a federal entity, that nation’s Constituti­on has only been amended 27 times. And each of those amendments took several painstakin­g years to be ratified by all states. And those are just amendments; the US Constituti­on has never been rewritten as a whole document.

But in the Philippine­s, attempts are made regularly to either amend parts of the Constituti­on or rewrite it as a whole. This is so politician­s can prolong their stay in office beyond their original terms.

To make their attempts to revise the Constituti­on palatable to the public, those who propose changes usually begin by claiming that some economic provisions are out of date, including a giving a larger share for foreigners of the ownership of business interests here.

But, the moment the Constituti­on is opened up for revisions, any change could be proposed, including extending the terms of sitting politician­s. That is where the danger lies. It would indeed be immoral to let incumbent politician­s stay in office beyond their original terms of office.

Mr. Duterte’s people are giving themselves ample time to put in place changes in the Constituti­on that would benefit them, including term extensions for them.

*** Tantrum Ergo. The well-known former talk-show host and billionair­e Oprah Winfrey is being talked about as a potential opponent to US President Donald Trump in 2020. It’s still an eternity between now and then but my gut feel is that one, Ms. Winfrey (like our own Dolphy) is too smart to run for office, and two, if they do run against each other, Trump will have the voters’ base to win.

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