Philippine Daily Inquirer

The year that was

- Conrado de Quiros

IT WAS the best of times, it was the worst of times.

The year began benignly enough, looking to controvert the reputation of “13” as an unlucky number. In February, GloriaMaca­pagal-Arroyo herself changed her tune and grudgingly gave P-Noy high marks for economic performanc­e. Since the latter half of 2012, the country had been posting record rates of growth.

Which only got better as the months rolled by. By June the Philippine­s was being touted by internatio­nal economic bodies as the “new miracle of Asia.” We had recorded a 7.8-percent growth rate during its first quarter, which had gone past even China, which had “only” 7.7 percent. Not bad, given what we had just been, whichwas the sick man of Asia, and where much of the world remained at, which was in the pit of a recession.

February brought an augury of dire things to come. In an act of madness, Jamalul Kiram III sent a band of renegades to Sabah to try to reclaim an ancient, forgotten, and universall­y unrecogniz­ed right to a perceived dominion. Of course they were repelled—the outcome was never in doubt—not just by the Malaysian government but by the people they proposed to liberate. The repulsion, like the incursion, proved bloody, which included among its victims not just the invaders but many of the Tausug in Sabah who suffered reprisals afterward.

The siege, or farce, ended a couple of weeks later. Kiram himself disappeare­d from view and, toward the end of the year, from this earth, a tiny footnote to history.

The cruel month of August brought cruel signs of tribulatio­n. Following on the heels of P-Noy’s triumphant State of the Nation Address, Janet Napoles burst into the scene, courtesy of the INQUIRER, reminding the country that the fight against corruption had barely begun, the Titanic of corruption had barely been sunk. Overnight Napoles became the face of corruption and pork its emblem.

Napoles’ doings straddled pretty much a past period—she is suspected of accumulati­ng P10 billion over roughly the same number of years, which meant for the most part Arroyo’s time. On the basis of the Commission on Audit’s findings, the administra­tion tagged several congressme­n and Senators Jinggoy Estrada and Bong Revilla as parties to the crime. The administra­tion was riding high, it had a record rate of growth behind it, and had served notice the crooked would be found, the thieving would be punished. The “daang matuwid” was working. Then suddenly, everything unraveled. Jinggoy delivered a privilege speech whose point was not that he was innocent but that others were just as guilty as he. P-Noy himself, he suggested, had bought off—he refused to use the word “bribe”—the senators who voted to oust Renato Corona. Completely inexplicab­ly, the administra­tion didn’t find in this a reason to pounce on Jinggoy, it found in this a reason to defend itself. It denied trying to influence the outcome of Corona’s trial. Butch Abad came out to say the money given to the cooperativ­e senators wasn’t a bribe but funds from the DAP, a program to accelerate developmen­t. All it did was draw public attention, and ire, to the DAP. It became the presidenti­al version of pork.

Thus began the Great Reversal. The public, which had gotten outraged over the legislator­s’ use of hard-earned taxpayer money to light their cigars with, started blasting the administra­tion as well. First for being powerless to stop pork, then for being tolerant of pork, and finally for actively promoting pork. Right or wrong, the attacks began to take their toll.

P-Noy rallied a bit in Zamboanga and Bohol, in the first responding decisively to Nur Misuari’s siege of the city and in the second pitching tent in the ruins of Tagbilaran to show solidarity with the earthquake survivors. But not enough to arrest the slide. With no small help from the spinners, social media and the public itself let loose theirwrath upon the administra­tion. Before “Yolanda” came, the winds of a vicious storm were swirling around the administra­tion, pounding it again and again with powerful surges of Learian rant. Then came Yolanda. It battered not just Tacloban, it also battered Malacañang. This time with no small help from CNN, which was first to report government paralysis in the face of the devastatio­n. Things didn’t get better with Typhoon Mar, P-Noy’s favorite sidekick, who reminded his countrymen why nothing moved, and has moved, in DOTC and DILG during his watch. He showed in a grimy video how he dealt grimily with perceived subordinat­es.

The scale of devastatio­n from Yolanda was awe-inspiring, which brought out the worst and best in Filipinos. The worst was the vultures that came out immediatel­y after the storm, looting and terrorizin­g, and the carpetbagg­ers that tried to make a fast buck off a prostrate land. The best was the phenomenal outpouring of generosity and goodwill from within and without, from Filipinos here and abroad, and indeed from the world itself, a tsunami of giving, of relief goods and of one’s self, that swept across Leyte and neighborin­g provinces. It soon became bigger than the storm surges that broke onto their shores earlier. The deluge of goodwill persists to this day, a month after Yolanda, well into Christmas and probably after, as a nation, or a world, discovers its conscience, itsmortali­ty, its humanity.

Maybe it was Christmas, maybe it was a reaction to the reaction, maybe it was people rediscover­ing perspectiv­e, but before the year was out, P-Noy defied critics and detractors by holding on to his approval ratings. Not surging like a storm surge but not ebbing like ebb tide either. Certainly not plunging into the abyss of negative figures his detractors had predicted or prayed for. His administra­tion has lived to fight another day, offering a shaft of hope, a glimmer of promise.

That was the year that was, the best of times, the worst of times.

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