Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘BEST AND BRIGHTEST’?

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There is no question that the President has broad, almost unbridled powers when it comes to appointing people in government. The Constituti­on authorizes the chief executive to appoint “the heads of the executive department­s, ambassador­s, other public ministers and consuls, or officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose appointmen­ts are vested in him in this Constituti­on. He shall also appoint all other officers of the Government whose appointmen­ts are not otherwise provided for by law, and those whom he may be authorized by law to appoint.”

That is a tremendous authority, limited only by another section in the Constituti­on that prohibits the President from making permanent appointmen­ts to executive positions “two months immediatel­y before the next presidenti­al elections and up to the end of his term.”

The right of the President to choose who gets to join him in public governance and serve at his pleasure is not the problem; it’s when those he entrusts with public office turn out to be unfit for and unworthy of the job.

In the previous administra­tion, a valid and longstandi­ng complaint of Benigno Aquino III was his penchant for appointing to high office college classmates, shooting buddies and other people whose only perceived qualificat­ion was their closeness and loyalty to him. Exhibit A of this would be Virginia Torres at the Land Transporta­tion Office, Jun Abaya at the then Department of Transporta­tion and Communicat­ions, and ex-police chief Alan Purisima. Singly and collective­ly, their blatant shortcomin­gs in office, and Aquino’s inability to replace them with more competent alternativ­es, eventually wrought considerab­le damage on his presidency.

President Duterte promised something different at the beginning of his term: He would get only the best and brightest for his Cabinet, he said. Nearly a year into his administra­tion and that promise is a mixed bag. The likes of Social Welfare Secretary Judy Taguiwalo and Education Secretary Leonor Briones are inspired choices. The team of economic managers is a solid one. But many others have turned out to be wanting—punctuated by the “rahrahing” for martial law by Presidenti­al Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo and the show-biz posturing by the Philippine National Chief Gen. Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa amid the carnage that has attended the government’s brutal war on drugs.

Now comes a trio of new appointmen­ts that appear to be troubling from the get-go. The former sexy starlet-turned-formidable pro-Duterte blogger Mocha Uson has bagged a powerful position in government as assistant secretary in the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office. Amid widespread criticism, principall­y over her track record in disseminat­ing fake news and her fundamenta­l misappreci­ation of the role of dissent and a healthy free press in a democracy, Mr. Duterte himself has defended Uson’s appointmen­t as a case of his “utang na loob” (debt of gratitude) to her that must be repaid—with a taxpayer-funded position, in this case.

The militariza­tion of the bureaucrac­y, meanwhile, is seemingly accelerati­ng with the appointmen­t of former AFP chief of staff Roy Cimatu to the environmen­t department, and the announceme­nt this early of the ascension to the Department of the Interior and Local Government by current AFP chief of staff Eduardo Año, who is set to retire only in October. How they specifical­ly qualify for their respective portfolios is not clear. “I’ll add one more soldier and my junta will be complete,” joked Mr. Duterte. Wait—what? In any case, what has happened to this administra­tion’s “best and brightest” promise? Weneed more of President Duterte’s high-caliber appointmen­ts, like that of Nestor Espenilla at the central bank.

PRESIDENT DUTERTE PROMISED SOMETHING DIFFERENT AT THE BEGINNING OF HIS TERM: HE WOULD GET ONLY THE BEST AND BRIGHTEST FOR HIS CABINET

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