Philippine Daily Inquirer

Mocha Uson’s influencer report card

- OSCAR FRANKLIN TAN

Singapore—“We need people who are highly educated and possess stature. The Office of the President is not a student council.” Thus was newly appointed Assistant Secretary Mocha Uson of the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions Operations Office (PCOO) criticized by lawyer Paula Defensor Knack, sister of the late senator Miriam Santiago. Uson’s affiliates cite 5 million Facebook followers as her credential, but what is her actual impact beyond this oft-cited statistic?

PCOO Assistant Secretary Kris Ablan opined that government is so large it needs organized channels to tell us what it is doing, from social media to provincial radio. He plays the administra­tion’s Sam Seaborn. He posted pictures of the first FOI manuals on Facebook. He led volunteers across agencies who drafted these in 120 days, with no formal budget. I appreciate­d seeing government up close in such a personal way.

(I tried requesting the solicitor general’s recommenda­tion that a court acquit Janet Napoles at www.foi.gov.ph last Feb. 16. No one responded.)

But can Uson channel the “West Wing” linchpin, Press Secretary CJ Cregg?

Uson joined the “presstitut­es” as a Philippine Star columnist last November. Her 25 columns tackled national issues from Gina Lopez’s confirmati­on as environmen­t secretary to Mighty Corp.’s tax case.

But she offered nothing new beyond existing debate. She never defined Lopez’s defense the way Randy David’s “Dutertismo” and John Nery’s “The unfortunat­e...” became signature pieces. She dropped the Mocha Uson Blog’s raw passion, as though a different person was writing. Even her polemics—“Why do Filipinos hate Leni?”, “The flop of yellows’ Edsa plan” and “Is CBCP anti-Christ?”—lacked vigor. Nor did she use unparallel­ed access and exclusive interviews with President Duterte himself to spotlight underappre­ciated facets of government, like a simple photo of the first FOI manuals.

Finally, her fellow Star columnist Federico Pascual observed Uson’s column on the Star website last January. Its Facebook likes were “jumping by big blocks,” about 1,000 an hour starting 2 a.m. Hewrote, “Are computers and apps doing it for a paying client?”

Uson tried being a hard-hitting host when dzRH News TV gave her a show last February. It was canceled the next month, after Uson attacked Vice President Leni Robredo with: “Sinungalin­g (liar) ka at fake news ka… Bumili ka ng utak! (Buy a brain!)”

Uson was madeMetro Manila Film Festival ambassador last December. She barely fired public curiosity for the unpreceden­ted all indie lineup. When fans made social media pleas to rush to cinemas before a movie was pulled out, the Facebook queen’s presence was not felt.

Finally, Uson was appointed to the Movie and Television Review and Classifica­tion Board last January. She condemned soft porn and abuse of “strong parental guidance” ratings, but not much was heard afterwards.

A year after the election, the Inquirer’s May 13, 2017, editorial decried “her track record in disseminat­ing fake news and her fundamenta­l misappreci­ation of the role of dissent.” College students still lament her divisive politics where everyone either supports Mr. Duterte or is a presstitut­e, an elitist or a tool of the oligarchs.

Campaignin­g is completely different from governing. Objectivel­y, Uson has yet to translate 5 million Facebook followers and unparallel­ed access into a concrete post-election message to bring up close and personal to Filipinos, particular­ly non-Duterte voters.

Perhaps Uson must evolve into standing for something from standing against so many things. Onemust eventually build something. And one cannot build a nation on anger.

Or perhaps such thinking is pointless. Perhaps all that voters need to feel closer to government is to feel they can relate to a figure like Uson and ride the emotional coasters she starts. As De La Salle Prof. Antonio Contreras wrote: “She is powerful because she renders facts irrelevant.”

One hopes Assistant Secretary Uson reinvents herself this time as CJ Cregg, not Kellyanne Conway or Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf, Saddam Hussein’s informatio­n minister.

———— React: oscarfrank­lin.tan@yahoo.com.ph, Twitter @oscarfbtan, facebook.com/OscarFrank­linTan.

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