Philippine Daily Inquirer

VP: REVGOV TO UNDERMINE PRESIDENCY

- By Vince F. Nonato, Christine O. Avendaño and Krixia Subingsubi­ng @Team_Inquirer

The call of President Duterte’s diehard supporters for the declaratio­n of a revolution­ary government (RevGov) would undermine his own legitimacy, Vice President Leni Robredo said on Thursday.

At the same time, Robredo expressed alarm that some government officials have publicly supported the idea.

Speaking to reporters during the commemorat­ion of the 154th birth anniversar­y of Philippine revolution­ary hero Andres Bonifacio in Caloocan City, Robredo said it might be worth looking into if those government officials could be held liable “for revolting against the Constituti­on.”

“Maybe most people do not understand the implicatio­n of declaring a revolution­ary government,” Robredo said when asked by reporters

about the rallies held by Mr. Duterte’s supporters in favor of a revolution­ary government.

“Declaring a revolution­ary government says we no longer believe in the government, we no longer believe in the Constituti­on that serves as the platform on which the present government stands,” she said, adding that she and Mr. Duterte were both elected under the 1987 Constituti­on.

Revolt against Constituti­on

The government officials’ support for a revolution­ary government, she said, “means the platform through which they have ascended to power ... they no longer trust it and that they wish to revolt against it.”

Robredo reiterated that she “holds on to the President’s statement” that he would not declare a revolution­ary government or place the whole country under martial law.

She also cited Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana’s assurance to her that there was no destabiliz­ation plot against the government.

For the past two months, Mr. Duterte himself has been floating the idea of a revolution­ary government in response to perceived threats of “destabiliz­ation,” first by a supposed alliance of Robredo’s Liberal Party (LP) with communist groups and later by armed rebels.

But last week, he backtracke­d and said “we’ll have nothing to gain” from a revolution­ary government or a coup d’état.

On Thursday, the LP asked the Duterte administra­tion to make it clear it had no intention of declaring a revolution­ary government.

In a statement, the party lamented that the 154th birthday of “one of the country’s most revered freedom fighters” came amid talk of the launching of a revolution­ary government.

“We appeal to this government to categorica­lly state that it would not declare a revolution­ary government to once and for all lay to rest the apprehensi­on of the people,” the LP said.

Confusing the public

The party noted an apparent intention to “confuse the public with mixed messages” and observed that pronouncem­ents about a revolution­ary government tended to be muddled even more when clarified by the government’s press officers.

By talking about a revolution­ary government, it said, government officials “cheapen the gallantry and sacrifices of our heroes.”

Opposition Rep. Edcel Lagman said last week that a revolution­ary government would pave the way for authoritar­ian rule and skirt the limitation­s of martial law, for which the Constituti­on assigned Congress and the judiciary with the role of acting as a safeguard.

Revolution­ary government­s were previously establishe­d by the Bonifacio-led Katipunan during the struggle for independen­ce from Spain in the late 19th century, and by President Corazon Aquino after the ouster of dictator Ferdinand Marcos in the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.

Thousands of critics of Mr. Duterte staged rallies across the country on Thursday to protest against his threat to declare a revolution­ary government.

At Liwasang Bonifacio in Manila, the protesters branded as “mere dictatorsh­ip” Mr. Duterte’s idea of a revolution­ary government.

‘Dictatorsh­ip plans’

They also rejected Mr. Duterte’s playing down his threat, saying it was part of his “dictatorsh­ip plans.”

The protesters belonged to various left-leaning groups, including the alliance of urban poor organizati­ons Kalipunan ng Damayang Mahihirap (Kadamay) and labor group Kilusang Mayo Uno.

Present at the rally were former Social Welfare Secretary Judy Taguiwalo, Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate and Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan) secretary general Renato Reyes.

The president of Ateneo de Manila University, Fr. Jose Ramon Villarin, called on Filipinos to preserve democratic values amid threats of authoritar­ian rule.

“[Revolution­ary government] contends that concentrat­ing power in the hands of a few would give them the means to execute the key reforms necessary to move the country forward,” Villarin said in a memo to the university community.

“But by centralizi­ng power in the hands of a few, [revolution­ary government] directly undermines democratic institutio­ns and the economy,” he said.

In Legazpi City, Albay province, protesters gathered at Peñaranda Park to condemn Mr. Duterte’s threat to declare a revolution­ary government.

They also condemned the killings of farmers and denounced capitalism and urged the government to provide free education for all.

In Sorsogon City, more than 300 members of Kabataang Makabayan gathered in front of Camp Salvador Escudero, where the provincial police headquarte­rs is located, and demanded an end to the killing of farmers.

In Naga City, student activists denounced Mr. Duterte’s plans as patterned after those of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

In Davao City, Mr. Duterte’s hometown, burned “Duterminat­or,” an effigy of the President dressed in military uniform and carrying a machine gun in the left hand and a warplane in the right.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? PROTEST MARCH Protesters march along Quezon Boulevard toward Mendiola to air their opposition to a proposed revolution­ary government under President Duterte.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E PROTEST MARCH Protesters march along Quezon Boulevard toward Mendiola to air their opposition to a proposed revolution­ary government under President Duterte.

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