Philippine Daily Inquirer

Rememberin­g people power still matters

- BRYAN DENNIS GABITO TIOJANCO

Aliberal democracy whose citizens have little faith in the freedoms of democracy is a dictatorsh­ip-in-waiting. This is why Herman Müller in 1930 warned that “a democracy without democrats is an internal and external danger.” He was then the chancellor of Germany’s Weimar Republic, the democracy that made Adolf Hitler a dictator.

Our democracy is hardly an external danger, but it is often an internal one. Filipinos have historical­ly been faintheart­ed liberals: quick to give dictatoria­l powers to elected presidents during real or imagined crises. Millions of our countrymen and women have unjustly suffered because of this.

The Philippine­s was Asia’s first liberal (i.e., rights protecting) democracy. But it did not take long for President Emilio Aguinaldo to become a dictator at the urging of his chief adviser, Apolinario Mabini, who had little faith in the Malolos Congress. Our first president under the 1935 Constituti­on, Manuel Quezon, publicly declared that “individual liberties” and “opposition parties” were democratic “fetishes” protected by a “discredite­d theory” and may be discarded. The National Assembly quickly handed him dictatoria­l powers to address an economic crisis in 1940. He might have become dictator for life were it not for World War II. President Manuel Roxas, too, was cheered on as his administra­tion tortured and murdered Huk guerrillas who—as Ramon Magsaysay’s success later showed—were only fighting for fair elections and agrarian reforms.

Many now rightly condemn Ferdinand Marcos’ dictatorsh­ip. But his martial law was also widely popular at the start. Marcos’ promises to stamp out government corruption, crush communism, and pursue radical reforms attracted technocrat­s, big business, the middle class, farmers, and the urban poor. Most politician­s flocked to the regime instead of denouncing it. This broad consensus of support and acquiescen­ce early on drowned out protests from democratic politician­s, the press, university students, the progressiv­e clergy, and a sizable chunk of the middle class. Today, President Duterte has placed the whole of Mindanao under martial law. Our Constituti­on requires actual rebellion (and not merely an imminent danger of it) to justify martial law. And yet, although the (now defeated) actual rebellion was limited to Marawi City, the Senate, the House of Representa­tives, and the Supreme Court have all given the move a thumbs-up. Surveys suggest that the people, too, support it.

All liberal democracie­s have some form of constituti­onal dictatorsh­ip like martial law as a last resort during a crisis, but it is generally allowed only when absolutely necessary to end the crisis and restore normal conditions. Our history, however, shows that we are all too willing to tolerate dictatoria­l powers in the name of reform or change. This shows how little faith our citizenry has in liberal democracy’s ability to achieve these wanted changes.

This is why rememberin­g people power still matters. The four days of courage—Feb. 22-25, 1986—that forced Marcos and his family into exile is the most celebrated, seminal, and inspiring assertion of democratic will in the Philippine­s. But even more important than People Power, the historical event, is people power, the revolution­ary idea that culminated in those four days at Edsa. The term “people power” was coined more than a decade before 1986, and refers to a participat­ory kind of politics that challenged the fundamenta­l assumption­s and practices of traditiona­l patronage politics. Community organizers had often used the term since the early 1970s as a catch-all label for whenever a sufficient number of individual­s organize and act to improve their conditions. The widely celebrated success of the 1975 La Tondeña strike showed that a mobilized citizenry could achieve change peacefully—even during martial law. It bolstered our faith in democratic freedoms.

The spirit of people power is the democratic entry of new groups into a political stage historical­ly dominated by elite patrons. The 1987 Constituti­on enshrines this spirit. We now have greater democratic space to directly participat­e in policymaki­ng through initiative, referendum, and recall. It is now easier for us to affect policymaki­ng indirectly through the decentrali­zation of government­al powers in favor of local government­s, autonomous regions, indigenous cultural communitie­s, etc. The Constituti­on also politicall­y empowers different kinds of citizens and their groups: workers, farmers, the urban and rural poor, people’s organizati­ons, NGOs, etc. In short, democratic rights enable more Filipinos to peacefully pursue democratic change.

Once we remember how powerfully effective the freedoms of democracy can be, perhaps we would try using the Constituti­on’s People Power clauses first in our pursuit of needed changes, instead of once again flirting with dictatorsh­ip, or Charter change.

OUR HISTORY SHOWS THAT WE ARE ALL TOO WILLING TO TOLERATE DICTATORIA­L POWERS IN THE NAME OF REFORM OR CHANGE

Bryan Dennis Gabito Tiojanco is a JSD candidate at Yale Law School. He graduated cum laude from the University of the Philippine­s College of Law.

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