Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duterte’s novel: the federal constituti­on

- JOSE DUKE S. BAGULAYA

The legal philosophe­r Ronald Dworkin once compared a constituti­on to an unfinished chain novel. In line with his analogy, Dworkin viewed constituti­onal interpreta­tion as an act that resembles the writing of a new chapter that moves the narrative forward.

Like a novelist who takes up the writing of a story in medias res, the interprete­r of the constituti­onal text is bound by the old chapters’ plot, setting and characters. He cannot suddenly rewrite an El Cid into a Don Quixote. He cannot arbitraril­y turn an epic into a melodramat­ic romance. His freedom to write a chapter is therefore limited. He must fit his new chapter into the old structures of the text as written and construed by the framers and earlier interprete­rs.

President Duterte’s impatience with the 1987 Constituti­on is therefore understand­able.

From the literary viewpoint, changing or revising a constituti­on is like throwing away the old novel and writing a new one. The President no longer wants to be constraine­d by the textual and interpreta­tive fetters of the old novel. He simply wants to write a new story.

The new constituti­on, however, must offer us a preliminar­y narrative. It must offer us an arresting and interestin­g story, a story that we would want to believe and, perhaps, develop by thickening its plot, making it more complex, and, ultimately, embrace as a national narrative.

A narrative acceptable to the people is imperative, lest we forget that most constituti­ons are founded on the ultimate fiction that it is the people, not the Speaker of the House, who speak through the constituti­onal text. Preambles of state constituti­ons now follow the American precedent of starting the text with the words “We the People.” Even constituen­t treaties of internatio­nal organizati­ons have followed suit. The fiction of the people as author of the constituti­on is now establishe­d as a legitimati­ng and enabling fiction.

Indeed, constituti­ons are often undergirde­d by narratives. These narratives have their own heroes and villains. The American Declaratio­n of Independen­ce faults the British Monarch for “repeated Injuries and Usurpation­s.” The Constituti­on of the People’s Republic of China narrates the heroic effort of “the Chinese people … led by the Chinese Communist Party” in crushing imperialis­m and feudalism.

The 1987 Constituti­on is no exception. From its preamble to its last transitory provision on sequestrat­ion orders, the story of Edsa permeates its whole textual body. The Edsa narrative, that is the history of struggle against the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, so animates the Constituti­on that its replacemen­t can only be construed as a rejection of the narrative of struggle that has bound the nation in the past 30 years.

At this moment, this antidictat­orship narrative is at its lowest point. The electoral fortunes of the Liberal Party in the 2016 presidenti­al election have reduced, if momentaril­y, the narrative’s persuasive power. At the height of the second Aquino presidency, the Liberal Party partly usurped Edsa’s narrative and so discredite­d it with the ignominy of defeat.

We all know, of course, that no political party can monopolize the antidictat­orship narrative. The struggle against the Marcos dictatorsh­ip was a people’s struggle. It was a noble cause that attracted the lowly, the believer, the intelligen­t, the quixotic or, simply, the decent. The narrative belonged to a nation in rebellion.

It is against the residual powers of this antidictat­orship narrative that President Duterte’s new novel must contend with. The proposed federal constituti­on therefore cannot simply be based on a narrative of resentment and fear that carried the Duterte campaign to victory. Most importantl­y, it must rely not on the narrative of power, but on the power of a nobler narrative.

Jose Duke S. Bagulaya is assistant professor of comparativ­e literature at the University of the Philippine­s Diliman and works as a lawyer in his spare time. He is currently a PhD student in the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong.

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