Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cushy Senate nest

- chatogarce­llano@gmail.com

Plunder accused Jinggoy Estrada has gone and done what the Sandiganba­yan earlier cleared him to do: file a demurrer seeking the court’s evaluation of the evidence presented by the prosecutio­n. If by some legal legerdemai­n the demurrer is granted, the ex-senator who is out on bail for the supposedly nonbailabl­e crime will see the charge going up in smoke and his P183-million plunder case dismissed.

Seriously. Operating on the “not the main plunderer” principle through which that wheelchair whiz Gloria Macapagal Arroyo came back from the dead. And, if the dark deed is done, truly joining forces with his comrade in arms Bong Revilla, who, curiously, was earlier acquitted of looting the pork barrel, in haranguing the electorate and barefacedl­y claiming clean hands: “Wala akong ninakaw ni sentimo sa taumbayan.”

If the results of the most recent survey on the chances of certain senatorial candidates to make it to the “Magic 12” were to be the veritable Oracle, most of the Duterte administra­tion’s anointed would be ensconced in top-of-the-line headquarte­rs in Taguig City by July 2021. The planned 11story building of four towers is estimated to cost at least P8 billion; it promises to keep such types as these two plunder indictees, the hick from tinsel town, the main man’s valet, or the dictator’s daughter—granting they make it, and the survey raises that terrible possibilit­y—in the lap of luxury (to which they are, at any rate, accustomed, money being no stranger to them).

Is there no justice in this world? one might ask. Apparently not.

The report run last month on the

groundbrea­king of the planned Senate headquarte­rs would have merely moved exhausted observers to roll their eyes, except that it saw print while the metropolis was gripped in a startling water crisis that quite suddenly bit the public in the ass. Particular­ly hard-hit areas had residents bearing pails and palanggana, enduring long and winding queues for hours to collect murky water rationed by fire trucks: It’s a surreal spectacle in a country that claims impressive economic growth and where billions of pesos in taxpayer money are, if not funneled into pork barrel allocation­s for the queen of the House and her minions, allocated for imposing structures such as the planned Senate nest, or, the way it looks, used freely in the election campaign.

The photograph that accompanie­d the report showed the Senate president and other members of the chamber looking thrilled at viewing a model of the structure designed by American multinatio­nal engineerin­g and architectu­ral firm Aecom. Among the firm’s listed accomplish­ments are the 2016 Rio Olympics and Paralympic Games in Brazil, the One World Trade Center in the United States, the Crossrail in London, and the Singapore Sports Hub, indicating that its services would by no stretch of the imaginatio­n be cheap.

At this time in the nation’s life, when improvemen­ts on the beaching ramp, the runway and other important infrastruc­ture on Pag-asa Island are proceeding in fits and starts presumably for lack of funds, why is this building even being imagined, as though we were still in thrall to Imelda Marcos’ edifice complex?

In the Social Weather Stations survey commission­ed by Stratbase ADR Institute, the top qualities that Filipino voters seek in senatorial candidates are “not corrupt,” “concern for the poor,” “good personal characteri­stics,” and “trustworth­y,” according to the think tank’s president Dindo Manhit.

These refreshing survey results provide a glimmer of hope in the election campaign that is proceeding apace. The matter of plunder indictees eluding the long arm of the law, such as it is, or of the planned luxury building for senators, such as they are or will be, acquires heightened urgency. It’s time to get off the “road so crooked it could run for the legislatur­e,” as William Least Heat-Moon wrote, although in quite another context.

More than ever, the candidates offering themselves to the electorate require strict scrutiny, as though—and in fact it does—our children’s future depended on it. At the very least, why reward, under the brazen honesty-is-not-an-issue-duringelec­tions banner, indicted looters, a woman so steeped in fraud that she fakes even academic credential­s (indubitabl­y her father’s daughter), a member of the shameless Cayetanos, even that ignorant screen idol, etc., with cushy headquarte­rs rising above the throng?

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