Philippine Daily Inquirer

15th PH President just like ‘one of the boys’

- By TJ Burgonio @TJBurgonio­INQ

Even when he was still a congressma­n representi­ng his home province of Tarlac, there were times when the late former President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III acted like he was no VIP, easily striking conversati­ons and hanging out with the gaggle of journalist­s covering the House.

The bachelor political scion would be flitting in and out of the press office for a chat, sometimes even joining the reporters for an after-work drink—he with his can of soda, they with their

beer or wine.

“He didn’t drink liquor, but he was one of the boys,” a newsman, who became a close friend of Aquino, said of the country’s 15th president who died at the age of 61 on Thursday morning.

It therefore didn’t come as a surprise that when Aquino became president on June 30, 2010, he appointed reporter-columnist, Rey Marfil, to be one of his undersecre­taries at the Presidenti­al Communicat­ions and Operations Office.

Marfil would become a fixture in Aquino’s press briefings, whether at Malacañang, inside a mud-soaked classroom in a storm-battered town, or onboard presidenti­al flights abroad.

Making time

Far from being aloof and despite the trappings of power, Aquino struck the press corps as someone who always strove to be transparen­t and forthright, making time to brief reporters on hot-button issues after a hectic day.

Even in his trips overseas, he didn’t mind facing the journalist­s late at night—say, at an Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summit—and then fielding more questions about local issues in Manila than about the agenda of the trip. He was always game— so long as he had a glass of Coke close by.

Still, he and the press were not without uneasy moments.

When he guested before the Foreign Correspond­ents Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (Focap), several months before stepping down from office, Mr. Aquino spoke of a strained relationsh­ip between his administra­tion and the media.

‘Constructi­ve criticism’

He said the media had the tendency to sensationa­lize, become accusatory and focus on the negative rather than engage in “more constructi­ve criticism.”

“It cannot be true that there are only negative things happening in the Philippine­s today—that nothing has changed; that we are still apathetic and cynical; and that one shortcomin­g becomes reason enough to discount the whole,” he said at the Focap gathering.

After he reverted to being “Citizen P-Noy” in June 2016, he remained in touch with some of his media friends, whose unforgetta­ble images of the man include him hosting parties for them or their families at the Palace, treating them to a song or two. A recurring favorite in his repertoire: Freddie Aguilar’s “Estudyante Blues.”

He was always game— so long as he had a glass of Coke close by

 ??  ?? Mami-miss namin ‘Estudyante Blues’ mo, sir!
Mami-miss namin ‘Estudyante Blues’ mo, sir!

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