Philippine Daily Inquirer

The Elephant Man in the Senate

- SEGUNDO ECLAR ROMERO doyromero@gmail.com

One of the dilemmas of representa­tion in a democracy revolves around two models of representa­tion. The “Messenger Model”: Should a politician as a representa­tive elected by the people represent their sentiments and preference­s exactly as these are communicat­ed or revealed to him by the electorate regardless of his personal estimate of their soundness or wisdom? This model is best when the people are as educated and informed as the politician­s themselves.

The “Lawyer Model:” Should the politician represent the interests of the people according to his best lights, given his upbringing, expertise, and experience? This model is best where the politician is from the true elite, vastly superior in knowledge, expertise, experience, maturity, and probity to the electorate.

It must be clear to the public that the operative goal in processing the 2023 General Appropriat­ions Act is the venerable silent conspiracy among politician­s to ensure their reelection in 2025 and in 2028. The money of government may be woefully insufficie­nt to achieve the real developmen­t goals in the various developmen­t sectors, but they are more than sufficient to ensure the reelection of the decision-makers.

The shielding of government expenditur­es from the scrutiny of the public and the transparen­cy and accountabi­lity agencies and mechanisms of government happens through “kupit” (sequestrat­ion) of large chunks of funds into intelligen­ce and confidenti­al funds and unprogramm­ed funds.

Into this budget deliberati­on drama wades one Raffy Tulfo, a neophyte senator, who makes senior senators and department secretarie­s miserable through his impertinen­t questions. The problem with Tulfo is he seems to be acting out the “Messenger” model of representa­tion, speaking as if he were a farmer, a fisherman, a laborer, or an OFW, remonstrat­ing with the high priests and priestesse­s of government on their behalf. He has stuck out like a sore thumb.

Tulfo does not seem to get the cue when Sen. Loren Legarda pointedly addresses him as the “neophyte” senator. Still, he asks those questions that constitute a herd of “elephants in the room.” Legarda and Labor Secretary Bienvenido Laguesma are confronted with illustrati­ons of sleazy labor arbitratio­n by the National Labor Relations Commission. Tulfo puts Environmen­t Secretary Antonia Yulo-Loyzaga on her backfoot with searing questions on how indigenous peoples are shortchang­ed in the Kaliwa Dam project and how the Masungi Georeserve reeks of top-level corruption in the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources. Sen. Cynthia Villar, being both chair of the agricultur­e committee and one of the biggest real estate magnates in the country, ends up in a defensive battle about the conversion of farmland into subdivisio­ns. Tulfo raised eyebrows when he tangled off-tangent with Trade Secretary Alfredo Pascual on the sodium content of cup noodles. Tulfo also had verbal tussles with Sen. Grace Poe on the Department of Transporta­tion budget and Sen. Sonny Angara on the Department of Public Works and Highways budget. Perhaps the most scathing criticism Tulfo reserved for the Department of Budget and Management which he said seemed to act like God in dispensing budgetary allocation­s.

What is Tulfo up to? Is he being “incredibly smart or incredibly stupid?” (Famous quote from the movie “Enemy of the State,” 1998). My guess is, Tulfo is playing it smart. He is parlaying the granular case studies of needy, desperate, and exploited people wronged by callous government and greedy politician­s and businessme­n to stab at the powerful windmills in the Senate and the executive branch. People have found snap relief and deliveranc­e through his intercessi­on with the powers that be and the bureaucrac­y in his Raffy Tulfo in Action YouTube channel that builds on the iconic “Ipa-Tulfo Mo” program on radio. His YouTube channel is the third-most subscribed Filipino YouTube channel as of 2021. Tulfo was third overall in the 2022 Senate race with 23 million votes.

Tulfo wields the sword of grounded authentici­ty against which senators find difficulty in citing pertinent informatio­n, statistics, and illustrati­ve cases, often falling back on their limited personal experience­s of the grassroots, a stark contrast with the high moral ground on which Tulfo appears to perch.

Will Tulfo eventually be tamed by his colleagues in the Senate to be more of a team player or will he continue to deploy elephants to propel him toward some distant political vision that his popularity with the people makes him think he is entitled to? An early cue might be how he positions himself eventually on the issue of intelligen­ce and confidenti­al funds.

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ON THE MOVE

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