Philippine Daily Inquirer

Marcos: Not so ‘weak leader’ after all

- RICHARD HEYDARIAN rheydarian@inquirer.com.ph

Perched at the very center, flanked by a legion of national and local politicos eager to make their mark, he remained cool and composed. Although there were hints of exhaustion, he remained focused throughout the hour-long briefing. Though the nation’s most powerful man, he acted more like a school principal—gently listening to the counsel of various officials in attendance.

Far from a domineerin­g patriarch, President Marcos gently moderated backand-forth exchanges among those in attendance. The occasion was a very public “situation briefing” among multiple stakeholde­rs on the persistent flooding crisis in Pampanga. He kept his cool, politely directing questions and seeking clarificat­ion from various quarters.

And then, all of a sudden, the temperatur­e in the room rose to a boiling point. Former public works secretary Rogelio Singson’s proposal for a water impounding system, similar to his water cistern project at Fort Bonifacio in Taguig City, was met with vehement opposition from the local politico.

“We will not allow the impounding of Candaba Swamp ... If you want a security problem, go ahead and ruin the livelihood­s of all the farmers in Candaba. We will walk out from here,” Pampanga Rep. Anna York Bondoc said, clearly asserting her authority as a local government leader.

At this point, however, Mr. Marcos immediatel­y stepped in. He firmly, yet politely, explained the science as well as economics behind Singson’s proposal. He also reassured his local government counterpar­t that “[w]e have no interest in destroying the livelihood­s of our farmers [in Candaba]. We will not leave them behind ...”

Instead of engaging in populist antics bullying subaltern politicos to please his ego or base, he pellucidly explained the rationale behind the proposal of Singson, who served as former president Benigno Aquino III’s infrastruc­ture czar. In barely a single minute, he also evinced a respectabl­e degree of familiarit­y with the fundamenta­ls of environmen­tal science, which clearly took some in the audience by surprise. At once, he was both presidenti­al and authoritat­ive.

The curious episode was refreshing­ly revealing. It stood in stark contrast to preconcept­ions about Mr. Marcos prior to his assumption of power. Forget about the whole host of sensationa­l rumors—and, at times, slanderous comments—circulatin­g among his supposedly progressiv­e critics. No less than former president Rodrigo Duterte, in a thinly veiled public rant, tried to justify his refusal to endorse Mr. Marcos in last year’s elections: “I am not impressed by him. He is really a weak leader.”

In fairness, Mr. Marcos’ tenure, so far, can be credibly criticized for a whole package of gaffes. From traffickin­g in historical distortion to multimilli­on “rebranding” projects and a multibilli­on Maharlika sovereign wealth fund, there is no shortage of questionab­le moves. And mind you, we are yet to see whether this administra­tion will have any robust form of anti-corruption initiative, which is crucial both to our democratic health as well as economic dynamism.

Having said that, Mr. Marcos has clearly exceeded expectatio­ns on many fronts, most notably on foreign policy. By all accounts, it was the former president who was a “weak leader” when it came to defending the West Philippine Sea. Instead of prosecutin­g our national position, he repeatedly echoed Beijing’s version of geopolitic­al reality. By alienating our closest allies, he empowered our rivals.

And his self-styled trip to Beijing last month, which effectivel­y made him a “special envoy” to China, is a telltale sign of the former president’s foreign policy track record: Tough on the crimes of the West a century or half a millennia ago, but totally diffident (if not enabler) in face of Oriental imperialis­m in the Philippine­s’ own backyard.

In stark contrast, Mr. Marcos has consistent­ly adopted an uncompromi­sing stance, including on the finality and binding nature of our 2016 arbitral tribunal award victory under the aegis of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Crucially, the President has been flanked by an impressive group of individual­s, including Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro, Ambassador Jose Manuel Romualdez, and Philippine Coast Guard spokespers­on Commodore Jay Tarriela, who have taken up the cudgels for the rule of law in our region. So far, Mr. Marcos has shown that one need not become a “strongman,” like Duterte or his father, in order to be tough where it counts. It remains to be seen, however, if this is more signal than noise for his full term in office.

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