Sun.Star Pampanga

Robredo’s Cabinet experience

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VICE President Leni Robredo knew after the elections that she would be left without a Cabinet position. The second-in-command but a lame duck without an executive department.

Until President Rodrigo Duterte gave her a call in early July to offer her the position of Housing secretary. He spoke with Robredo over the phone in a conversati­on recorded by a government television channel from Duterte’s side. The recording showed Duterte saying that the Malacañang press corps had been asking him if he would appoint her to the Cabinet.

“Puwede ka Housing, ma’am? Can you be the Housing secretary?” Duterte asked. Robredo said yes, joined the Duterte Cabinet as Housing and Urban Developmen­t Coordinati­ng Council (HUDCC) chair.

Her Cabinet stint, albeit short-lived, could probably be called uneventful. Outnumbere­d by people who shared political sympathies with Duterte, it was possible Robredo avoided controvers­y during Cabinet deliberati­ons. And that is to be expected. She came from the opposing camp, had a different political background and is a woman, although that last one should not have mattered.

Five months later, last December 5, Robredo resigned after she was told by text message to stop attending Cabinet meetings. The text message from Cabinet Secretary Jun Evasco Jr. to Robredo said Duterte wanted her to “desist from attending all Cabinet meetings starting Monday, December 5.” “This is the last straw,” Robredo said, “because it makes it impossible for me to perform my duties.” She said in her resignatio­n statement, “I will continue to support the positive initiative­s of this administra­tion and oppose those that are inimical to the people’s interest.”

Robredo said, “From the very beginning, the President and I had major difference­s in principles and values. Since I assumed office, I have been consistent in my opposition to issues such as the burial of former President Ferdinand Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani, extra-judicial killings, reinstatin­g death penalty, lowering the age of criminal liability, and sexual attacks against women… I had hoped that this shared commitment to the poor and marginaliz­ed would transcend the difference­s between us.”

Robredo’s stay in the Cabinet could be described as largely uneventful, except perhaps for that controvers­ial statement of Duterte about her knees.

Duterte joked during an event in Tacloban City early last month that he found Robredo’s skirts during Cabinet meetings as “shorter than usual.”

“Si Ma’m Leni, medyo shorter than usual yung damit. Siguro nahalata ng protocol officer, sige ako sa likod. Si Sonny Dominguez naman, ‘dito tayo,’ sabi ko. ‘Tignan mo ‘yung tuhod ni...,” Duterte motions to Robredo. (“Her skirt is shorter than usual. I guess the protocol officer noticed what I was doing at the back. I told Sonny Dominguez, ‘Let’s stay here. Look at the knees of...’.”)

In the May elections, Robredo turned out as a clear winner in the vice-presidenti­al race, followed by Sen. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. She won in a total of 41 provinces while Marcos took 33.

Robredo doesn’t have to be a lame duck as a secondin-command. She has a mandate from the people and that’s a good starting point.

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