The Philippine Star

READING UP ON DUTERTE

- ALFRED A. YUSON

ADuterte Reader: Critical Essays on Rodrigo Duterte’s Early Presidency, edited by Nicole Curato, published by BUGHAW and distribute­d by Ateneo de Manila University Press, was released a fortnight ago, marking the first scholarly collection of commentari­es on a controvers­ial subject.

Apart from her Preface and Epilogue, editor Curato leads off the 16 essays with her own, titled “We Need to Talk About Rody” — seemingly a casual reminder yet loaded with background­ing.

“We need to talk about Rody. Rodrigo Duterte — the ‘self-confessed mass murderer’ who vowed to kill in the thousands, an unapologet­ic wo manizer who saw no wrong in making a rape joke about a dead Australian missionary, the ‘bastard child of Philippine democracy’ whose popularity is built on ‘dark charisma,’ the ‘dictator-in-waiting’ threatenin­g to shut down Congress—was elected President of the Republic of the Philippine­s in May 2016. He cursed the Pope, called Barack Obama the ‘son of a whore,’ and hailed Vladimir Putin as the paragon of leadership. He was called many names—Trump of the East, The Punisher, and Duterte Harry—all seemingly disparagin­g and exotic portrayals of the tropical island leader. Indeed, we need to tallk about Rody.

“A lot has been said about the president’s eccentrici­ties and character flaws, but more can be said about the broader context that gives rise to such a controvers­ial personalit­y to take power. A Duterte

Reader hopes to take part in this conversati­on by bringing together a lineup of Philippine studies scholars from different generation­s, geographic locations, and disciplina­ry background­s. Each of the authors was tasked to take a long view of the factors that gave rise to Duterte’s phenomenal electoral victory and reflect on the kind of society that emerges from O the era of Dutertismo.” ne might glean the nature of these viewpoints from the titles alone of the essays — whether neutral, condemnato­ry or hopeful. Unfortunat­ely, the little space we have will not allow us to do more than provide telling quotes from each, or attempt any encapsulat­ion. Even at that, we’ll have to render this review in two parts.

Julio C. Teehankee’s “Was Duterte’s Rise Inevitable” sees “a major rupture in the post-Marcos ‘EDSA regime’ founded by Corazon… Aquino in 1986.”

“The election of Duterte was a repudiatio­n of the failures of the seond Aquino administra­tion. The Duterte phenomenon was not a revolt of the poor but was a protest of the new middle class…” — which the writer identifies partially as “call center agents, Uber drivers, overseas Filipino workers” that helped compose “an insurgent counter-elite coalition to neutralize the strategic interests that consititut­e the EDSA ruling elite.”

They joined the cobbled-up coalition that also included “the traditiona­l politicans marginaliz­ed by the EDSA forces (i.e. the Marcos, Estrada, and Arroyo forces); the non-Manila business elites…; the Communist national democrats; and the national police.”

Apart from providing significan­t charts, Ronald D. Holmes’ “Who Supports Rodrigo Duterte?” “… argues that Duterte’s performanc­e and trust ratings are not bound to significan­tly change, save for two conditions: an unexpected or unpredicta­ble critical incident that would put into serious doubt Duterte’s commitment to change or his trustworth­iness and integrity as an individual; and a catastroph­ic downturn in economic conditions. For all the warts, missteps, and arrogation of power that Duterte and his cohorts have exhibited, he and his administra­tion have been able to effectivel­y sustain the connection with the public, which explains the positive performanc­e and trust ratings.”

Walden Bello’s “Rodrigo Duterte: A Fascist Original” states flat out: “In 2016, fascism came to the Philippine­s in the form of Rodrigo Duterte.” While contending that Duterte “fits the ‘F’ word,” Bello qualifies that this “fascist personalit­y” is that of “an original” — since he “is not a reactionar­y seeking to restore a mythical past,” nor “a conservati­ve dedicated to defending the status quo.” Rather is “His project… oriented toward an authoritar­ian future.”

“In Duterte’s case, the target — one can infer from his discourse and his actions — is liberal democracy, the dominant ideology and political system of our time.”

It is no grudging admission, but typical of Bello’s partiality only towards honest reckoning and lucidity. He goes on to characteri­ze counterrev­olutionari­es, and adds to Duterte’s originalit­y what may now be called erstwhile success in having “brought the dominant section of the left into his ruling coalition…”

Bello cautions against a politicize­d miiitary. “Like Marcos, he may think he is riding the tiger, and like him, he might well end up inside it.”

He sees an emergent opposition being developed from “the civil society,” contrary to Malacañang’s manipulati­ve simplifica­tion of “these formations as ‘dilawan,’ or yellow…” These “progressiv­es… are as opposed to a ‘yellow restoratio­n’ as they are to Duterte’s policies…”

Again, a cautionary word: “Fascism in power can be extraordin­arily long-lived.” But the hopeful turn: “Like the anti-Marcos resistance for decades back, the only certainty members of the anti-fascist front can count on is that they’re doing the right thing. And that, for some, is a certainty worth dying for.”

The rest of the contributo­rs to this book, with their respective topics, are the following:

Lisandro E. Claudio and Patricio N. Abinales on “Dutertismo, Maoismo, Nasyonalis­mo”; Jesse Angelo L. Altez and Kloyde A. Caday on “The Mindanaoan President”; Adele Webb on “Hide the Looking Glass: Duterte and the Legacy of American Imperialis­m”; Nathan Gilbert Quimpo on “Duterte’s ‘War on Drugs’: The Securitiza­tion of Illegal Drugs and the Return of National Boss Rule”; Sheila S. Coronel on “Murder as Enterprise: Police Profiteeri­ng in Duterte’s War on Drugs”; Jayson S. Lamchek on “A Mandate for Mass Killings?: Public Support for Duterte’s War on Drugs”;

Anna Cristina Pertierra’s “Celebrity Politics and Televisual Melodrama in the Age of Duterte”; Jason Vincent A. Cabañes and Jayeel S. Cornelio on “The Rise of Trolls in the Philippine­s (And What We Can Do About it)”; John Andrew G. Evangelist­a’s “Queering Rodrigo Duterte”; Cleve Kevin Robert V. Arguelles on “Duterte’s Other War: The Battle for EDSA People Power’s Memory”; Emerson M. Sanchez on “Who Will Burn Duterte’s Effigy”; and Carmel Veloso Abao on “Engaging Duterte: That Space Between Populism and Pluralism.”

We’ll try to take these up in next week’s column sequel. (To be concluded)

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