The Philippine Star

Broader ‘People’s SONA’ to confront President Duterte

- SATUR C. OCAMPO Email: satur.ocampo@gmail.com

As he delivers his third state-ofthe-nation address this Monday, President Duterte will face a much broader range of opposition forces – converging in a “United People’s SONA” – than the one he went out of the way to address directly last year, which was composed of progressiv­e multisecto­ral organizati­ons and allies gathered under the banner of the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan).

This time around, other groups that had differed with Bayan and held parallel protest actions before will join the Bayan forces, along with the various independen­t formations, religious and civic, that have rallied behind former Supreme Court Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno in her fight for judicial independen­ce and the rule of law. Sereno herself will march and speak at the unified rally on Commonweal­th Avenue.

The United People’s SONA will call Duterte to account for failing to fulfill his campaign promises: to end labor contractua­lization, uplift the dire conditions of the poor, and pursue peace negotiatio­ns to their logical conclusion by addressing the root causes of the armed conflict. Then there are the largescale human rights violations in both his “war” against illegal drugs and the revved-up counterins­urgency program. Plus, the soaring prices of prime commoditie­s (5.2 percent inflation) partly spurred by the TRAIN law’s excise taxes and sustained neoliberal economic policies and programs. These have all worsened mass poverty.

Besides the above issues, the broadening opposition forces have committed to confront and oppose the Duterte regime’s moves toward extending the terms of office of incumbent elective officials, concentrat­ing power in the President and fast-tracking the replacemen­t of the 1987 Constituti­on by a “federal” system of government – maneuvers that are certainly intended to install tyrannical rule.

This, in face of the latest (June 15-21) survey of Pulse Asia showing that 67 percent of adult respondent­s opposed amending the Constituti­on at this time, and the earlier Social Weather Station survey showing a very low public awareness of what federalism is all about.

Heedless, Malacañang has announced that the shift to federalism will be on President Duterte’s legislativ­e agenda this year. This assumes that the mid-term congressio­nal and local elections scheduled in May 2019 will not be the focus. Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque has already said that they can do nothing to stop a “people’s initiative” to cancel the elections, which Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez is pushing. Of course, if that succeeds, this will then extend the stay in office of the incumbent senators, congressme­n, and local officials, ensuring support for the federalism project.

Let’s take a brief look at Duterte’s unfulfille­d promises cited above.

On labor contractua­lization: During the 2016 presidenti­al election campaign, he was quoted as having declared, “The moment I assume the presidency, contractua­lization will stop.”

In the past two years, organized labor have pressed Duterte to fulfill this promise but got disappoint­ing responses. Of late the disparate labor groupings have agreed tactically to work together to intensify the fight against all forms of labor contractua­lization. Last May 1’s observance of the Internatio­nal Day of Labor was marked by two rival formations marching and rallying together for the first time in years.

The issue, which has mainly occupied the attention of workers in the private sector, has now found resonance among the public sector employees, in light of data made available by the Civil Service Commission (CSC) showing that the government has been hiring more and more contractua­l workers.

In 2016, per the CSC data, of the 2.4 million state workforce more than 595,000 workers were hired on the basis of either “job orders” (JO) or “contracts of service” (COS). This year the number of JO and COS workers has increased to 660,390, or 27 percent of the total.

The Confederat­ion for Unity, Recognitio­n and Advancemen­t of Government Employees (Courage) points out that JO and COS employees have no security of tenure and fringe benefits. “You should be the model,” Courage president Ferdinand Gaite rebuked the national government. “How can you enforce [laws against contractua­lization] if you yourself are violating those laws?”

Yesterday Courage led a protest of government employees in Quezon City during lunch break (12 noon to 1 pm) to call for a P16,000/month minimum wage for all government workers and for the regulariza­tion of JO and COS employees. Under Executive Order 201 (Salary Standardiz­ation Law), the current minimum wage in the public sector (national level) is pegged at P10,510/ month. That’s hardly enough if measured against the P33,000 that the Ibon Research Foundation says should be the monthly living wage.

The situation is worse for the 830,000 employees in the 1,715 local government units. The minimum wage for a 6th class municipali­ty, per EO 201, is only 65 percent of the minimum wage in the national government, or P6,831. The LGU minimum wage ranges from 90 percent for first-class municipali­ties and tapers down the scale to the lowest, 6th class municipali­ty. On the GRP-NDFP peace negotiatio­ns: President Duterte suspended for three months the 5th round of formal negotiatio­ns scheduled last June 28-30, purportedl­y to enable him to review all the signed agreements since 1992. He then unilateral­ly set preconditi­ons for the resumption, and authorized the LGUs to pursue “in the meantime,” localized talks with leaders of the CPP-NPA in their respective areas of responsibi­lity.

Not surprising­ly, this was promptly rejected by the NDFP. Existing agreements, protocols, and even the substantiv­e agenda agreed upon as early as 1992 are violated by Duterte’s guidelines which include: adherence to the existing Constituti­on (noncomprom­ise of constituti­onal integrity and sovereignt­y); pressuring the NPA forces to surrender (by offering an amnesty package based on disarmamen­t, demobiliza­tion, “rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ion to the mainstream society”); no coalition government or power sharing, no revolution­ary taxes, arson and violent activities with the NPA fighters staying put in encampment areas as the “as the necessary enabling environmen­t“for the talks. Moreover, Duterte insists that the substantiv­e agenda must be based on the “Medium Term Philippine Developmen­t Plan and Philippine Developmen­t Program 2040.”

Duterte wants to hijack the GRPNDFP peace talks. I’m certain he will fail, as his predecesso­r did.

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