This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 49, January 22-28, 2006
Erap Comeback,
Anyone?
Five years have
passed since Joseph Estrada was ousted as President. But for those who continue
to support him, Estrada is merely on a leave of absence and he will assume his
duties as President anytime soon.
BY AUBREY SC
MAKILAN
Joseph Estrada, popularly known by
his nickname Erap, is said to be perceived by those belonging to the D and E
social classes as a “miracle worker,” based on the roles he portrayed in movies
where he ends up solving the problems of the poor.
However, this is not because he
was a good actor, said Prof. Benito Lim, a political analyst who teaches at the
Ateneo de Manila University. According to him, this is because previous
presidents who had better academic credentials failed to solve the problems of
the people, especially the poor.
Estrada was a college dropout and
many doubted his competence and intellectual preparation to be president. “It’s
like you have gone to the best of doctors to cure you but they all failed so you
decided to go to an albularyo (local healer),” said Lim.
Despite the insults hurled against
Estrada, many politicians copied his pro-poor style. But they did not succeed as
unlike them, Estrada’s image was a product of a long build-up. Unlike them, too,
Estrada has the movie industry behind him.
Estrada knew how to reach out to
the poor. For instance, in his visit at the Payatas dumpsite during his term,
Estrada fed a resident using his own hand. There was also a time when, as he was
about to ride the presidential chopper, he turned back and approached a boy who
was to give him flowers.
“If you belong to the poor, you
will tell the story a thousand times and you will not be tired of telling others
about it,” Lim said. He said, however, that Estrada ended up destroying his
image as a savior when he associated himself with shadowy characters like Atong
Ang and Dante Tan.
Lim added that when Panfilo Lacson,
then Estrada’s Philippine National Police (PNP) director-general, got involved
in the Kuratong Baleleng case, Estrada made a mistake of not castigating him.
This incident, he said, brought down his popularity rating from 70 percent to
about 50 percent.
Luckily for him, Lim added, he did
not suffer systematic destruction because it was the Edsa II (people's uprising
in January 2001) that destroyed him.
Maltreatment
Accused of plunder which is
punishable by death, Estrada is currently detained at his rest house in Tanay,
Rizal. “He has been treated shabbily as the illegitimate president,” said Ronald
Lumbao, chair of the People's Movement Against Poverty (PMAP), a group
associated with Estrada.
Lumbao said that those who
benefited from his “leave of absence” need to allegedly portray him as a
“plunderer, sinner president, as a symbol of all evils” in order to legitimize
their stay in power.
“No matter how brazenly they
project themselves as the savior, the people know this regime is corrupt, a
cheater,” Lumbao said. “This regime would be eventually overthrown.”
Support
The late Jaime Cardinal Sin alone
could have destroyed him. But because of the charisma he was able to carry with
him from being an actor to being a politician, Estrada won the 1998 presidential
elections by a landslide 39 percent of the votes. “He was an insult to the
traditional elite,” Lim said, adding that Sin, the business tycoons, and former
presidents Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos allegedly conspired to bring him down.
On the occasion of the fifth
anniversary of EDSA II last January 20, thousands of Estrada's followers
gathered at the University of the Philippines (UP) in Diliman, Quezon City to
renew their commitment and support to the ousted President by establishing the
Free and Restore Erap Estrada Democracy Movement (FREEDOM).
Freedom, Lumbao told Bulatlat,
will be the start of a movement that will eventually grow “to reinstall the
legitimate presidency of Erap and reestablish constitutional order and democracy
in the country.” He explained that it was also a collective call for Estrada to
terminate his “leave of absence and reassume the presidency by virtue of his
legal mandate as duly elected president.”
He also said that the number of
people who went to Edsa to decry what happened during Edsa II and to call for
the people to recognize the legitimacy of Estrada “was a lot bigger than that of
the second Edsa.”
Up to now, his supporters do not
believe that “it was an ouster by the people of a very popular president” but
rather a “manipulation by the troika of the church, the business elite, and the
adventurist and trapo (traditional politician) generals in the military
hierarchy.”
Kingmaker but not a king
Despite his supporters’ numbers,
Lim told Bulatlat that a comeback for Estrada would be very hard.
Although his children have
political positions, Lim said that they do not have the charisma of their
father. And while in prison, his family also “collapsed,” he said, because “his
family is being united to support him politically and not to serve the country.”
Lim cited the incident when Sen.
Jinggoy Estrada humiliated a school teacher who issued a memorandum asking and
teaching the students not to vote for actors. Jinggoy could have used his
father’s soft approach instead of taking it personally, Lim said.
Also, Lim said that the speaker of
the political family of Estrada did not try to preserve his image consistently.
If the handler was to portray Estrada as a hero in the movie who also loses a
battle and gets beaten up but still triumphs in the end, “he should have handled
his image consistently, and made his sons behave consistently with his image.”
Lim opined that Estrada “can be a
kingmaker but he cannot make himself a king anymore.” In fact, Lim said he did
not say anything memorable while he was in prison. Most of all, his inability to
unite then presidential candidates Panfilo Lacson and Fernando Poe Jr., shows
that he was not very convincing anymore as a political leader. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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Does Joseph
Estrada have what it takes to regain his so-called lost presidency?
Bulatlat