STREETWISE*
The
Bigger Picture
This is the latest in the wave
of illegal, criminal assaults by a politically isolated regime against those who
have the will and the capacity to bring about the broad united front of
political forces necessary in order to rid the country of Mrs. Arroyo's
dastardly leadership.
BY CAROL PAGADUAN-ARAULLO
Business World
Posted by Bulatlat
I stood on the steps of the entrance to the
Makati City Hall, taking in the sights and sounds of the latest political
stand-off in the heart of the country's premier business center, where an
embattled mayor fights off what is widely perceived to be political persecution
by his sworn enemy, no less than the de facto president, Mrs. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
Mayor Jejomar Binay's fortitude and will to stand his ground is most
apparent. He appears calm and focused as he is approached by a throng of
concerned followers, supporters and mass media people lured by an unfolding
real-life drama that could have some unusual twists and quite unexpected
outcomes.
Mr. Binay's preparation for this moment is clearly more than psychological:
there is a sense of order and direction despite the tense atmosphere, the
constant stream of people and the bellowing of the loud speaker conveying the
ongoing program where speakers take turns lambasting the government and calling
on the crowd to chant Binay's name in a demonstration of their loyal support.
The threat that the police and even army troops will storm Mr. Binay's bastion,
a twenty-two story, modern high rise rivaling those in the central business
district, is real. It can also happen earlier than expected should Malacanang
take the option of trying to nip in the bud what Mr. Binay's supporters hope
will become, at least, a mini "people power" phenomenon. On the other hand, a
bloody assault could be politically costly and provoke
even more widespread outrage and set into motion events that could spin out of
control.
There is an unmistakable feel of traditional, patronage politics in the air.
After all, Mr. Binay is not just a well-entrenched local politician in one of
the wealthiest cities of Metro Manila, he is also the head of UNO or the United
Opposition, a loose alliance of opposition parties and personalities that he is
most instrumental in cobbling together, to do battle with an unpopular but wily
and ruthless Malacanang occupant. Moreover, most of several hundreds of people
gathered in front of the city hall are Mr. Binay's poor constituents in Makati,
beneficiaries of years of the city government's largesse in the form of fairly
generous social services and benefits.
Yet the presence of the broad array of groups and forces that have been working
for more than a year in trying to force Mrs. Arroyo to step down from power --
in the wake of irrefutable evidence of massive cheating during the last
presidential elections, of plunder of the national treasury and wanton abuse of
authority by Mrs. Arroyo and her subalterns, and of grievous human rights
violations including unabated extrajudicial killings of
activists and suspected dissidents -- is the best proof that the political
crisis in Makati is not really about its mayor much less his alleged crimes in
office.
First thing first, is the preventive suspension order issued by Malacanang
valid? Mr. Binay contends that it is not. He is accused of placing "ghost
employees", i.e. employees who do not exist, on the payroll of the city but
there is no clear proof of such. There is not even a listing of who the alleged
"ghost employees" are and in what departments they are said to have been
spuriously employed. Neither is there evidence Mr. Binay is
responsible for hiring such alleged non-existent city hall employees nor that he
tolerated their alleged anomalous drawing of salaries from the government.
With not even the flimsiest of grounds for a Malacanang-ordered preventive
suspension, other circumstances contribute to the suspicion that the move to
force Mr. Binay from the mayorship of Makati is a brazen abuse of presidential
power meant to systematically eliminate the strongholds of the Opposition and
substantially weaken if not destroy their ability to challenge Mrs. Arroyo's
illegitimate rule.
For one, the preventive suspension has been leveled against not only the mayor
but the vice-mayor and all of the members of the city council. All the better to
demolish Mr. Binay's residual political control or influence in the city
government?
Secondly, the complainant against Mr. Binay is a perennial loser for the
mayoralty who has made it his lifetime ambition to cut Mr. Binay down to
size. When asked by reporters if he would accept an offer to take over in the
event that the incumbent is successfully removed from office, he is said to have
immodestly announced his willingness to serve the remainder of Mr. Binay's
term. Why was Malacanang only too eager to entertain this complaint at this
time?
Why didn't Mrs. Arroyo's bright boys undertake due diligence to investigate the
matter fully before unceremoniously trying to kick Mr. Binay out? Indeed, the
tentacles of the Chief Executive, from the Executive Secretary to the Department
of Interior and Local Governments to the Philippine National Police, have all
acted with indecent haste, if not uncharacteristic efficiency, in issuing the
preventive suspension and then plotting the
mayor's bodily removal from his office.
The larger picture must be shown for all to see. This is not just another
mayor's desperate fight to remain in office in the wake of charges of graft and
corruption.
It is the latest in the wave of illegal, criminal assaults by a politically
isolated regime against those who have the will and the capacity to bring about
the broad united front of political forces necessary in order to rid the country
of Mrs. Arroyo's dastardly leadership. Business World / Posted by Bulatlat
*Published in Business World
October 20-21, 2006
© 2006 Bulatlat
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