Arroyo’s Ramos Agenda
Statement on the SONA
By CENPEG
Posted by Bulatlat
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was, as planned, the center of attention during
her fifth State of the Nation Address last July 25. She was applauded 32
times by administration congressmen and senators and their wives, in most
cases for no apparent reason, but exactly on cue. It was to demonstrate,
of course, that she remains popular, except that it was the members of the
majority in Congress—most of them Jose de Venecia loyalists expecting to
reap the political benefits of the shift to a parliamentary system--who
were jumping up from their seats and applauding.
She was in fact most applauded when (1) she argued for a supposed “change
in the political system”; (2) she said this should be through
constitutional amendments; and (3), in a turn around from her
often-announced position that charter change should be through a
constitutional convention, she announced that she preferred a constituent
assembly to do the deed.
Everything else she said was either irrelevant or untrue. She claimed to
have created four million jobs over the last four years—but did not say
how she came to this number, as well as what jobs were created, and
whether these jobs were temporary, seasonal or permanent, quite possibly
because she was referring to, among others, those temporary low –paying
street sweeper jobs she created in aid of her election campaign in 2004.
To a people among whose majority hunger has become a fact of life, whose
children cannot go to school, who die from preventable and curable
diseases, and many of whom sleep under bridges, she claimed to have
provided housing and “shelter, security for the urban poor and indigenous
peoples,” as well as some vague achievement she called “rice
productivity”. She also claimed that 69 million Filipinos are
“beneficiaries of health care insurance” - alluding, of course, to those
PhilHealth cards she distributed during the May 2004 elections. Mrs.
Arroyo also claimed credit for the country’s supposedly being at the
forefront of the war on terrorism, and cited US President George Bush’s
saying so--not so much to prove that claim, but to subtly suggest that she
still has US support.
When she began her speech it seemed she was about to say something true.
There are two Philippines, she said, and she would have been right to say
that one is the Philippines of the poor and powerless and the other the
Philippines of the powerful and wealthy--one the country of those who have
nothing, the other the country of those who have everything. But instead
she said that one Philippines is the country that’s supposedly “on the
verge of take off” economically, while the other is that country “whose
political system, after equally long years of degeneration, has become a
hindrance to progress.”
It was all predictable and downhill from there. She went on to argue that
the political system has failed us—a seemingly radical and absolutely
correct proposition, until she said that it has nevertheless succeeded in
introducing reforms. Of course she had to say so because the reforms she
claims to have achieved were as president under the very system she said
has failed the Filipino people.
“Over the years,” said Mrs. Arroyo, “our political system has degenerated
to the extent that it is difficult for anyone to make any headway yet keep
his
hands clean”—a reference, certainly, to the fact that a the money-based
political system is fraud-ridden, the May 2004 elections being the most
fraudulent since 1947. But, Mrs. Arroyo went on, “to be sure, the system
is still capable of achieving great reforms. But, by and large, our
political system has betrayed its promise to each new generation of
Filipinos, not a few of whom are voting with their feet, going abroad and
leaving that system behind.”
The political system has indeed failed the Filipino people, but for
reasons Mrs. Arroyo failed to mention. It has failed the Filipino people
because it is based on money, influence, and fraud, and because it has
been run by the same political dynasties that have monopolized political
power in this country for six decades. That means that it is not so much
the system as the political class that dominates it that has led to the
country’s perpetual economic backwardness and political turmoil.
But leave it to Mrs. Arroyo to draw the wrong conclusion from a valid
premise. She said the country can’t go forward under this system, which
makes the shift to a parliamentary system critical—and which, presumably,
would make the “two countries under the same name” she mentioned one.
Only Mrs. Arroyo’s commitment to the shift to a parliamentary system and
to a federal form of government was of any relevance—or for that matter,
had the ring of truth in it-- given the deepening political crisis of her
damaged and despised administration. That crisis is of course based on the
widespread perception that she cheated in 2004, as a result of which,
among those who really matter—the Filipino people—she is totally lacking
in credibility, and has lost the trust of an estimated 60 to 80 percent of
the population.
Although she didn’t announce it, Mrs. Arroyo was apparently following a
schedule in her head: that schedule, proposed by former President Fidel
Ramos in exchange for his support last July 8, which says Constitutional
amendments would be in place by the end of the year, that ratification of
the amendments would take place by February, and parliamentary elections
by May 2006.
Thus the paucity of her legislative proposals to Congress, which she
limited to asking it to “pass the Pre-Need Code to rehabilitate, reform
and regulate the pre-need educational programs that worked so well in the
past as a major vehicle for youth education entitlement,” legislation
“encouraging renewable and indigenous energy,” and, “in the area of
national security…an anti-terrorism law.”
The thinness of Mrs.Arroyo’s legislative agenda was understandable. If
the Ramos proposal were to be implemented, Congress as a Constituent
Assembly would have only ten months to do much of anything, and would be
more focused on assuring that (1) the nationalist provisions of the 1987
Constitution are removed for the benefit of US and other foreign
investors; and (2) that the Constitution is so amended as to allow its
members to run and win handily during the elections for parliament in
2006.
While Mrs. Arroyo was thus the focus of attention in this, her last SONA
as president (under the Ramos plan she will have to step down by May 2006
even if she isn’t forced out of office or resigns earlier), it was
actually Fidel Ramos who was pulling the strings at the podium. Mrs.
Arroyo’s State of the Nation Address was thus no more than words, words,
words confirming the Ramos agenda, and was but one more stage in its
carefully-calibrated implementation. That was its only significance.
July 26, 2005
CenPEG is a public policy center set up shortly before the May 2004
elections to help promote people empowerment in governance and democratic
representation of the marginalized poor in an elitist and patronage-driven
electoral and political system. It conducted poll watch trainings and
voters’ education in the grassroots and, helped monitor and document
election proceedings. In December, it published the book, “Subverting the
People’s Will” amidst findings that massive cheatings marred the last
elections. Another book on FRAUD is due for release before the end of the
year. CenPEG taps a wide pool of political analysts, public policy experts
and academic scholars for their expertise and experience in public
governance as it relates to grassroots empowerment.
CenPEG (Center for
People Empowerment in Governance)
Rm. 304 College of Social Work and Community Development (CSWCD) Bldg.,
University of the Philippines Diliman Quezon City 1101 Philippines
Telefax: (+632) 929-9526 Email address:
cenpeg2k4@yahoo.com
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