EDSA—COME AND GONE
Many
of us who are deeply disappointed in the results of the 2019 election for the
Philippine Senate would be well informed if they understood the underlying
attitudes and values of the lower-income population, the vast majority of whom
constitute the electorate and who this time around with overpowering force planted Duterte’s candidates
in the last Constitutional bastion checking our descent into federalism and concomitant dynastic,
feudal, authoritarian, populist, and quasi-fascist rule, if not fascism itself.
Let’s
revisit Randy David’s astute analysis published on the last anniversary of the 1986
EDSA Revolution.
WHATEVER
HAPPENED TO THE EDSA REGIME
By:
Randy David - @inquirerdotnet
Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 05:10 AM February 24, 2019
The
Edsa regime refers to the political order that was founded soon after the overthrow of the dictatorial regime of Ferdinand
Marcos. Its legal framework is laid down in the 1987 Constitution crafted
under the post-Edsa government of President Corazon Aquino. This founding
document incorporates the political values and principles that grew out of the
struggle against Marcos and found their most dramatic articulation in the Feb.
22-25, 1986 Edsa People Power Uprising.
The
most important of these are national sovereignty, the primacy of civil and
political rights, the supremacy of civilian authority over the military, the
urgency of social justice, the role of people’s organizations and social
movements in a democracy, the inculcation of transparency and accountability in
the public service, the separation of powers, and the need for institutional
checks to the arbitrary exercise of governmental power, etc. Written in the
wake of the collapse of a dictatorial system, the 1987 Constitution is suffused
with a clear antiauthoritarian bias.
Thirty-two
years after its ratification, the Edsa Constitution has remained in place,
unamended and unrevised. Strictly
speaking, we could say we continue
to live under the Edsa regime.
No regime change has taken place despite the increasingly open denigration of
the symbolism of Edsa and the political resurrection of the Marcoses.
Indeed,
the government continues to mark the disgraceful exit of the Marcoses from
Malacañang as a nonworking public holiday. But, unlike in the early years, gone
is the celebratory spirit. Today there
is hardly any expression of public recognition of the significance of those
historic days in February 1986.
Without any doubt, the Edsa regime has passed on. The sooner
we recognize this, perhaps the easier it would be to understand — and hopefully
move on — from where we are today. In my
view, the Edsa regime ended on
the day Joseph “Erap” Estrada, a
Marcos admirer, handily defeated Jose de
Venecia, who was backed by then President Fidel V. Ramos, a key figure in
the Edsa Uprising. The forces that brought Erap to the presidency in 1998 were
more or less the same ones that had supported Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco, a
known Marcos crony, when the latter ran against Ramos in 1992. Ramos won that election only by the slimmest
plurality vote.
The
rise to the presidency of Rodrigo Duterte, a strongman who
flaunts his admiration for Marcos as though it were a badge of honor, may be
viewed as the mainstreaming of a
political attitude that had shadowed
the Edsa regime from the
beginning. The flagging Edsa spirit got
a momentary boost when a second people power mobilization in January 2001
successfully drove Estrada out of the presidency barely three years into his
term, and installed Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in Malacañang.
What
was seen but ignored by the Edsa forces was the smoldering resentment of
ordinary folks who saw their votes summarily nullified with the ouster of the
man they had elected to the presidency just a couple of years before. When
these same people dared to mount their own version of people power at Edsa to
protest the arrest of Estrada a few months later, their activity was dismissed
as anarchy and a mockery of the idea of Edsa.
The
ensuing years under the corrupt and patronage-driven administration of Gloria
Macapagal Arroyo did nothing to affirm the correctness and wisdom of Edsa 2.
Rather, the disenchantment that set in, particularly after her fraudulent
reelection in 2004, infected a big segment of the middle classes. The
disintegration of the Edsa spirit was arrested only when Cory Aquino died in
2009. Cory’s death magically revived memories of her courage and the heroic
moment of hopefulness that defined Edsa. It paved the way for the successful
presidential run of her son Benigno Aquino III in 2010.
Much
was expected of the younger Aquino. It was as if, by his election to the
presidency, the Edsa spirit was given a second chance to prove itself and to
end all the cynicism that had threatened to choke it with every misstep in
governance. Though he remained popular, except in the final year of his
presidency, and although the economy registered steady growth under his watch,
he ended his term amid widespread doubts about the wisdom of the major
decisions he made. He was perceived to lack empathy for those who were not of
his class, and the strong will needed to make hard decisions on longstanding
social issues.
By
the time the 2016 election rolled in, the resentment against the political
class had ripened into a readiness to embrace any leader who could free the
country from the grip of politics-as-usual. The allure of the strongman, we
soon realized, never disappeared. Strangely
enough, nearly every survey that has sought to measure our people’s belief in democracy has only yielded results that place us among the top in the world.
There’s
probably only one explanation for this:
We have not understood the meaning of democracy, especially what it demands of the governed. Many equate it with the
simple act of voting, oblivious of the importance of subjecting the choices we
make to rational criteria that transcend emotional attachments and short-term
personal needs.
We
profess a firm commitment to democracy, yet we uncritically accept the claims
of those who make decisions in our name. We prefer strongmen, who imperiously
go ahead and do what they think they must do, over leaders who take time to
study and consult with those who may know better. So prone are we to moral
panic that we easily give up the right
to think for ourselves.
Photo courtesy of Sheryl Cababa
ReplyDeletePhoto link: https://www.flickr.com/photos/eselcee/4692538637
Gonzalinho
FEBRUARY 25 EDSA only marked the beginning of a conscious awakening that our cherished liberties will always be threatened if we do not fight for them. There are so many things beautiful about our country, but there are also many endangered values to fight for. Be vigilant.
ReplyDeleteMel Sta. Maria @attymeltweet
5:22 PM - 22 Feb 2019
Gonzalinho
Remember that we vote for candidates to serve us, not the other way around. Candidates who will become senators are public servants, answerable to us. We matter more than they do. Our taxes serve as their salary. Choose a candidate that will SERVE Filipinos, not act as a boss.
ReplyDelete@audreydomasian
March 21, 2019
Unfortunately, democracy in theory has a long way to go before being put into practice in the Philippines.
Gonzalinho
Philippine presidential election is coming up in 2022. Democracy forces must mobilize now against anti-democracy forces, building trust among the electorate, especially among the lower socioeconomic classes, by implementing active and effective mechanisms for listening and dialogue. Once in power, democracy forces must foster democratic values and attitudes among the populace by institutionalizing formal education courses.
ReplyDeleteGonzalinho