Wishful
Thinking for the 1992 Elections:
The
Principled Vote
as
a New Factor
This
article was released by the Kamalaysayan Media Service and
published in Health Alert, the monthly newsletter of the
Health Action Information Network (HAIN), in its issue No.
128, which came out in April 1992 or one month before the
elections. A few paragraphs giving historical backgrounds are
omitted in this presentation.*
THE
CURRENT election season is unprecedented in our country’s
history. The number of well-known presidential aspirants (seven as
of this writing) is only one of the reasons.
Another
is the sheer number of posts at stake – with 24 senatorial
slots, 200 seats in the House of Representatives and thousands
upon thousands of elective local government positions – and that
of aspirants falling over one another in a mad scramble for the
people’s nod.
A
new factor has emerged on the scene, gaining the recosnition and
respect of a substantial portion of the electorate. This is the
"NGO factor," also known as the cause-oriented vote.
‘New
Politics’
top
During
the campaign period for the 1989 congressional elections, the call
for "New Politics" was raised by such organizations such
as the leftist Partido ng Bayan (PnB), which fielded seven
senatorial candidates and a sprinkling of district-level
congressional candidates in coalition with other groups. The
attempt was trampled underfoot by the guns, goons and gold of
traditional politicians’ clans and parties.
But
the idea for principled politics caught on, especially with the
unprecedented multiplication and growth of non-government
organizations and people’s organizations (NGOs and POs), which
have increasingly covered various occupational sectors, lines of
advocacy and aspects of social life.
The
Aquino administration has hastily claimed this to be the
fulfillment of the promise to "institutionalize people
power."
Seeing
the future electoral potential of these organizations, and
observing that foreign donor preferred NGOs to government
instrumentalities as channels of assistance to reach the people,
government agencies and bureaucrats and their close relatives
began to set up their own equivalents of the NGOs. These instant
creations have come to be called "GO-NGOs" (pronounced
"gongos") or "government’s NGOs,"
emphasizing a contradiction in terms.
Both
the genuine NGOs/POs and the government’s own "NGOs) began
to lash out at the traditional politicians, who have since become
more commonly tagged with the derisive label, trapos
(literally, dirty rags). The traditional politicians have floated
a similar-sounding but non-pejorative term, "tradpols"
and jeered the NGO and GO-NGO personalities as "unelected and
unelectable." However, it was too late. The trapo stigma
had stuck.
Meanwhile,
as Election Day approached, the trapos were throwing so much mud
upon one another that they were discrediting all the more their
entire bunch. This has enhanced the danger of seducing the
military to use it as an excuse to later move in and launch a coup
to "save the republic," akin to their first
"coming-out party" two decades before.
Metro
Manila and various other parts of the country have been swept with
recurring rumors about a new military takeover plot to be executed
immediately before, or right after, the scheduled date of the
elections. The would-be preemptive coup has even been given a
name: Oplan No-El, short for "no elections." Some
political observers have said this may turn out to be a logical
repeat of former Defense Secretary Fidel Ramos’s refusal to
abide by his having been defeated by House Speaker Ramon Mitra Jr.
in the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) selection process for
standard bearer; others say such a move would more logically come
from the direction of Eduardo "Danding" Cojuangco,
another presidential bet, who had been a close ally of deposed
dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
The
‘NOTA’ Drift
top
It
was Supreme Court Chief Justice, and erstwhile presidential
aspirant, Marcelo Fernan who coined the word "NOTA"
(short for "none of the above") to express disapproval
of all the early campaigners for the Palace post. Fernan
has since agreed to become the running mate of Mitra, one of those
presidential aspirants his NOTA posters and stickers had earlier
asked voters to reject outright.
But
the NOTA logic has apparently remained, with large numbers of
voters and principled groups agonizing over the task of having to
choose one president from this field of candidates. This is
a throwback to the "lesser evil" dilemmas of years and
decades past.
Apparently,
the NOTA drift has been abetted by the "Vote Wisely"
promotional campaign launched by the Commission on Elections (Comelec)
and various civic, religious and media organizations mainly
through the mass media. Somehow, this campaign may have succeeded
in persuading many voters to take this electoral exercise
seriously, to give it more meaning than its usual entertainment
value and opportunities for extra income. A friend of this writer
remarked: "How can anyone vote wisely given this batch of
candidates to choose from? I’m thinking of spending Election Day
sport-fishing off the coast of Zambales, kung
ganyan din lang!"
However,
not all those running for posts to run our country are trapos and
cheap entertainers. Some of them do represent New Politics in this
contest. Given the chance they can still form a positive though
miniscule minority in the new legislature. However, that chance is
precarious.
The
‘NGO Vote’
top
The
NGOs and POs are perceived to influence millions of voters across
the archipelago. These millions of potential ballots, in a field
of 20 million, cannot by themselves propel any national candidate
to victory. But they hold the potential of becoming decisive in a
closely-fought contest. With seven candidates for the presidency (Cojuangco,
former Defense Sec. Juan Ponce Enrile, former First Lady Imelda
Romualdez-Marcos, Mitra, Ramos, former Senate President Jovito
Salonga, and Miriam Defensor Santiago), with no frontrunner
expected to win a majority vote, this factor can prove to be vital
in determining the final outcome.
A
straw vote conducted by the United Rural Sector Electoral
Coalition (URSEC) among 1,500 farmer leaders topbilled progressive
senatorial candidates Wigberto Tañada, Florencio Abad and Nemesio
Prudente. The URSEC reportedly covers a membership of 1.8 million
peasants, and includes the Congress for People’s Agrarian Reform
(CPAR), the Bukluran ng mga Tagapaglikha ng Butil, the Kaisahan ng
Maliliit na Magniniyog sa Pilipinas, and the Kilusan ng mga
Mamamalakaya sa Pilipinas.
The
same straw vote reportedly also included entertainers Vicente
"Tito" Sotto III and Ramon Revilla in these groups’
preferred lineup.
There
was also the "Earth Vote," the candidates-rating project
undertaken by Green Forum Philippines, in cooperation with a
University of the Philippines-based research institution. The
presidential and vice-presidential candidates were rated in
performance and platform in such aspects and categories as
environmental management, forestry and fisheries development,
rural development and agrarian reform, and political leadership,
by 43 representatives of participating organizations. Topping the
ratings in both performance and platform were Salonga and his
running mate, Aquilino Pimentel Jr. Green Forum president Maximo
Kalaw Jr. stressed that this did not constitute a formal
endorsement of the candidates but was intended to be a guide to
the voters. The "Earth Vote" project and its results
were presented to the media in a joint forum held by Green Forum
and the CLEAR Media Organization on the eve of Earth Day 1992.
‘Mang
Pandoy,’ the Voter
top
"Mang
Pandoy" is that flesh and blood personification of the
voters, mounted by ABC Channel 5 to confront presidential
candidates before a Comelec-sponsored debate. The "presidentiables"
had to respond with their respective diagnoses and prescriptions.
Mang Pandoy has been portrait of the Filipino citizen in worse
shape than earlier representations of Juan de la Cruz had ever
been. He is a picture of near-destitution that all would-be
leaders had to respond to.
But
how will Mang Pandoy perform as a voter? Has the Filipino finally
"arrived" as a voter? Or will he vote the way he and his
parents have been voting all these past decades, resigned to and
completely absorbed in the periodic farces? Or can he now make the
unprecedented statement of the principled vote, one that would
give any significance at all to all those demands and measures for
a clean count?
The
principled vote would not be of a myopic memory, it would not
support candidates associated with the most naked of repression
and rapaciousness this country has ever experienced in the past
half-century. The principled vote is one that rejects recycled
promises, prescriptions, and excuses, one that really pushes
forward a demand for the allevi leviation and resolution of Mang
Pandoy’s social predicament.xxx
There
have been signs that a growing section of the electorate is
galvanizing behind such a principled vote. This is part of what is
called New Politics, spearheaded by a relatively new phenomenon on
our political scene, the non-government and people’s
organizations. But it is too early to tell whether such a
development has already touched the mind and heart of the average
Mang Pandoy who would no cast his vote.
Has
Mang Pandoy really "arrived" as a voter? As a voter of
consequence? As a voter of real consequence to centuries- and
decades-old problems that have pushed the nation further and
further on to more widescale destitution and the imminent danger
of full social disintegration?
The
way he will vote on May 11 will be remembered by his children, and
his children’s children, hopefully not in regret and shame.
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