LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March Fianza
Time
flies. If not, then one term for an elective post from congressman down to the
last councilor is too short. And so, after some two and a half years or so, we
are in an election season again. In those couple of years, voters heard broken
and fulfilled promises, and witnessed politicians’ cheap tricks. We saw elected
politicians keep their simple lives and stay as they were while others changed,
consciously forgetting their modest beginnings – some even forgetting friends
who, at the outset, propelled them to occupy their present status.
In
the local scene, some who campaigned in the last elections about championing
the environment did exactly the opposite by becoming its destroyers instead.
Hooded interests backed by arrogance, shamelessness, greed for power and money
are the elements behind environmental destruction.
In
Baguio and the mountain districts, opposing politicians race to become richer
everyday, either illegally by coddling jueteng lords and gambling operators; or
legally through their deputies who engineer the plans and procedures on how
gains and spoils are divided. I wonder if these friends are able to sleep
well.
One
complaint that keeps coming back every election time is that a politician’s
supporters who spend their time in the field distributing leaflets, talking to
people, posting election material and doing all the dirty jobs are the ones who
are often left out when payback time comes. Only the trusted few remain under
his wings to get rich along with him. Knowingly, the winning politician does
not “spread the sunshine”.
The
candidate and his supporters are inseparable “lovers” during the campaign
period. They go out strong together and never doubt each other. But after the
winning, changes are suddenly felt, one knows that he will be out of the graces
of the person he supported. And the politician who won will not even bother to
call to say thank you for all your help.
********
Once
upon a time, comedian king Dolphy Quizon said: if I run for an elective post, I
will surely win but what will I do? “Magpapatawa ako?”Dolphy said this to stop
his friends in the silver screen as well as musicians, basketball players and
prizefighters from getting entangled in politics because he knew that doing so
will be better for the country.
Dolphy
meant that it is time for Filipino voters to judge candidates based on actual
accomplishments and stop banking on popularity. Indeed, it is time for both
voters and candidates to be more decent, get rid of distasteful campaign styles
and cheap tricks.
Since
Comelec announced that they are not backed by laws to charge candidates from
early campaigning, the latter came up with all sorts of gimmicks. What has
become the practice is for local candidates to flock to wakes I funeral parlors
and residential houses, expressing fake sympathies, even when they are not
known by the immediate families.
Sincerity
in paying respects to the dead is accompanied with consistency, which is doing
the practice even before they had planned on running for public positions.
Consistency is not choosing which wake to go to. It is dropping by wakes
located in places where they will not be voted on.
In
some provinces, political candidates choose to tell jokes and entertainment
pieces to attract the crowd, letting go of the chance to inform voters of more
serious issues that should be addressed. But in Benguet, votes cannot be cast
in favor of a clown or politician-entertainer because development in Benguet is
not a laughing matter.
In
shaky times, people are waiting for solutions to persistent problems in their
communities that should be addressed. Jokes and entertainment make serious
moments lighter but it is an abuse to the intellect of voters if these
unresolved issues are put aside by rubbish talk or jokes.
From
the start of the local campaign in March, politicians will pull their opponents
down in the mud little by little. In the end, it will be each to his own just
like what happened to a congressional bet in Benguet who was promised financial
support by his party-mate.
But
even while this may be the case, voters should better pay attention to
candidates who will make intelligent speeches that are dignified and delivered
in a decent manner.
********
Before
I forget, Dalton Bocyong Afidchao whose mother Elizabeth traces her roots to
Alab, Balili and Samoki, and whose father Atanacio Sr. hails from Bontoc and
Samoki filed his candidacy for councilor of Bontoc. Similarly in other places,
there are new faces who jump to politics.
Change,
they say, is one thing no one can stop. So if residents in the prime town of
Bontoc as well as in the other towns in the Cordillera are looking for
different innovations in running communities, they might as well look for new
breeds of public servants. No one knows really what they have under their
sleeves, but it does not hurt if they are given the chance to serve.
More
info about new faces in politics next week.
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