PERRYSCOPE
Perry
Diaz
Barely a year to election time and presidential candidates are coming out of their cocoons like caterpillars hungry for food. They would transforminto butterflies called metamorphosis.
The butterflies would then fly from one plant to the
next to feed on the sweet nectar located in the interior of
flowers. The same thing with
presidential candidates – they go from one political party to another in search
of the right party to run under. Hence the term “political
butterfly” comes to play.
In Philippine politics,
presidential candidates fly from one group to another until they find the right
mixes of people and ideas to build their campaign.
Meanwhile, they start
looking for their running mates, which could be a problem. They have
to search for someone who would play second fiddle as vice-presidential
candidate. And more than likely all of those vying for president
would also like to be chosen as the running mate of a strong presidential
candidate.
But nobody would talk
about being the running mate because that would take them out of the
presidential derby right away.
It’s a very
complicated process where one has to thread very carefully because one misstep
could derail his or her presidential ambition and could also leave him or her
out of the vice presidential race as well.
Remember, the
Philippines doesn’t have primaries like they do in the U.S. where each
political party would have a primary election in each state to elect their
presidential and vice presidential tandems. The Philippines doesn’t
elect the president and vice president in tandem.
They’re elected
independent of each other and oftentimes the winning president and vice
president come from competing teams. A case in point is the current
president and vice president – Rodrigo Duterte and Leni Robredo -- who belong
to two opposing parties.
With the next election
barely a year away, the question is: Who will run for president and what would
the current vice-president, Robredo, run for? Since the president’s
term is limited to one six-year term – which means Duterte is not allowed to
run for re-election – would vice-president Robredo run for president, which is
usually the case in presidential successions?
Since Robredo is in
the opposition Liberal Party, Duterte is trying to pre-empt Robredo from
running for president, which brings to fore the question: Whom would
Duterte support for president? The logical answer would be his
daughter, Sara Duterte-Carpio, who seems to like the idea but has so far stayed
away from it. However, support for her candidacy is growing and
President Duterte may already have chosen her for the post.
Conflicting statements
But according to
President Duterte, Sen. Bong Go wanted to be president; however, Go denied it,
saying that Duterte was only joking. However, presidential spokesman Harry
Roque was quoted as saying: “If Sara [Duterte] doesn’t run, [and] if Bong Go
doesn’t run, because he [Go] will only run for president if the President will
run for vice president, the President will have to choose who has the
numbers.” And who would that be?
One person that comes
to mind is Bongbong Marcos, who would be a safe choice for Duterte to keep his
family in power if Sara would run as Bongbong’s vice-presidential running
mate. And then Sara would follow Bongbong. It would
signal the beginning of the Duterte-Marcos political alliance.
But if Go would run
for president with Rodrigo Duterte as his vice-president, that would end up
with Duterte calling the shots because Go -- Duterte’s most loyal political
“lapdog” – would still be controlled by Duterte, just like when Russian
president Vladimir Putin turned over the presidency to his second-in-command
prime minister Dmitry Medvedev in a power-switching operation to keep Putin in
power.
After Medvedev’s
one-term presidential term, they switched again to their old positions. They
had conveniently managed to keep power to themselves by just switching
positions. That shows that Philippine politics and Russian politics is a game
of survival of the fittest or should I say, survival of the cheatest?
Presidential wannabes
And this is where it
gets to be interesting. At this point, the presidential candidates
-- including those who would run for vice-president if they failed to gain
traction in their run for the presidency – would be fighting each other in a
free-for-all (labo-labo) contest with the candidates forming their own
coalitions or political parties. By the time the slates are
finalized, the leading presidential candidates would choose their running mates,
who some of them were their former rivals.
There would probably
be five or six pairings left that would slug it out until Election Day on May
9, 2022. Since the president and vice-president are elected
separately, the two winning candidates could come from different political
parties, which happened quite often.
Various personalities
have directly and indirectly hinted on the possibility of running for president
or vice president. Polls taken in April show the following in order
of popularity: Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte (27%), former Senator Bongbong
Marcos (13%), Senator Grace Poe (12%), Manila Mayor Isko Moreno (12%), Senator
Manny Pacquiao (11%), Vice-President Leni Robredo (7%), and Sen. Bong Go
(5%). Others who are mentioned are: Sen. Bato dela Rosa, former Sen.
Allan Peter Cayetano, Sen. Sonny Angara, Sen. Richard Gordon, and former
Senator Mar Roxas.
It’s interesting to
note that in the past three presidential elections, the front-running
presidential candidates eventually lost in the election. In 2016, the early
favorite for president was Vice-President Jejomar Binay who came out fourth
after Rodrigo Duterte (the winner), Mar Roxas, and Grace Poe.
In 2010, Senator
Benigno Aquino III and Senator Manny Villar were statistically tied in the
Pulse Asia poll at 38% for Aquino and 37% for Villar. But the final
tally showed Aquino winning over former president Joseph Estrada and Villar,
who came in second place and third place, respectively.
In 2004, the late
action hero Fernando Poe Jr. was the front-runner ahead of Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo who came from behind to beat Poe in the election with a margin of just
over one million votes, the closest margin in Philippine election
history. Ping Lacson came in third place.
Does that mean that
Sara Duterte would also slip and fall short of winning the presidency a year
from now?
There is still a lot
of water that will flow under the bridge, so to speak. A great deal
of what Papa Digong’s performance in the last year of his presidency would
affect Inday Sara’s future presidential candidacy. With all the
controversies that he got himself into and the dire economic situation the
country is in right now, it could drag her down the political
sewer. First of all, Sara doesn’t have national experience in governance. She’ll
be pitted against sitting senators, the current vice-president, and the popular
current mayor of Manila.
What is interesting –
and intriguing – is the candidacy of Bong Go. Why would he run for
president against Sara, the president’s daughter?
But Duterte himself
doesn’t approve of Sara running for president. “My daughter is not
running,” he said. “It’s not for a woman.” “My only sin
is the extrajudicial killings. The job would ‘make her crazy’ if she won the office,”
he said. But the extrajudicial killings are not just a sin, they're
crimes against humanity. Besides, it could all be part of “strategic
denial,” which is the popular ploy early in the game.
As a matter fact there
is a move in Congress to amend the constitution to allow the president to run
for re-election, which I think is not going to happen. They had been
trying to extend the president’s term since the time of former president Fidel
Ramos but had never gained national or congressional support. It
reminded people of the Marcos years when he extended his rule by declaring
martial law. Never again would the people allow another dictator
rule over them.
Quo vadis, Leni
Robredo?
And this brings to
mind Vice-President Leni Robredo’s own political future. She revealed recently
that her lack of resources was affecting her decision to run for a possible
presidential run in 2022. While she is still considering running in
2022, speculation is rife that she has been preparing to run for governor of
Camarines Sur, her home province. However, her spokesperson
said there is no ”truth” to rumors that she is running for governor.
So there you go, the
presidential musical chair game of elimination has started. There
would be a lot of speculation, rumors, claims, and denials as the presidential
hopefuls parade themselves in a circle hoping to remain in the game until there
is just a person left who would then become the presidential candidate of their
party.
And then there is the
scramble for the vice-presidential spot. Indeed, the presidential musical chair
game is bloodless but only the fittest or cheatest wins. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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