They tried everything they can muster, but in the
end all of that black propaganda backfired that resulted to their demise.
None of the eight Liberal party led senatorial
coalition Otso Diretso- a historic shut out of an opposition.
Nobody can deny the “Duterte Magic” having the
record highest satisfaction rating as president of the country.
President Rodrigo Roa Duterte (photo credit to owner) |
Veteran columnist and former ambassador Mr.
Rigoberto Tiglao in his article published in the The Manila Times last May 15,
2019, titled “This nation is on the verge of take-off, finally” he wrote the reasons why we should be more
hopeful for this coming last half of the Duterte administration with his vision
for the Philippines, starting with the shut out of the opposition candidates in this recent mid-term elections.
For purposes of public knowledge we are quoting in
full the said article for the consumption of our readers.
“This nation is on the
verge of take-off, finally”
THE most important consequence of the elections the other day is
this: The political landscape has been cleared for our country to finally take
off, not just in terms of its economy and its nationhood.
The results of the
senatorial contest prove without an iota of doubt that there is massive support
for President Duterte. He has presided over the funeral of the elite-based
Yellow Cult that had ruled the country for 18 years under Cory, Fidel Ramos and
Aquino 3rd.
Outside of Davao, practically nobody knew who Duterte’s aide
Christopher “Bong” Go was. Yet the senatorial contest shows him in the same
league as two personalities — Cynthia Villar and Grace Poe — who are household
names not just because they are incumbent senators. Villar’s husband ran for
President in 2010, while Poe did so in 2016.
Filipinos simply
took Duterte’s word that Go would be a good senator. He is basically Duterte’s
trusted political proxy in the Senate.
Former police chief
Rodolfo “Bato” dela Rosa was, after Duterte, the face of this administration’s
war against illegal drugs. Its alleged “extrajudicial killings” had been the
focus of the Yellows’ propaganda, supported by American media and the press
outlets the US government and its proxies have been funding. De la Rosa was
even fading from public consciousness, since he retired seven months ago — a
long time in politics.
Duterte’s word
Filipinos simply took Duterte’s word that somebody whose life
occupation had been in law enforcement deserves to be in the highest
legislative chamber of the land. He is basically Duterte’s representative for
his most important agenda in his first three years in power, which was to stop
the country’s slipping into becoming a narco-state. The vote for dela Rosa, who
took the 5th slot, is another indication of Filipinos’ support for that agenda.
Francis Tolentino
could have been disliked by voters, as he could not improve the EDSA traffic
while he was Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) head from 2010 to 2015,
and his former Yellow comrades alleged that he had sponsored the lewd dancers
that provided the entertainment in one Liberal Party rally. People didn’t have
an idea what he stood for. His campaign peg was that he was “Tol,” the Filipino
translation of “Bro.”
Yet Duterte’s last-minute “request” (pakiusap) to Filipinos to
vote for him, and the newspaper photos of the President raising his hand,
apparently got Tolentino the 9th slot — millions in votes ahead of the sons of
the once-popular Erap, and the iconic Yellow leaders, Bam Aquino, Mar Roxas and
Serge Osmeña.
The results of the
Senate contest of course validates recent polls that showed 8 out of 10
Filipinos being happy with Duterte’s rule.
There has been no
president in the post-Marcos era with such a high level of nationwide support.
The apparent euphoria over Marcos’ fall and Cory Aquino’s capture of power in
1986 has proven to be an illusion, expertly created by the US media and
controlled by Aquino’s oligarchs who had returned to power.
The veil of illusion
has been rent asunder. Imee Marcos, the strongman’s daughter who had been most
active during his rule, is in the 8th slot in the senatorial results, getting 5
million and more votes than the personification of Cory rule — Bam Aquino, Mar
Roxas and Serge Osmeña.
Senate
Midterm elections for the Senate in all past administrations before Duterte were messages that the people had become tired of his or her rule, and couldn’t wait for it to end. The elections the other day instead proved to be an affirmation of Filipinos’ satisfaction with Duterte’s presidency, and implicitly a wish for his rule to continue past 2022.
Midterm elections for the Senate in all past administrations before Duterte were messages that the people had become tired of his or her rule, and couldn’t wait for it to end. The elections the other day instead proved to be an affirmation of Filipinos’ satisfaction with Duterte’s presidency, and implicitly a wish for his rule to continue past 2022.
The biggest block to
the landscape of Duterte’s rule, the Yellow Cult, has been demolished.
Also, the senatorial
candidates backed by the Communist Party — Neri Colmentares, Chel Diokno and
Erin Tañada — were roundly rejected by Filipinos. The communist party-list
representatives will also be decreasing as a result of this election. Even a
dubious party as “1Pacman” bankrolled by a billionaire got more votes than
communist fronts Gabriela and Kabataan.
The political
routing of the communists opens the way for the military destruction of the
communist insurgency — one of the biggest reasons why the Philippine economy
has not taken off, in contrast to its neighbors that had decades ago decisively
defeated their communist rebellions.
There is nobody in
the horizon to challenge Duterte, certainly not the Yellow leaders such as the
sleeping Drilon and the sleepy Pangilinan, nor the two often hysterical ladies.
Skill
The past three years have demonstrated Duterte’s unexpected skill in political maneuvering: Note how he has kept the wily Sen. Panfilo Lacson largely quiet with regard to his rule, and how he acquiesced to the removal as House Speaker of his buddy Pantaleon Alvarez.
The past three years have demonstrated Duterte’s unexpected skill in political maneuvering: Note how he has kept the wily Sen. Panfilo Lacson largely quiet with regard to his rule, and how he acquiesced to the removal as House Speaker of his buddy Pantaleon Alvarez.
I don’t think any
president except the former general Fidel Ramos has had such support from the
military as Duterte. His recruitment of retired generals to the bureaucracy
both vastly improved its efficiency and endeared him to the military.
The economic elite
and the middle class have applauded his economic initiatives such as the
overhaul of the tax system and his massive infrastructure-building program.
Duterte has shown his commitment to building a form of welfare state, through
such programs as free education and health services. Note how vastly different
that focus is from the previous administration’s dole-out program
euphemistically called the “conditional cash transfer.”
The Yellows and the
US-funded media’s main thrust against Duterte — the alleged extrajudicial
killings in the wake of his anti-drug campaign — demonstrates their total
isolation from the conditions on the ground. This is not surprising because
their world has been in gated middle-class communities, so detached from the
masses.
I don’t think there
is any community of the average Filipino that isn’t celebrating the success of
Duterte’s anti-drug war.
For instance, my
caddy who lives in a municipality outside Manila remarked that she was happy
that her brother was the subject of “tokhang,” dela Rosa’s term for suspected
drug pushers warned by the police to reform. Reading the reports on the
casualties of the drug war, her brother had turned a new leaf, she said. Ironic
perhaps, but that’s the reality on the ground. In my subdivision, the taho
vendor was finally exposed, and jailed, for being the efficient shabu retailer.
With a president
having a clear vision for the country, an iron will to see it through, and a
political runway cleared of obstructions, we are poised for a take-off,
finally. I hope.
And those Yellow and
Red academics claim they’re losing sleep over the loss of “checks and balances”
in our Republic?
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Report from Manila Times
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