Marcos and Aquino: Both hijacked our democratic institutions.
Strip Benigno S. Aquino 3rd of his daang-matuwid rhetoric, and he
emerges as the worst president, along with the dictator Marcos. Both captured
or tried to capture our democratic institutions. Both had rhetorical skills and
catchy slogans: “This nation will be great again” for Marcos; “Kung walang
corrupt, walang mahirap” for Aquino.
Marcos abolished or lorded over our democratic institutions when he
imposed his one-man rule in 1972, when the Philippines was touted as the
exemplar of democracy in Southeast Asia.
Aquino
attacked or prostituted our democratic institutions, which his mother Cory
Aquino restored after Marcos fell in 1986 when the Philippines was touted as
the exemplar for the restoration of democracy in the world.
Unfortunately,
as the histories of most countries in the world have shown, it is the strength
of these democratic institutions that are crucial for a nation’s long-term
growth and prosperity.
In our
own case, the dictatorship at first resulted in a phenomenal economic growth, a
sustained 6 percent growth every year from 1972 to 1979.
Without
the type of checks and balances of a democracy though, Marcos’ economic-policy
errors were not corrected, cronyism worsened, and by 1981, he was on a survival
mode that he lost control of the economy, which then became too weak to survive
the 1982-83 debt crisis and the political turmoil in the wake of the senior
Aquino’s assassination in 1981.
The
collapse of the economy in 1985 and 1986, which contracted 7 percent for each
of those years, meant a return to the economy’s size in 1979.
Partly
because of his remarkable myth-driven popular support and the public sympathy
for the death of his mother when he assumed power in 2010, and partly because
of his gargantuan slush fund amassed through the grossly misnamed Disbursement
Acceleration Program, President Aquino didn’t need martial law.
He
damaged the Supreme Court, and has controlled the other key institutions of a
democratic republican system: the Congress, the Commission on Audit, the
Ombudsman, and media.
He has
also prostituted a crucial executive agency that was traditionally a bastion of
justice administration, supposedly above the fray of politics, the Department
of Justice. He has made the DOJ as his own political assassin and legal
persecutor. Even the Bureau of Internal Revenue has been transformed by Aquino
into one of his hit men.
We are
lucky, though, that Aquino has only two years left to continue damaging our
institutions, and the Supreme Court has survived his attacks, that it has
fought back as the last bastion of democracy in our country. I will discuss the
first set of institutions Aquino damaged or wrecked, while the rest would be
for my column on Friday.
(1) The Supreme Court
Aquino browbeat and assaulted the Supreme Court when he undertook a conspiracy to remove the Supreme Court’s Chief Justice. In a last-resort move to have the Tribunal order P10 billion paid to his clan’s Hacienda Luisita instead of just P460 million as it had decided on, Chief Justice Corona was removed.
Aquino browbeat and assaulted the Supreme Court when he undertook a conspiracy to remove the Supreme Court’s Chief Justice. In a last-resort move to have the Tribunal order P10 billion paid to his clan’s Hacienda Luisita instead of just P460 million as it had decided on, Chief Justice Corona was removed.
Corona
was impeached not for any case of graft or incompetence, but by failing to
declare his dollar accounts in his Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net
Worth (SALN), of which the legally prescribed remedy is simply to file another
SALN.
As a
result, the High Court had become a damaged institution. In his wish to control
it, Aquino threw into the dustbin long-cherished notions that the highest court
of the land should be manned not only by the best legal minds in the country,
but by the most experienced.
Aquino’s
college classmate, whose career as an academic had been mediocre, was appointed
to replace Corona. After that, he appointed to the court the weird college
dean, Marivic Leonen, who should be disbarred from the practice of law for
formulating an agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) that is
patently unconstitutional.
What was
Leonen’s qualification? The fact that he did Aquino’s bidding to come up with
that agreement with the MILF wherein they could have their own state and claim
“peace” so that Aquino could be nominated for the Nobel peace prize.
Even
Marcos, with his dictatorial powers, didn’t have the gall to appoint legal
lightweights to the court, as Aquino did on the basis entirely of his thinking
that they would do his bidding.
While the
image of Enrique Fernando, chief justice from 1979-1985, holding an umbrella
for Imelda Marcos, has been iconic purportedly symbolizing the Marcos
dictatorship’s hold on the court, the strongman appointed respected and
independent chief and associate justices to the high tribunal, legal luminaries
the likes of Querube Makalintal, Felix Macasiar and Claudio Teehankee. No one
among the justices Marcos appointed to the Supreme Court then was in the junior
league of now Chief Justice Lourdes Sereno and Associate Justice Leonen.
We are
fortunate, though, that the Supreme Court has weathered its decapitation, and
appears even to have grown stronger, perhaps because of its realization that it
has become the last barrier to a de facto Aquino dictatorship.
It has
ruled as unconstitutional Aquino’s Disbursement Acceleration Plan, his grand
scheme that hijacked the budget to use it at his whim. The bully has been in
tantrums, claiming the Court has gone “personal” against him. The worst isn’t
over for him. The Court will most likely rule unconstitutional his pact with
the MILF, as well as his military pact with the US.
(2) Congress
It is no longer rumor but established fact that Aquino bribed the House of Representatives to file the impeachment complaint against Corona, with the Senate equally bribed to find him guilty. This was through P13 billion in funds he hijacked from the budget and cloaked as his “Disbursement Acceleration Fund.” The Senators who voted to convict Corona are, in fact, now in the annals of our legal history, as the Court decision on the DAP listed them together with amounts each received from that fund, shortly after their “decision.”
It is no longer rumor but established fact that Aquino bribed the House of Representatives to file the impeachment complaint against Corona, with the Senate equally bribed to find him guilty. This was through P13 billion in funds he hijacked from the budget and cloaked as his “Disbursement Acceleration Fund.” The Senators who voted to convict Corona are, in fact, now in the annals of our legal history, as the Court decision on the DAP listed them together with amounts each received from that fund, shortly after their “decision.”
Have you
heard of any commentator or member of Congress now praising that saga as a
victory to cleanse the Court of corruption?
The
Court’s decision on July 1 on the DAP was that Aquino, in effect, disregarded
Congress by commandeering funds, whose allocation had been determined by the
body through the Appropriation laws it passes each year.
Here is
one branch of government, the Judiciary, defending the second branch, the
Legislature, from being lorded over, politically raped by the third, the Executive
branch.
Yet,
Congress is even applauding Aquino’s DAP. Worse, one of Aquino’s lackeys in the
House of Representatives, Rep. Niel Tupas, who was the chief prosecutor in
Corona’s impeachment, is childishly bullying the Supreme Court to reverse its
decision by calling for an investigation of its own funds.
Aquino,
in effect, screwed them by throwing to the dustbin the budget laws, which
Congress is the prime author of. Yet, Senate President Franklin Drilon and
House Speaker Feliciano Belmonte were applauding Aquino’s state-of-the-nation
speech yesterday. They should have asked Congress to protest its political rape
by refusing to have Aquino speak before them.
Belmonte
didn’t even bother to undertake the kind of moro-moro hearing on the DAP in the
Senate. Belmonte’s minions investigate the alleged sex tapes illegally released
by a doctor, yet didn’t lift a finger to investigate how DAP politically raped
the Congress.
Never
since the restoration of democracy do we have the likes of Drilon and Belmonte
that are so servile to the President. Think of Drilon and how he “lawyered” for
Abad in the hearing on the DAP last week: He shames the office that luminaries
like Jovito Salonga (who defied Cory’s wish to retain the US military bases),
Neptali Gonzales, Marcelo Fernan, and Blas Ople, had held. Belmonte is without
doubt the most spineless Speaker the House has ever had.
(3) The Commission on Audit
No president, not even Marcos before, ever recruited the COA to participate in its conspiracies, as they understood that it was vital to the nation that his institution remains above politics. The framers of the Constitution in their wisdom made the COA an independent body with the sole authority to audit every single centavo of taxpayers’ money.
No president, not even Marcos before, ever recruited the COA to participate in its conspiracies, as they understood that it was vital to the nation that his institution remains above politics. The framers of the Constitution in their wisdom made the COA an independent body with the sole authority to audit every single centavo of taxpayers’ money.
Yet,
Aquino appointed Grace Pulido-Tan COA as chair, whose career as finance
undersecretary had been unremarkable, with her main qualification being as a
rabid Aquino supporter. Aquino appointed as member of the three-man commission
Heidi Mendoza, who had retired 10 years ago from the COA and had been going
around in NGO circles as a self-proclaimed anti-graft crusader.
More
importantly for Aquino perhaps, Mendoza had for years been probing the alleged
corruption of vice-president Jejomar Binay, now the shoo-in for the presidency
after Aquino. Mendoza’s dossier on Binay, my sources claimed, will be Aquino
and his candidate Mar Roxas’ propaganda artillery in 2016.
Mendoza
early on proved her value to Aquino’s schemes, when she deliberately
misinterpreted Corona’s dollar bank accounts and gave this to Ombudsman
Conchita Carpio-Morales. She then with a dramatic flair waved the bank
documents in the air, claiming it shows the Chief Justice had $10 million in
his dollar bank accounts. (He didn’t, as Mendoza counted flows, not stock, so that
Corona’s $1 million became $10 million.)
COA’s
report on the use of pork-barrel funds covered only mostly those of opposition
senators and congressmen. The excuse it gave was that Budget Secretary Abad
refused to release all documents it requested. But was this really the case, or
did the COA actually connive with Abad to use the special audit process to file
charges against opposition senators, especially Enrile, Estrada, and Revilla?
To this day, how senators and congressmen disbursed their PDAF has been kept
secret.
Despite
demands by the opposition, why has COA chairman Grace Pulido-Tan not issued an
order auditing the pork barrel funds of all legislators during Aquino’s
administration, and the much bigger P167 billion DAP funds?
Why did
it, instead, put as a priority for special audit the P900 million Malampaya
funds, which seem to provide more proof against the jailed opposition senators?
This is
the real state of the nation four years with Aquino in control. Our most
important democratic institutions have been damaged or prostituted.
FB: Rigoberto Tiglao
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