New Pinoy Politics: jose “butch” dalisay endorse dick gordon for president

Jose "Butch" Dalisay endorses Dick Gordon for President

(Multi-awarded author Jose Butch Dalisay endorses Sen. Richard "Dick" Gordon for President.)

My Endorsement

Posted by Jose Dalisay on 1/05/10

The official candidacies are in, so now we know that 99 Filipinos—at least nine of them serious contenders—are

dreaming of becoming their country's next president. The serious ones—in their intentions if not in their machinery—include Sen. Noynoy Aquino, former Defense chief Gibo Teodoro, Sen. Manny Villar, former President Erap Estrada, Sen. Dick Gordon, Sen. Jamby Madrigal, environmentalist Nicky Perlas, Bro. Eddie Villanueva and young reformer JC de los Reyes.

I've never done this before, but I'm going out on a limb to make an endorsement. And I'm going to do that because the

stakes are just too high, the situation too dire, for someone in my position—who might yet persuade the uninformed or the uncertain—to sit idly by as the most important presidential election of the post-Marcos era takes place.

Having gone through martial law, two EDSAs, and the interminably long night of GMA's hold on power (something she might yet extend with her run for Congress, and presumably the Speakership and Prime Ministership, if the chips fall her way again), I'm convinced that we Pinoys have punished ourselves enough with bad and corrupt leadership. If we elect another lemon to the Palace again, we'll have no one to blame but ourselves.
My vote will go to that person who I think has the experience, the integrity, the intelligence, the vision, the compassion and the discipline to best serve as our next president. After reviewing the options, I conclude that that person can only be Sen. Richard "Dick" Gordon. He's running along with former Marikina mayor and Metro Manila chief Bayani

"BF" Fernando—whose teaming up with Gordon was something of a masterstroke, focusing attention on the reputations of both men as proven, no-nonsense performers (or, the way Gordon puts it "transformers"—people who change society).

First of all, full disclosure: I've just finished writing the biography of Senator Gordon, a commissioned project that took three years to finish. Within that time, I got to know the man and his story better than most people, beyond the official press releases and the front page stories. I've kept a formal distance—I still call him "Mr. Senator, never "Dick" to his face—and I'm not a part of, nor have I been asked to join, his campaign organization.

My heart tells me to vote for Noynoy and Mar, which will most strongly express my outrage over the way GMA has gutted our most cherished values and institutions. But my head tells me to vote for Dick and BF, who will need no on-the-job training in good governance, and whose track records as strong-willed, visionary executives are unmatched.

I frankly don't know Noynoy well enough—and neither, I suspect, do most Filipinos, beyond what they've seen of him on TV after President Aquino's death. I have no reason to doubt that he'll make an honest, upright President—maybe even a capable one. I've worked for Mar, and have nothing but appreciation for the seriousness and high purpose with which he takes his job as a senator. But much as I admire the late President Cory Aquino and the legacy she left behind—a legacy the Liberals will seek to sustain—I believe the Presidency can't and shouldn't be inherited, but earned.

One just has to look at what Gordon has done in Subic and Olongapo, and what Fernando did to Marikina, to see how they have delivered on their word. Both places provide working demonstrations of what inspired leadership and political will can achieve.

True, both men have big egos, and can come across to Filipinos accustomed to being wooed and massaged as being brusque or even abrasive when they need to get things done. But that's nothing compared to the smiling impunity with which GMA and her crew weakened, rather than strengthened, our people's faith in government.

They've faced their share of lawsuits, but, to the best of my knowledge, no charge of corruption against either man has ever stuck or prospered. Gordon lives with his wife Kate in a comfortable condominium in Fort Bonifacio—in the same building where artists, expats, and successful professionals live—and stays in the same old, modest house in crowded downtown Olongapo when he's there.

In a country plagued by disasters of every kind, Dick's 40 years of hands-on experience with the Red Cross should be invaluable. At a time when Philippine-American relations need to be managed with both firmness and finesse, Gordon trumps all his fellow aspirants in experience in dealing with the Americans, knowing when to stand up to them and when to seek their cooperation.

It was, I must admit, the small personal touches that convinced me that this was a man of character. As one of his former assistants put it: "When he was in Honolulu, I PA'ed for him, and the consulate people were amazed, because they hadn't seen anyone work so hard. He was a block away from Waikiki and never saw the beach. He wanted to get a souvenir for his mom, and so at 1 a.m. we crossed the street to get a box of chocolates from a souvenir shop."

Did Dick Gordon pay me to write his biography? He most certainly did, and I wouldn't have done it otherwise; writing books is my livelihood, and I didn't know him from Adam then. Knowing him as I do now, this endorsement comes gratis and unbidden.

Can Dick Gordon win? The surveys don't look too good at the moment, but it's up to us to decide whether to let the surveys—or we ourselves—choose our best next President.

GetRealPhilippines: Attack of the Noynoy Taliban!


MONDAY, 04 JANUARY 2010 16:44 BENIGN0

E-mailPrintPDF
taliban-toyotaThe Noynoy Aquino Taliban recently struck a blow to the forces of free inquiry as Pinoy Buzz personality Paul Farol was removed from the roll of bloggers in emerging online e-zine Asian Correspondent where he once held a blogger post also as Pinoy Buzz. The editors of Asian Correspondent (AC) reportedly cited risks to their "reputation" as a reason for the decision to boot out Farol from their blog roll. According to AC editors, they have been receiving many complaints from pro-Noynoy supporters about Farol's writing. Blogger BetterPhilippines re-published Farol's final blog entry on AC in his post "Yellow Censorship". In his farewell entry in AC Farol concedes to the forces of primitivism for now.
Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino III is a presidential candidate that enjoys cult status. His supporters are drawn to him on the basis of a largely (if not entirely) emotional appeal. As such, like mostcult figures Noynoy commands a following of exceptional virulence. His followers act in an emotionally charged manner and are quick to judge those who are seen to be not "one of them". One of them. Sounds a bit ominous, doesn't it?

What then does it mean to be "one of them"?
Ironically, this is the question that most infuriates Aquino's supporters. Because when one attempts to answer this question, one finds that there is nothing to work with. As a matter of fact, local social networking czar Carlo Ople beat everyone to the conclusion that Aquino has in fact become a high priest of vacuous substance in his recent article "The cult of Noynoy Aquino" where he makes the following observation:
I wrote an article recently about how Noynoy Aquino has to answer the questions being raised against him, especially with the surfacing of old news clips of him defending the dispersement of the farmers in Hacienda Luisita, which eventually resulted into a bloody massacre.  Some people screamed that it was black propaganda. They put more weight on the blogger writing negatively about Noynoy than the content of the actual post.
Indeed, one can almost picture long-bearded Aquino supporters riding around in Toyota Hi-Lux pickup trucks wielding Kalashnikovs rifles patrolling the Philippine political blogosphere. The almost Taliban-like zealotry of Aquino supporters is disturbing to say the least. This kind of zealotry for a future president of the Republic can only lead to two outcomes:
  • A further polarisation of society into those who are "one of them" and those who beg to think, possibly resulting in further inbreeding in an already inbred Philippine Media; or,
  • Mass disillusionment and a reversion back to wholesale fragmentation of our society if Aquino fails to deliver anything during his administration (in essence, a return the Square One that, ironically, was the state that Aquino's supporters claim we will be delivered from under their man).
In either case, we will be seeing a further degeneration of the quality and dignity of Philippine politics and its partner in crime Filipino journalism.
If even now we are already seeing the kind of inclination towards suppression of free inquiry amongst the supporters of The Popular One, it becomes quite easy to imagine what actual political power conferred upon Aquino will turn his supporters into.
As a friend of mine quipped recently in light of Farol's plight:
Even GMA who's been thought to be dictatorial never censors the press as they continue to bad-mouth and demonize her, yet these noynoyistas at this stage already silence those who are against noynoy. I guess we can agree that, here, GMA and Noynoy are indeed opposites.
Carlo Ople for his part issues a challenge to supporters of whoever candidate that remains and will remain relevant particularly in these times when a cult candidate dominates the polls:
To end, let me just say that if you really want to help this country, then don't be stupid and defend your candidate like a faithful guard dog. Ask questions, challenge the campaign staff, and push him/her to take action. Don't forget that more than a supporter of Noynoy, you are also a Filipino and I don't think nationalism entails blind whole-hearted trust to your candidate of choice. Put that passion and energy into actual things that can help the country and maybe then you can make a real difference.
The rise of a politician of nil substance who commands a cult following is a dangerous development. Without substance, followers of such figures are prone to exercise extreme liberties in their efforts to support their choice.

Paul Farol: Pro-Noynoy cult wins, Pinoy Buzz a.k.a Paul Farol loses battle?


Jan. 04 2010 - 09:24 pm
View comments (21)
 

0


(This entry is dedicated to Amiel CabanligBrian Gorrel, the Get Real Squad and my kumpare, www.betterphilippines.com.)

Let me tell you the story of how Pinoy Buzz came to be and how it is going to end.

For the past year, Pinoy Buzz (www.pinoybiz.blogspot.com) has gone from absolute obscurity to some level of regional recognition.

For a long while, I was at the bottom of the blog heap.  My blog was dormant and my stats were absolutely nothing compared to the stats I have today.  In December of 2008, I resolved to make www.pinoybiz.blogspot.com one of the more better known blogs in the Philippines.

I blogged persistently, like a mad man.  I actually started spending more time on my blog than on my work.

I didn't have a mission when I first hatched the idea of being the number one blogger in the Philippines, a goal which I think I will never reach.  All I wanted to do, really, was to write about the things that, it seems, only I can see in the things that were happening all around me.

I was among the first to say that Bambee dela Paz was a fraud right in her own blog and that earned me a lot of scathing comments - including a blogger profile that insinuates that I am gay.  (I laugh everytime somebody mentions it.)

Like most bloggers in the Philippines, I enlisted my blog in almost all of the blogstorms that erupted over one thing or another.  There was the Terry Hatcher blogstorm, the kidnapping of 3 ICRC workers, Hayden Kho, Maui Taylor, Ondoy, etcetera.  The baseline of my stats rose from a hundred pageviews a day to around 500 to 700 pageviews a day - this is the reward of joining bandwagons, you get popular.

My wife, of course, hated the fact that I spend hours upon hours a day tending to my free hosted blog.  In order to appease her and show her that my efforts were actually making the money that we needed to raise our only child, I kept on updating her on my Google Adsense earnings - which I am not too proud to admit, had totaled to all of $70.00 which is more than I've actually spend on pre-paid broadband load. Of course, she snorted at the $70.00 and told me to spend more time on my real job, which at that time was to write press releases for Senator Richard Gordon.

I ignored her and passed her comment off as another one of those silly woman things that women tend to blurt out.

In my head I growled, "Ug! Ug! Me man! Me write blog and make millions of pesos through google adsense! Me show you! Ug! Ug! Silly woman! Make me coffee!"

The millions of pesos never materialized.  I got reprimanded several times at work for not turning in the press releases I was supposed to write.  But my blog, being freehosted as it was, finally started getting the stats I had only dreamt about when I decided to revive my dormant blog.

Then, out of the blue, Asian Correspondent contacted me and offered to hitch me up to their website in exchange for a certain amount of dollars a month.  I didn't know the lingo back then, but apparently, I was being syndicated or rather my blog's traffic was being bought.  I was even among a few renowned Filipino bloggers who were being invited to participate in Asian Correspondent.

I can't tell you enough of how this bit of news elated me.  Suddenly, blogging glory - much better than winning the Philippine Blog Awards - was at hand.

Of course, in transferring my blog from blogger to Asian Correspondent, I lost quite a bit of traffic from my previous posts.  Thankfully, with a lot of work from the people of Asian Correspondent and a lot of blogging work from me, my stats started to come back.

I actually started blogging on Asian Correspondent by writing a lot of safe pieces which were restrained by the usual journalist ethics which most Filipino reporters IGNORE.  But, after weeks of doing blog entries that really didn't get a rise out of me or any of my friends. I realized that I wasn't being true to myself.

To be sure, there are certain top bloggers who claim to be following ethical journalism standards and some who claim to espouse noble causes.  None of them really lived up to their claims because they are all paid hacks - one way or the other.

Who was I kidding? 

I learned about ethical journalism not by being a journalist but by being the one who had to write rejoinders to the breach of ethics of some Filipino journalists. (If there is one worthy blog entry I will try to write, it is about the ABSOLUTE HYPOCRISY OF CERTAIN FILIPINO JOURNALISTS.  Just recently, Ampatuan got mauled by journalists who were campaigning to stop violence against journalists. WHAT THE F**K WAS THAT ALL ABOUT?)

Certain commenters point out that I am not an ethical journalist. To that, I say PAKSHET. What are you talking about? Ethical Filipino journalists are a rare breed, they are not the dominant specie in the Filipino media jungle and they are not very well known either.

As Bubby Dacer once said, "Everybody has a price."  And he actually mentioned a couple of names which, oddly, corresponded with the names mentioned by other PR guys.

No.  I am not a Filipino Dyornalist.

I am a blogger. I make no claim to living up to standards of any sort.  I am one man with a laptop, internet access, and a blog.  I write as I please about the topics that interest me.  Even after accepting the deal to be part of Asian Correspondent, I still insist on the idea that I am accountable to no one but myself.

For the past few weeks, I went on a rampage against Noynoy Aquino and his minions. This was not because of some misguided and rabid hatred for a political figure.  This was because I lived through the years the fabled Cory Aquino administration and while we can credit her for the rise of Press Freedom, we cannot credit her for nation building. 

The Cory Aquino legacy is the road paved with good intentions but led us to perdition.  That legacy ought not to be repeated by anyone, much less Noynoy Aquino.

If I wasn't clear about it in my previous entries on this blog, let me say it again:

Manny Villar, despite the C-5 scandal, is the lesser evil.  Dick Gordon, despite being unpopular, is the best choice over Gibo Teodoro who is a close second. JC delos Reyes is better off as a councilor in Olongapo, Brother Eddie Villanueva is better off tending to his ministry, and Nicanor Perlas is not worth the trouble.

I didn't expect to be popular for one reason or another.  In fact, given the sentiments of most people, I expected to be less popular - even hated. 

It was not easy being on the receiving end of some of the stupidest comments on Earth - really, come on guys, do some thinking before you comment.

My behavior on the internet has been lambasted by a lot of people, my motives have been questioned, and my credibility has been thoroughly assailed.  If the internet were the UFC, I think I would be a bloody pulp by now - mostly blood, very little pulp with a lot of guts thrown in.

I may be notorious to some (especially among the pro-Noynoy legions out there) and I may be somewhat celebrated  - albeit, in certain  very small cliques who will disavow any association with me as soon as I post their real names.  But, that hardly matters to me.

What matters is that I see that Noynoy Aquino is unfit for the Philippine Presidency and what matters is that I can blog about it.

So, how is it going it end?  My stay with Asian Correspondent has hit a rough spot... a very rough spot.

Apparently, there was a deluge of complaints about my blog and Asian Correspondent has to take care of it reputation - which is understandable. I've made mistakes with previous entries and in light of the barrage of complaints from Noynoy cultists and others, I think the officers of Asian Correspondent has to make a decision that will be favorable to accomplishing their vision for their website.

I've asked them to reconsider their decision but I'm not really hoping for a change of mind.  I am, after all, pretty risky.  Then again, it's usually the biggest risk that pays off the most.

So, yellow trolls, I guess you guys win... For now.



  Comment It |           |    Email it    Print it   

Paul Farol: Carlos Romulo Foundation presidential policy debate kicks off without Noynoy Aquino


Jan. 06 2010 - 09:15 pm
View comments (3)
 

0

7


Noynoy Aquino still has time to change his mind about not joining the Carlos Romulo Foundation Presidential Policy Debate on January 14.

For the first time in the history of elections in the Philippines, it seems that debates among Presidential aspirants in the Philippines has gained currency among a large audience.  Both TV network giants, ABS-CBN and GMA7, have been pouring money into live debates among Presidential aspirants perhaps in response to a clamor from their audiences.

In the coming debate, Presidential candidate Manny Villar will be facing off Gilbert Teodoro and Dick Gordon. This will be the first time that Villar will be doing so. He had begged off from previous debates and some claim that he did so because leading rival Noynoy Aquino wouldn't be joining.

Below is the official announcement from the Romulo Foundation:

Presidential Policy Debate Kicks Off Thursday, January 14 at AIM

The Carlos P. Romulo Foundation for Peace and Development is pleased to announce that the first comprehensive debate on domestic and foreign policy among presidential candidates in the May elections will take place on Thursday, January 14 at the Asian Institute of Management (AIM).

Sen. Richard Gordon, Sen. Manuel Villar and former Defense Secretary Gilbert Teodoro will participate in the two-hour forum. Two other candidates – former President Joseph Estrada and Sen. Benigno Aquino III – were invited to join the discussion as early as October last year, but they declined.

Organized by the Romulo Foundation in cooperation with ABS-CBN News Channel (ANC) and AIM, the forum will focus on the broad theme of "Philippine Credibility and Competitiveness in the World", and seek policy responses from the candidates on five main issues:

1.The Maguindanao massacre and the wider challenge of peace in the Philippine South – If elected President, what policies and programs will the candidate pursue to stop the problem of private armies, resolve the conflict in Mindanao and Sulu, and bring stability and development to the region?

2. Philippine foreign relations and international security – What significance does the candidate attach to Philippine relations with the world, what countries and regions are the most important, and should the nation be involved or not in the international struggle against terrorism?

3. Philippine economy and international economic relations – What policies will the candidate adopt to strengthen and grow the national economy, expand foreign trade and investments, and what importance does he attach to key economic organizations such as WTO, IMF, WB and APEC?

4. Migrant workers – What policies will the candidate adopt with respect to Filipino labor migration, the welfare of OFWs, Philippine relations with labor-receiving countries, and international conventions for the protection and rights of migrant workers?

5. Philippine competitiveness in the world – What specific policies and programs will the candidate adopt to reverse the erosion of Philippine international competitiveness in the world and address the problem of corruption?

"The primary purpose of the forum is to elicit from each candidate his specific policy ideas and solutions to major problems and challenges of national life today," says Ambassador Roberto R. Romulo, Chairman of the CPR Foundation. "In this way, the forum will assist voters in reaching a decision on who to vote for."

The forum will be moderated by Ricky Carandang of ANC. A question panel composed of Ambassador Rodolfo Severino, head of ASEAN Studies Center, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Philippine Star Editor/Columnist Amy Pamintuan, and CNN correspondent Jaime Floro Cruz will take turns in directing questions to the candidates.

Under the rules approved by the representatives of the candidates and the sponsoring organizations, the panel will question the candidates on the five main issues during the first hour of the forum. Each candidate will be given two minutes to state his position on each issue.

In the second segment, there will be an open forum participated in by both the question panel and the audience. Questions will be directed by them to the candidates individually.

In the final segment, the three candidates will each deliver a three-minute closing statement to sum up their policy positions and make their appeal to Filipino voters.

Organizers of the forum said the event will be attended by the business and diplomatic communities, the media and the general public. At least 20 ambassadors are expected to attend. Because of limited seats, interested parties are enjoined to reserve their seats early. Registration can be made via email: reyes@pfgc.ph or telephone 885-0921

The forum will be broadcast live by ANC on cable TV and ABS Studio 23 on terrestrial TV. "This will enable the Filipino citizenry all over the country to watch the event," says Ambassador Romulo.



  Comment It |           |    Email it    Print it   

Paul Farol: Noynoy Aquino defended Hacienda Luisita massacre?



Dec. 28 2009 - 05:20 pm
View comments (2)
 

0


A YouTube video has started spreading on Facebook alleging that Presidential candidate Noynoy Aquino defended the violent dispersal of workers in Hacienda Luisita.

Seven people died and scores were wounded when the police guarding Hacienda Luisita opened fire on the demonstrators gathered at the Hacienda.

Here's the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwAaKs2hEIg



  Comment It |           |    Email it    Print it   

Paul Farol: Noynoy Aquino for President campaign going Humpty Dumpty



Dec. 28 2009 - 09:03 am
View comments (3)
 

0

4


Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the king's horses and all the king's men
Couldn't put Humpty together again

(Interesting references to Humpty Dumpty here.)

 

Rather than adopt a romanticized view of Philippine politics as a fight between good and evil or the pure and the corrupt, I try to look at it in terms of how accrues to one group or another.  Why? Because that is all what politics is about, power.

It's all about who has it and who wants more of it. All claims of idealism and noble intentions are mere propaganda until one actually acquires and skillfully wields the power to make it happen.

It would be great, if like in the Lord of the Rings, one could blunder one's way into acquiring power.  Such is the tale of Bilbo Baggins who found a ring of immense power but merely used it to enjoy a rather long life and accrue a certain amount of prestigue in his community.  It is arguable that Frodo Baggins actually wielded the power of the One ring to do anybody any good, he didn't have the skill to use it and was actually frightened to wield its enormous power. If there was actually anybody worth praising in the whole Lord of the Rings saga, it would have been Golem -- he was the one who actually destroyed the ring, the rest of the characters were too busy with their own struggles.

Those who are quite successful at accruing and wielding enormous power are often the deliberate and persistent sort, those who are almost obsessed with making detailed plans or schemes and executing these schemes perfectly down to the last detail.

Noynoy Aquino doesn't strike me as that sort of person.  In the very few times that I had run into him at the Batasang Pambansa and at the Philippine Senate, he struck me as someone who is laid back and easy going.  He was actually one of the very few senators you can chat up while riding the elevator or walking through the hallway.

Proof of his human-ness, I guess, is the time when he burst out of his room on the fifth floor minutes before session was about to be called to order.  He was in such an apparent rush that he forgot to check his fly and his shirt tail was peeping through his zipper.  For some reason, this is one of the images that keeps replaying in my mind whenever his name comes up in a conversation.

As far as Noynoy Aquino's quest for power is concerned, a lot of people have described it as coming out of the blue and landing with a lurch. It blazed the trail, and actually stole Pole Position from top survey contender Manny Villar, probably because Aquino was riding on the huge sympathy people had for him after his mother's death.  Such sympathy had gotten people elected in the past, as in the case of Pia Cayetano who launched her political career after her father died of a liver disease.

Despite all the effort to make it seem like a well orchestrated move (as if one can really orchestrate the vagaries of the human condition, i.e., disease, death, and sympathy being harnessed to further political careers), signs of the Noynoy Aquino campaign faltering have begun to show and the cracks are becoming more evident as the days pass.

I don't know how much planning had been made during the days immediately after Cory Aquino died, but I'd dread to think that the idea of launching Noynoy Aquino's bid for the Presidency was deliberately and extensively plotted while Cory Aquino was suffering on her death bed or even before that. 

Anyway, in my mind, political plans of the magnitude of winning the Philippine Presidency aren't so easily hatched and implemented.  Common interests have to be defined, agreements have to be made, alliances have to be validated, and sticky issues have to be sorted out.  Doing this in the Philippine context is an ordeal that not even the most popular contender can breeze through with, you either sort it out before the campaign starts or wait for the problems to crop up during the campaign and after the campaign -- supposing the candidate wins.

Winning the Presidency, girls and boys, will always be about making deals.  Our history tells us that our culture is a transactional culture, I am not saying that this is right -- I am saying that this is the way it is.

It would be great if you can actually make deals directly with each and every one of the 50 million Filipino voters -- then atleast, the candidate can claim to actually represent the the interests of a definite number of people.  But in reality, Presidential candidates make deals with a very small cluster of individuals who may represent the interests of a number of other people.

Considering the deal making that must go on, the quest for power and the fight to keep power is what drives people to commit evil.

Just this morning, I found some information that points to the deal making that may be hurting Noynoy Aquino's campaign.

First is this article from the Daily Tribune:

There are reports that within the Liberal Party (LP) camp that this early, a power struggle is rearing its ugly head among the supporters of presidential candidate Sen. Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino and vice presidential bet Manuel Roxas II.

That is the apparent reason that despite the lead, which, however, is being whittled away fast, of Noynoy in various surveys, the LP campaign seems heading nowhere.

A valid concern about the current LP infighting even before its candidates do win, presupposing that they do, what more conflicts are in the offing when Noynoy steps into Malacañang.

What is apparent in the developing rift between supporters of Noynoy supposedly led by former Sen. Franklin Drilon and the backers of Roxas led by former Education Secretary Florencio Abad is that both camps cannot wait to get their spoils from the victory they are perceiving to be already theirs.

That is apart from the other factions, such as the usual civil socialite-supporter s in one camp, with the Aquino-Cojuangco group working in the shadows.

It was Roxas who was initially groomed as party standard bearer — that was until former President Corazon Aquino, Noynoy's mother, died.

The Roxas campaign which tried to run on the promise for an honest government as opposed to the corrupt administration of Gloria never found its wings as Roxas hogged the cellar of surveys on the presidency.

The LP then was faced with the problem of devising a more effective persona for Roxas to make him capture the imagination of the public which included squeezing dry his romantic affair with popular news anchor Korina Sanchez, now his wife.

The LP bet was ranged against the very liquid candidacy of Sen. Manuel Villar, the popular pull of former President Joseph Estrada and the then youth favorite Sen. Francis Escudero.

Roxas was getting the support mainly only from the civil socialites, who were, and still are, to blame for imposing the nine-year blight called Gloria Arroyo on the country, and a sprinkling of the Edsa I groups, including some Ayala Avenue businessmen and guess what? The former lawyers of Gloria Arroyo.

The death of Cory Aquino opened the way for an LP shortcut to Malacañang by taking advantage of public sympathy from her death. What happened next was almost too predictable, Noynoy would have to carry the flag for the LP and Roxas would slide down as Noynoy's vice presidential running mate.

It did happen and in the process created two centers of power within the party. Noynoy was then built up by the civil socialites as the only logical choice in place of Gloria and quickly it seems the machinery that conspired to overthrow Estrada in 2001 was reactivated and Noynoy was immediately publicized to be on top of the surveys.

Floated initially, through the help of Yellow Army media, was a Social Weather Station survey showing Noynoy getting some 60 percent preference for the presidency. What the report on the survey tried to gloss over was the fact that the survey was undertaken in select regions in Luzon where the Aquinos have a sizable following.

Subsequent surveys showed that Noynoy still has the lead, thanks to the boost from the misleading SWS survey, but at far lower ratings.

The early lead of Noynoy, however, is being taken by the groups within the LP to be a sure indication of an Aquino administration in 2010.

Where Gloria will leave off with transactional politics by June next year, the LP seems to have taken over. Politicians perceived to be Gloria's top butt lickers have jumped to the LP stable, thus creating another group within the party that will stop at nothing to maintain their hold on political power.

Thus, the LP is now divided into groups madly pulling at each other's hair for being out of the circle of power for so long and those who are fighting to get an assurance that they will retain their hold on power.

That is happening even before the feuding Aquino forces step into Malacañang. Imagine when they do, hopefully not.

The public, if one goes by the suspect surveys, still appears to perceive Noynoy as a worthy alternative to Gloria, but the sentiment is far from him being a leader but an entitlement for being the son of two national figures who have been made larger than life by the same scheming Yellow civil socialites.

It seems that with a lot of help from his circle of power-hungry backers, Noynoy's candidacy is heading for self-destruction.

And here's another from New Philippine Revolution:

Reason for the implosion---GREED. Yep, Noynoy's inner circle are acting like rapacious wolves salivating for this and that posts, confident that they belong to the right group and their bet is a sure winner. Their greed has definitely overtaken the Cause. It has muddled the real cause why Noynoy ran in the first place.

For example, I know for a fact how certain members of Noynoy's group barred friends of Mar Roxas, some of them, senatoriable material, from being included in the Liberal party official senatorial slate. Reason? They don't want Mar's old circle of friends there, fearing a power struggle.

I know how some of them, members of Drilon's team clashed with Abad's.

Now, these internal clashes and talks about the slowly dwindling funds are affecting Noynoy Aquino's campaign. These talks are spilling over the public sphere and causing demoralization to some.

And when these verified information reaches well-meaning people, true friends of Noynoy and they write about it, people like Montelibano and some fanatical Noynoy Yellow army members act like they're the sages of old and probably felt they are doing good by branding everybody paid hacks.

Let me just say that I now fear what will happen to the government if Noynoy wins. At this early in the game, his close-in advisers are fucking things up, showing their greed and engaging in petty internal squabbles and power struggles.

Let me put on record that I am no paid anti-Noynoy writer. Check my background. I am not even an anti-Noynoy. Most of my friends are in the Liberal Party and I agree with what they are fighting for. Yet, I cannot say , for certain, if I am truly pro-Noynoy. I am pro-Filipino People and the reason why I write is simply to scratch my writer's itch. And I care for Cory Aquino and Ninoy, parents of Noynoy, whom I revere and salute for what they did for the country. It does not follow, however, that I will blindly follow the son. What people ask of Noynoy is get your thing going by publishing your platform and let us discuss them before the people. Until now, however, no platform, no discussions.

I write to warn Noynoy to take a firm hold of the organization and exercise leadership, an enlightened one.Purge your organization of ravenous wolves and vultures. The "cretins" which Montelibano described in his article resides well within Noynoy's circles. Be a man.



  Comment It |           |    Email it    Print it