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Philippines
Political payoffs to supporters and opponents alike
Arroyo attempts to shore up her grip on the Philippine presidency
By Keith Morgan and Peter Symonds
2 March 2001
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Just over a month ago, with the backing of the military, the
Catholic hierarchy, significant sections of big business and the
political establishment, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo forced Philippine
president Joseph Estrada from office and, blessed by the Supreme
Court, took charge herself. Her installation was portrayed in
the national and international press, with a few misgivings, as
a triumph for democracy and People Power that would end Estrada's
alleged corruption, incompetence and abuse of power.
It has soon become apparent, however, that Arroyo is just as
beholden to big business and her political backers as Estrada
ever was. She has handed cabinet posts to those who supported
her virtual coup d'etat, sought to cut deals with key corporate
figures, including those who previously backed Estrada, and reassured
the international markets that her administration will pursue
the IMF's restructuring agenda. Time will tell whether she is
any less inclined than Estrada apparently was to use the presidency
for personal financial gain.
The most obvious political payoff is to former president Fidel
Ramos, who along with Cory Aquino and Roman Catholic Archbishop
Jaime Sin, was instrumental in inserting Arroyo into office. The
three were all key figures in the so-called People Power movement
that toppled Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos in 1986 and
installed Aquino in power. Ramos, who was head of the armed forces
at the time, succeeded Aquino as president.
Arroyo has appointed Ramos as a special international emissary;
his close associate Renato de Villa, who served as his defence
secretary, has the powerful post of executive secretary; and the
key position of finance secretary has been given to Alberto Romulo,
who served as budget secretary under Aquino and was Senate majority
leader during the Ramos administration.
The new Vice-President, Teofisto Guingona, is also allied to
Ramos, having served as justice minister in his administration
and as parliamentary leader of the opposition Lakas party. He
was the first in the Senate to openly call on Estrada to resign
last April, before provincial governor Luis Singson made public
his allegations of Estrada's involvement siphoning off money from
the country's gambling rackets and tobacco taxes.
Herando Perez, who has been appointed Justice Minister, was
Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives during the Ramos
administration. Eduardo Ermita, the new Defence Secretary, was
government negotiator with the Moro National Liberation Front
under Ramos, and Hernani Braganza, now the Agrarian Reform Secretary,
is one of Ramos's nephews.
Arroyo has also rewarded leaders of Kongreso ng Mamamayang
Pilipino (Kompil) 11, an alliance of unions from the public and
private sectors, who were instrumental in mobilising support against
Estrada. KMP convenor Corazon Juliano-Soliman was given the post
of Social Welfare Secretary and another KMP figure, Teresita Ging
Quintos-Deles, was appointed as National Anti-Poverty Commission
Chair. Quintos-Deles was a representative for non-government organisations
(NGOs) on the social reform council during the Ramos administration.
Estrada's cronies
It is not so surprising that Arroyo has handed positions to
those members of the political establishment who helped remove
Estrada. What is more revealing about the Arroyo administration
is the rapidity with which it has appointed or sought deals with
key supporters of the ousted president.
One of the most striking appointments is that of Luis Singson;
a man who by his own confessions acted as the bagman for Estrada,
funnelling millions of dollars in payoffs from the illegal gambling
racket known as jueteng into the president's pockets.
He was an close confidante of Estrada, taking part in his drinking
parties that were lambasted for months in the Philippine press,
right up until the point when the president decided to hand the
running of a new legal gambling game to one of Singson's rivals.
Not without a touch of irony, Singson has been officially appointed
as gambling consultant to the Arroyo administration.
According to the interior minister, the provincial governor's
experience and knowledge made him the obvious choice
for the post. Moreover, through his sister, Viviana Honeygirl
Singson, who has been given the job of chairperson of the state-run
lottery, he has succeeded in getting a stake in the country's
legalised gamblingsomething he failed to do under Estrada.
An article entitled Revenge of the Estrada Cronies
in the latest issue of the Far Eastern Economic Review
made clear that the appointment of the Singsons is not an aberration.
It commented:
[W]hat really bothers a lot of Filipinos is that Governor
Singson isn't the only friend-of-Estrada who has ingratiated himself
with the new president. In recent weeks, Malacanang [the presidential
palace] has laid out the red carpet for everyone from allies of
the former president in Congress to Estrada's most notorious drinking
companions and big-business supporters. Arroyo's fans call this
reaching out' to the opposition. To increasing numbers of
Arroyo's critics, however, it is a sign that she is cynically
padding her power base with the same characters who caused so
much mischief under the Estrada presidency.
The magazine reports that key business figures such as Lucio
Tan, chairman of Philippine Airlines, and billionaire Eduardo
Cojuangco Jr, chairman of San Miguel Corp, have held meetings
in the presidential palace. Arroyo disingenuously claimed that
just because she had had her photo taken with the two businessmen
did not mean that she would be doing them any favours. But Tan,
who is facing tax evasion charges, took the opportunity to call
on the government to provide more protection to Philippine Airlines.
According to the Far Eastern Economic Review, Manila
is rife with speculation that Arroyo, whose government has enough
shares in San Miguel to oust its chairman, and Cojuangco have
reached an understanding so he can stay at the helm of the brewing
and food giant if he gives up his political ambitions (he ran
for president in 1992) and cuts his ties with his Nationalist
People's Coalition and Estrada's party. Other former Estrada
allies, including Senator Ramon Revilla, have abandoned Estrada
and joined the administration's Lakas party. Revilla was one of
the 11 senators who in January voted to suppress evidence in Estrada's
impeachment trialthe event that triggered the president's
removal just days later.
A sign of political weakness
While Arroyo has been bending over backwards to accommodate
Estrada's supporters, her administration has continued to vigorously
pursue charges against Estrada himself. A major legal obstacle
is the fact that Estrada insists that he did not formally resign
and his lawyers are arguing in the Supreme Court that he is still
the president and thus immune from prosecution. A ruling is expected
by mid-March, which, if it confirms that Arroyo is the president,
will clear the way for charges to be laid by the Ombudsman. One
of the charges being preparedeconomic plundercarries
the death penalty.
The fact that Arroyo is prepared to put Estrada on trial for
his life, while rewarding Singson, his self-confessed partner
in corruption, indicates that the new president is far from certain
about her own political position. She is compelled to try to politically
destroy Estrada, who still commands significant popular support,
by proceeding with the charges, and at the same time, undermine
his base by doing deals with his allies.
Moreover, there is a certain urgency to the task. Elections
for 13 of the 24 Senate seats and all 208 members in the House
of Representatives are due in May. Estrada is fielding a team
of candidates, including his wife, and has begun to campaign on
her behalf. In the 1998 presidential elections he convincingly
beat his opponents with a populist campaign geared to exploiting
widespread dissatisfaction with the previous Ramos administration
and its implementation of the IMF's austerity measures.
Recent opinion polls indicate that the months of corruption
allegations against Estrada have taken their toll, but he and
his party could still be a force to be reckoned with in the upcoming
elections. Whatever support Arroyo has been able to build up in
the course of the campaign against Estrada may rapidly evaporate
as she begins to impose the policies being demanded by the IMF
and international investors. Dissatisfaction with the ability
of Estrada to make the required reforms was one of
the principal reasons that sections of the ruling class swung
against him.
Finance Secretary Romulo is in the process of drafting a budget
that will cut public spending by $US1.6 billion and sharply reduce
the size of the civil service in Manila. The IMF had made a number
of criticisms of the high level of government spending, which
under Estrada resulted in a 136 billion peso ($2.8 billion) budget
deficit last year. In an attempt to compensate for the anticipated
cut in public spending, Philippine interest rates have been cut
to try to spur private investment.
The peso and share values have risen, temporarily at least,
since Arroyo came to power. However, as economic commentators
have noted, the Philippines has a long way to go to lift foreign
investment. An article in the US-based BusinessWeek magazine,
which outlined a detailed economic prescription for the new Philippine
administration, commented: Arroyo's longer-term challenges
are daunting. She needs to boost growth, cut into corruption,
and woo back foreign investmentat a time when the US economy
is slowing and amid growing competition from other low-wage centres
in China and South East Asia. She will have accomplished a great
deal if she merely restores the economy to its condition at the
departure of President Fidel V. Ramos.
But in order to carry out such demands, the Arroyo administration
will come into conflict with workers and the urban and rural poor,
who are already feeling the impact of rising prices for fuel and
other basic commodities such as rice, along with cutbacks to jobs
and government services. Estrada's populist demagogy to be for
the poor was already beginning to wear thin after just two
and a half years in office. Arroyo, who is a member of the country's
wealthy elite, the daughter of a former president and the wife
of a well-off businessman, may find that disillusionment with
her administration sets in even sooner.
See Also:
An exchange on the anti-Estrada
movement in the Philippines
[13 February 2001]
Behind the façade
of People Power
Philippine military and big business join hands to oust Estrada
[31 January 2001]
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