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Philippines
Philippine president fails to obtain a clear mandate in national
elections
By Keith Morgan and Peter Symonds
19 May 2001
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Vote counting in the May 14 national elections in the Philippines
will probably not be finalised for more than a week. But it is
already clear that President Gloria Arroyo has failed to register
the ringing electoral victory she needed to legitimise her ouster
of former president Joseph Estrada earlier in the year. At stake
in the poll are 13 out of 24 Senate seats, all 208 seats in the
House of Representatives and over 17,000 posts at the regional
and municipal level, including governors and mayors.
The main focus of attention has been on the Senate where Arroyo
is seeking to establish a firm majority to push through her program
of privatisation and economic restructuring. Throughout the week,
the result has seesawed between seven and eight seats for her
government's Peoples Power Coalition (PPC), with the remainder
going to the opposition Force of the Masses (PnM) and an independent
with strong links to Estrada.
According to the latest semi-official quick count
by the National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL), Arroyo
can expect at best an 8-4-1 outcome in her favour. This would
leave the president short of the nine or 10 seats that she wanted
to ensure the Senate was under government control. The loyalties
of the 11 senators whose seats were not contested in this election
are unclear. But during the crucial Senate vote on January 16
that effectively ended impeachment proceedings against Estrada,
six supported the blocking of key evidence against Estrada..
The election outcome also undermines Arroyo's claim to have
been swept to office by a mass popular movementthe so-called
People Power demonstrations that followed the January 16 vote.
In reality, the protests, which were organised by former president
Cory Aquino and Cardinal Jaime Sin and largely middle class in
composition, provided a convenient pretext for the removal of
Estrada by sections of big business, the military and the political
establishment concerned at his failure to implement market reforms
and halt the country's deteriorating economic position.
A number of political commentators have noted the class
divide in the election. An editorial in the pro-Arroyo Philippine
Daily Inquirer lamented: What seems to be emerging from
the early election returns are signs that the nation is deeply,
and dangerously polarised.
Sections of the middle class supported Arroyoan US-educated
economist, daughter of a former president and wife of a wealthy
businessman. Layers of the urban and rural poor were expected
to vote for Estrada's candidates. In the 1998 presidential election,
Estrada, who is just as much a big business politician as Arroyo,
campaigned on the basis of the slogan Erap [buddy] for the
poor and traded on his career as a film star playing tough
guy roles.
Two weeks before the vote, the Arroyo administration was shaken
by substantial protests of Manila's poor following Estrada's arrest
on corruption charges. When tens of thousands of demonstrators
converged on the presidential palace on May 1, Arroyo reacted
by claiming that the opposition was attempting a coup, then declared
a state of rebellion and ordered the arrest of key
opposition senators on charges of conspiracy.
Faced with criticism of her anti-democratic actions, the president
was forced to back off. She ended the state of rebellion
and allowed the opposition candidates to campaign even though
the conspiracy charges still stand. It's time to move on,
Arroyo told reporters. It's time to start the healing process.
She also attempted to woo the votes of the poor by visiting some
of Manila's sprawling shanties.
On May 10, Arroyo, clad in a pair of jeans and speaking in
vernacular Filipino, ventured into Manila's notorious Smokey
Mountain shantytown, where thousands of slum dwellers eke
out a living sifting through a huge nearby garbage dump. She told
a gathering of several hundred people, I've heard your grievances,
and then presented a cheque to a local women's group. But according
to a Reuters report, the reception was lukewarm
even though a well-known television comedian chaired the proceedings
and tried to coax the crowd to applaud the president enthusiastically.
When she made a trip to the area in early April, Arroyo was booed
and individuals slammed their doors in her face.
Voter turnoutestimated to be up to 85 percent of the
30 million eligible votershas been one of the highest in
Philippine history. As one commentator, Nelson Navarro told Reuters,
The more turnout there is, it's bad news for the president.
It means more rural voters voting, which means more votes for
the opposition. As rural votes from the more than 7,000
islands that comprise the Philippines are expected to be tallied
later, it could also mean a further slide in support for Arroyo.
A violent election
The bitterly fought character of the election was also evidenced
by the greater than usual level of violence. According to an official
police count, more than 100 people have been killed in election-related
incidents, making the poll the bloodiest since the snap elections
called by dictator Ferdinand Marcos in 1986. Among the more prominent
figures killed were Tanauan City Mayor Cesar Platon, who was shot
dead while campaigning for Batangas governor, and Quezon representative,
Marcial Punzalan Jr. Punzalan who was also shot.
The Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) has branded the poll
as the worst elections ever and is demanding that
the Electoral Commission (Comelec) pay the 700,000 teachers who
act as electoral staff. Already accounts of widespread ballot
rigging and vote stealing have flooded in from the provinces.
NAMFREL is considering legal action against electoral commissioner
Luzviminda Tancangco, saying he is responsible for the confusion
at Monday's polls because he failed to computerise the list of
voters. According to NAMFREL chairman Jose Concepcion, substantial
numbers of people were left off the lists and thus robbed of the
right to vote. Comelec has admitted that hundreds of thousands
of voters' names were missing from the rolls and that in some
districts and provinces a revote would be necessary.
Both sides have seized on the voting irregularities, rorting
and violence to accuse the other of rigging the ballot. According
to one account, rival teams of politicians have been racing across
the country in helicopters attempting to gather evidence where
their opponents have been most active. Neither side, however,
can claim to have clean hands. Voting rigging, electoral bribes,
intimidation and murder are an integral part of what is presented
as democracy in the Philippines.
Ever since formal independence from the US in 1946, Philippine
politics has been dominated by two main rival groups of wealthy
families, which are connected to big business interests and large
landed estates. Today these factions are, broadly speaking, represented
by the Arroyo and Estrada political camps. Particularly in the
rural areas, the power, influence and financial clout of various
clans and local warlords is wielded to ensure that
their political representatives are assured of victory. Lacking
any basic policy differences, the rival groups resort to bribes
and violence as the means of dealing with opponents and defending
their turf.
The Philippines Daily Inquirer noted: Political
families in Northern and Central Luzon appeared headed for a firmer
grip on local politics as their candidates posted a strong showing
at the polls... The Marcoses in Ilocos Norte, the Singsons in
Ilocos Sur, the Ortegas in La Union, the Dys in Isabela and Josons
in Nueva Ecija appeared headed for victory. While the newspaper
concentrated on Arroyo's opponents, a similar list could also
be drawn up for her supporters.
In the aftermath of Monday's vote, Arroyo claimed that the
elections had been free and fair and showed a vibrant democracy
at work. The Philippines is open for business, she
said, making a pitch to international investors and the financial
markets for support. Despite the president's upbeat comments,
the stockmarket fell slightly the day after the election and has
seen little subsequent activity as investors await the outcome
of the protracted count.
They are unlikely to get any solace from the final result,
however. Arroyo's failure to win a convincing victory will only
lead to further political instability. Moreover, in the short-term,
several of the opposition senators likely to win a seatJuan
Ponce Enrile, Gregorio Honasan and former police chief Panfilo
Lacsonface charges of conspiracy for their alleged role
in the May 1 coup against the president. Any attempt
to drag these senators through the courts will provoke further
protests and unrest.
See Also:
Philippine president declares "state
of rebellion" and cracks down on opposition
[7 May 2001]
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