
ISSUE
ANALYSIS No. 04
Series of 2010
THE
LIMITS OF OLIGARCHIC POWER:
BEYOND THE 2010 ELECTIONS
"Organization
is the weapon of the weak in their struggle with the strong."
Robert Michels, Political Parties
By the Policy Study, Publication, and Advocacy
Center for People Empowerment in Governance (CenPEG)
April 26, 2010
They
say that elections in our country are like the game of musical chairs.
In reality, however, elections are contests exclusively for the
elites and their families who will later use their political positions
of power for private gain for themselves and their affluent families.
They are exercises for the oligarchy in sharing political power
among their coterie of the elite. While more than 70 percent of
our people are poor, more than 80 percent of the elected representatives
in Congress and presidency belong to the exclusive multimillionaires’
club, based on their own declared assets and liabilities.
Factions of the oligarchy and bureaucrat capitalists have maintained
their power by manipulating the poor and powerless especially during
electoral contests. They have used the poor as their tiradors or
hitmen in their contention for limited seats of political power
at the national and local level.
But no matter how much they pretend to come from the ranks of the
poor, or to project themselves as "maka-masa," especially
in their electoral propaganda, one can see how they have gained
from their positions of political power.
Can the oligarchy nationalize and expropriate land and private property
under the auspices of a genuine agrarian reform law as Cuban President
Fidel Castro did in May 1959 when he led by the example in implementing
Cuba's sweeping Agrarian Reform Law by first nationalizing his own
family's sprawling hacienda in Biran, eastern Cuba?
Validation
The coming Philippine elections are further validating the long-held
truism that:
- The
elections are basically contests for the elite and economically
powerful.
- The
major political parties running for national positions are basically
money machines, and convenient alliances of political clans and
dynasties, and are not based on real genuine, consistent party
principles or platforms.
-
Politics is still very personality-oriented.
But these characteristics of Philippine electoral politics are also
the limitations of oligarchic power. These limitations are on the
following grounds:
- Oligarchic
power thrives on the low awareness of the people and the divisions
among the non-elites. Once the people become socially-aware and
organize, they challenge the very foundations of elite rule.
- Oligarchic
monopoly of state power can never be expected to deliver policies
and services for the vast majority of the poor and oppressed.
- Oligarchic
power limits the exercise of true political democracy and the
realization of social justice.
- Oligarchic
power reduces the democratizing economic benefits that may come
from economic growth. The economic pie and GNP/GDP may grow each
year, but only a tiny speck of the population will corner this
added wealth for themselves and benefit from it.
The real hope
This is why the hope is not in the electoral struggle per se. The
real hope lies in deepening the processes of democratization, in
strengthening and widening the grassroots citizens' movements which
can act as an effective countervailing force against the economic,
political and military domination of the oligarchy - both foreign
and local. Thus, elections at the national and local levels should
not be a mere contest among the factions of the elites and bureaucrat
capitalists, among whom we are often limited to choose from. The
real struggle is between the continued oligarchic rule and the exploited/oppressed
toiling masses.
And real power is not also in state power per se. Real power is
in an empowered citizens' grassroots movement seeking to wrest control
of economic and political power from the oligarchs. The role of
people's movements in their engagement with the elite-driven state
is not just to provide an effective check and balance in the state,
or to share a token of that state power. Their role is to develop
alternative local and national leaders for the emergence of a genuine
political party of the non-elite to challenge oligarchic power.
For this, it may be necessary to unify the country's diverse progressive
and left-of-center forces behind a coherent political program.
What therefore, are the tasks at hand for people's organizations
and social movements which are participating in the coming political
exercise?
- Use
the whole electoral exercise to expose the bankruptcy of oligarchic
power and corrupt oligarchic politics that only reinforce if not
legitimize the monopoly of political and economic power of the
few. And we should show to the electorate whose consciousness
we are raising that we are the genuine people's alternative to
the corrupt patronage politics of the oligarchy.
- Show
by example that "New Politics" and "Politics of
Change" is always a principled one; it must maintain its
high moral ground and should never imitate the practices of corrupt
traditional politicians and the parties of the elite, just to
get positions of power. It should not be used by any faction of
the old or nouveau riche oligarchy in their bid for power. To
do so is to act like a hatchet person of one oppressor against
another. We should avoid riding on the discredited political machines
of the elites which are fueled merely by money and patronage.
How we win, is how we will govern.
- Maximize
the election to raise the level of consciousness of the people,
to make and develop new contacts in all provinces and regions,
and to organize and further broaden and strengthen people's organizations.
Special focus and more serious work should be given to our engagement
with local government units (LGUs) for consolidating grassroots
political power.
The greater tragedy of oligarchic power and politics is if the hoi
polloi -- the poor victims themselves -- fight and kill one another
while the exploiting classes playfully swap musical chairs in an
elite game we call elections.
(This
issue analysis was written by Prof. Roland Simbulan, Senior Fellow
of CenPEG, centennial professor and former Faculty Regent of the
University of the Philippines system.)
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