IBON
Features/May 2007
COMMENTARY
ELECTIONS
IN RP: ILLUSION OF DEMOCRACY?
The
closing of voting precincts sees the end only of the first salvo
of election cheating with the wholesale manufacturing of the eventual
outcome still to come. This is bad enough, but unfortunately the
problem with the Philippine electoral exercise actually goes much
deeper.
By
Sonny Africa
IBON Research Head
IBON
Features--No one disputes that the Philippines is mired in economic
and political crises. There is endemic poverty that despite government
hype everyone knows is nowhere near being overcome. Around 65
million Filipinos struggle to live on P96 or less a day, according
to the latest 2003 Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES)
of the National Statistics Office (NSO). The net worth of just
the ten richest Filipinos is equivalent to the combined annual
income of the poorest 49 million Filipinos. The situation can
only get worse with corporate profits rising even as joblessness
is at a sustained historic high.
At
the same time is public dismay over a political landscape strewn
with issues: illegitimacy, continuing bureaucratic corruption,
patronage and self-serving politicians. Worst of all are the unabated
political killings and disappearances of over a thousand Filipinos
daring to struggle for a more humane future and an end to the
country's chronic crises. This is just in the last six years.
There
are perhaps those who believe that the May 2007 mid-term elections
offer a path to resolve the country's ills. They are unlikely
to be very many. Probably much more common is a well-founded sense
of despair that the elections are a momentary spectacle that in
the end won't mean any real change in governance much less in
the country.
The
most attention is given to the widespread electoral fraud and
violence which are barefaced subversions of the democratic process.
These are things already familiar to most Filipinos whether of
the fading generation with a recollection of the so-called two-party
system pre-Martial Law, of those born during the Marcos dictatorship,
or of the generation who believed that they were favored for growing
up amid a flawed but at least restored democracy under Aquino.
Unfortunately
the despair actually has much deeper roots that strike down to
the essential character of "democracy" in the Philippines:
it is in many essential respects a false democracy that cannot
but result in perpetual social crisis. The fraud and violence
during elections are just some of the symptoms of the deep-seated
social problem of elite domination of Philippine political life.
Even including the appalling phenomenon of political dynasties,
of trapo patronage and of brazen opportunist turncoatism still
only gives part of the picture.
The
problem with the country's politics is that it remains fundamentally
elite-dominated and so overwhelmingly about governance for and
by elites. This is a problem that dates from the birth of the
Philippine Republic at the turn of the century, continued through
the American colonial period, and has alarmingly persisted under
post-war neocolonialism until today. On the face of it the last
hundred years appears to have seen democracy unevenly but surely
taking root with, despite the Martial Law interregnum, inexorable
forward progress. However the Philippines regrettably has yet
to make the truly qualitative democratic breakthrough.
This
is not to deny the many partial gains that have taken place for
there is certainly an accumulation of positive steps. It is rather
to underscore that, despite all these and the opportunities they
open up, the essentially undemocratic character of the country's
politics remains. Philippine politics is changing, but it has
yet to really change. Forces for democracy and more broad-based
citizen's participation in governance that genuinely serves their
interests are increasing, but they have yet to overcome elite
power.
Great
resistance
Fortunately
the undemocratic character of Philippine politics is being challenged.
In ever-increasing numbers, Filipinos have defied the false "freedom
of choice" offered by elite-dominated elections. Indeed the
increasing violence with which this challenge is put down is back-handed
testament to their ever-mounting successes. These all build up
towards the much-desired qualitative change in Philippine politics.
At
the core of this challenge is the understanding that Filipinos
are kept in grinding poverty by elite domination of economic and
political life. At the national level this is a set-up that big
foreign powers such as the US favor. Lasting Philippine economic
backwardness guarantees them a source of cheap labor and natural
resources, as well as an outlet for recycling their surplus capital.
It also guarantees that the country is weak enough to be subordinated
to larger imperialist geopolitical and strategic objectives in
the East Asian region.
However
this unjust situation is also what has given rise to the greatest
hope of overturning it. Social movements have formed and gather
strength with the aim of replacing elite domination with a more
democratic system that gives primacy to the interest of the majority
of Filipinos.
The
rise of social movements is important in the country's attempt
to establish a democracy. Their most vital contribution is the
painstaking attention to building political consciousness at the
grassroots. This is a political awareness that pays rigorous attention
to addressing the roots of the country's stifled modernity. Accompanying
this understanding is moreover a commitment to organizing and
direct participation in concrete struggles to build a democracy.
Ruling
elites have worked to keep these in check and tried to put down
their threats to the established order. On one hand they have
not been able to prevent important victories such as the overthrow
of the Marcos dictatorship in 1986 and the ouster of the corrupt
Estrada presidency in 2001. At the same time they are especially
careful to preserve their parliamentary bastions of elite power.
In
1946, six congressional representatives of the Democratic Alliance
(DA) known to be opposed to unequal treaties with the US were
prevented from taking their seats following trumped-up charges
of electoral fraud and terrorism in Central Luzon. Especially
working with allies in the Nacionalista Party (NP), they would
have been enough to deny the three-fourths majority needed to
ratify treaties in Congress.
In
1987, the Left-leaning Partido ng Bayan (PnB) which fielded candidates
at the senatorial down to the local level came under violent attack
by state forces. Six congressional candidates were assassinated,
six other provincial coordinators killed, and hundreds more party
leaders and members attacked and harassed. PnB offices were bombed
and rallies disrupted or broken up.
The
year 2001 saw the breakthrough of Left politics in Congress with
the progressive political party Bayan Muna (BM) taking the maximum
three party-list seats available to it in the House of Representatives.
Strengthening and expansion continued in 2004-- with six seats
going to BM, Anakpawis (AP) and Gabriela Women's Party (GWP).
Political elites have however responded with a systematic and
increasingly violent crackdown not just on these parties which
have decisively won seats in Congress but also on the larger social
and mass movement that they represent and draw their strength
from.
Crisis
and authoritarianism
The
last six years have been brutal particularly for progressive and
democratic forces. Most dramatic are the outright attacks on the
mass movement and progressive political parties, including political
killings, enforced disappearances, and assassination attempts.
The attacks are wide-ranging and include black propaganda and
vilification campaigns, illegal arrests, interrogations and torture.
There are also pseudo-legal attacks on national leaders involving
trumped-up rebellion and murder charges.
The
suppression of dissent has at times taken on a legal fa�ade
falling just short of outright Martial Law. There was the "calibrated
pre-emptive response" declared in September 2005 against
protestors aside from a more assertive implementation of the Marcos
era "no permit-no rally". Executive Order (EO) 464,
also declared in September 2005, prevented officials from appearing
before investigations of high-level government electoral cheating
and corruption. Presidential Proclamation 1017's legally ambiguous
"state of national emergency" was declared and sent
the political signal that the Arroyo regime would not hesitate
to mobilize its full powers against any and all opposition.
It
is also worth mentioning how the deepening economic crisis and
the shrinking of economic spoils from power also appear to have
had another effect. The faction of the elite not in power-- the
mainstream political opposition-- has also to some extent been
subjected to political repression albeit to a much less degree
than the democratic mass movement.
The
post-election scenario augurs even more dangerous times for democracy.
The National ID System has already begun to be implemented even
if only on a limited scale so far. The National Security Plan's
(NISP) Oplan Bantay Laya II has already been drawn up with targets
going beyond alleged terrorists to also include revolutionary
armed groups and civilian Leftist organizations. All this coincides
with global US military aggression waging a self-declared "war
on terror" that, among others, aims to secure the Philippines
as a key strategic location in East and Southeast Asia. There
have already been massive increases in US military aid and intervention
under the Arroyo regime aimed at eliminating not just armed liberation
movements but also nationalist opposition to the US military presence.
The
political situation is most obviously about Pres. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
fighting for sheer political survival. She is beleaguered by issues
of illegitimacy following the fraudulent 2004 presidential elections,
by the persistence of high-level and grand-scale corruption, and
by the economic problems caused by retrogressive "free market"
policies. There is widespread public dissatisfaction which already
resulted in two impeachment moves and a vigorous ouster campaign.
The
current administration's survival is now critically dependent
on securing greater political control through the mid-term elections.
Particularly important is control over the House of Representatives
to forestall another impeachment move. Its comprehensive campaign
to survive includes another episode of massive electoral fraud,
using public funds for electioneering, brazen patronage politics,
harassment of local opposition politicians and even subverting
of the party-list system. The political killings and attacks in
turn are aimed at maiming, if not decimating, among the most organized
and effective forces demanding real change. The regime also seeks
support from the US by promising charter change to further open
up the economy and to allow the wholesale return of US troops.
However
the political situation can also be seen at another level: as
an elite-dominated system striving to preserve itself amid deepening
economic and political crisis. The Filipino people have been engaged
in a centuries-long struggle that is creating the real foundations
for democracy. Against them are elites threatened by the rumble
underfoot who are reacting viciously to preserve their rule. The
hundreds of thousands of volunteers mobilizing across the country
to watch the polls are engaged in a noble effort. However the
fundamental social change sought will only come when millions
of Filipinos are able to genuinely claim political power and put
in place a true democracy.
IBON Features