THE whole Marcos bureaucracy has now descended upon the Dutertes, worse than Severe Tropical Storm Kristine (Trami) that ravaged the countryside. Mainstream media are inundated by various Senate and House hearings that started several months back. The "pasakalye," or opening gambit, was Marcos allowing the investigations by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on the core initiatives of the Deegong administration, a vital part of Duterte's legacy, arresting the country's slide into a narco-state. Marcos' acts presaged the breakup of the UniTeam that propelled BBM to the presidency. These harsh methods were applied successfully in Davao, where he was mayor for almost three decades.
True, he has gotten rid of illegal drugs and drug lords and made the city crime-free and relatively peaceful — analogous to the proverbial stillness of the graveyard. But for the Davaoeños, who suffered all types of violence during the dark days of the martial law regime and the leftist and communist insurgency, making Davao its laboratory — it was worth the blood of evil men. We were tolerant. But the Deegong's formula failed when he translated his homegrown solution into the national stage when he became president and instituted the "tok-tok hangyo" or "tokhang" initiative — a house-to-house campaign against illegal drugs, resulting in deadly collateral damage, the reprehensible extra-judicial killings (EJKs) currently under ICC investigation. BBM's seeming cooperation and tacit blessing for the ICC prompted the Duterte clan — particularly the Duterte boys — to clamor for BBM to step down from Malacañang. But Duterte's accusation of BBM being an addict himself was unacceptable, particularly to the first lady — the last straw that broke the camel's back. So today, the battlelines are drawn between two political dynasties ("Clash of dynasties," The Manila Times, March 4, 2024) and the control of power by 2025 and beyond.
Senate-House hearings
If one tunes in on TV today, YouTube and social media, a Filipino teleserye is on stream, rivaling those of any on Netflix. It started with the innocuous hearing on the alleged Chinese sleeper agent, Mayor Alice Guo, POGO and the proliferation of illegal drugs that were later linked to the Duterte administration — his people in the Bureau of Customs, police, and other government bureaucracy — and implicating even his son, Congressman Pulong. But the House, controlled by the speaker, Martin Romualdez, backed by the powerful first lady, Liza ("The woman DDS love to hate," TMT, Oct. 2, 2024), upped the ante, dragging in VP Sara, Martin's bete noire and rival for the 2028 presidency. The teleserye heightened with the roasting of VP Sara on her presumed alleged anomalies during the budget hearings. Sara didn't have a chance, with barely a handful of congressional allies against the minions of Romualdez. This was expanded to an inquisition-like ad-hoc structure of four committees on dangerous drugs, public order and safety, human rights and public accounts, consolidated into a single incongruously named quad committee, akin to the Inquisition of old, presided over by a set of Grand Inquisitors. And these hearings, purportedly "in aid of legislation," are clearly ordained to burn the father at the stake and implicate the daughter for the killings and transgressions of the past.
The beleaguered Sara, with no recourse, obliged her inquisitors with her outrageous two-hour rant on media, deflecting temporarily, it seems, accusations of her alleged anomalies during the budget hearing — which some columnists and allies of the BBM-Liza-Martin tandem described as a "meltdown." But was it?
Method to her madness
VP Sara may have learned a thing or two from her father. One is the propensity to change the face of the issue. In his time, the Deegong often did this with his long peroration and press conferences as diversionary tactics deflecting attention from controversies with indelicate claims of the length and potency of his manhood. Sara, with more finesse, has learned her lessons well from the master with her frontal criticism of BBM as "one who doesn't know how to be president," giving his administration a rating of 1 — on a scale of 10. And to add color to her language, she threatened "to dig up the Marcos cadaver from the Libingan Ng Mga Bayani and throw the same to the West Philippine Sea." Gross, yet effective in grabbing control of the narrative. Indeed, there is a method to her madness! Thus, her meltdown in some ways was intentional, not far from the image portrayed of Malacañang's "polvoronic couple," snorting cocaine during their parties or whatever illegal drugs BBM was handed and pocketed in full view of cameras during one of Malacañang's public gatherings.
End game
But despite these deflections and temporary respite, the Marcoses, with Martin and Liza, are clearly in control and on track to wreak havoc on the remnants of the Duterte political structure. Quiboloy, the religious charlatan, an accused pedophile and the partner of the Deegong, has been practically neutered and could suffer through the long process of the Marcos-controlled justice system. Failing that, there is the likelihood of a US extradition. And their mouthpiece and propaganda machine, the SMNI, is now voiceless and castrated.
The quad hearings and the sustained crucifixion of the Dutertes and cohorts will continue to erode Sara's popularity — the remaining viable Duterte who, like Imee Marcos, her erstwhile ally, are the true replicas of their fathers, Macoy and the Deegong. The planned impeachment of Sara by the lower house at this point will no longer hold traction as the Senate will now hunker down into electing old and tired names who, by the very nature of our dysfunctional politics, will produce the next "presidentiables" to compete with Martin and Sara.
In this coming 2025 senatorial fight, the Deegong's team is being decimated, with Bong Go, the one true believer, left vying for one of the slots. Turncoat Tolentino is now with the Marcos camp, a long shot in winning his post back; Imee is neither here nor there, and Senator Bato may lose his seat and be impaled in the ICC-EJK investigations. The rest are also-rans with Quiboloy in the slate, hoping a win as senator will insulate him from the justice system — just like Jinggoy Estrada and Bong Revilla, who were imprisoned yet have gone scot-free.
So, the old, tired names will be back. Our election system and culture give premium to popular personalities, actors, influencers, and branded names with tons of cash, either legitimately or illegally acquired. We may find under the Marcos camp the re-electionists — Pia Cayetano, Lito Lapid, Bong Revilla and Imee Marcos, who repudiated her brother's team, and old names, Ping Lacson, Manny Pacquiao, Tito Sotto and Camille Villar, substituting for Mommy Cynthia. Same old, same old!
In this coming election, the triumvirate is in control. And in dismantling the Duterte structure, their Davao base is imperative. Here, the Marcoses and Martin Romualdez have initiated a coup of sorts, letting loose a budding dynasty — the scion of that much-vilified cousin and erstwhile ally of the Deegong turned mortal enemy, former speaker Prospero "Boy" Nograles, now deceased. Former Duterte Cabinet member Karlo and sister lawyer Migs, a party-list representative, will contest in a mano-a-mano the sons of the Deegong.
To be continued next week
000