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Philippines
Philippine election reveals widespread political alienation
By John Roberts and Peter Symonds
10 May 2004
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Filipinos go to the polls today to vote for the next president
as well as more than 17,000 positions at the local, provincial
and national level, including the House of Representatives and
half of the Senate posts. The election takes place amid acute
social and political tensions, produced by deteriorating economic
conditions and attacks on basic democratic rights.
In the latest polls, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo appears
to have a slight lead over her main rival, millionaire film star
Fernando Poe Jnr, of 37 percent to 31 percent. But at least 12
percent of the electorate is undecided and another 12 percent
indicated that they might change their vote. The other presidential
candidatesformer Senator Raul Roco, ex-national police chief
Panfilo Lacson and Christian evangelist Eddie Villanuevahave
little support.
The fact that Poe, or FPJ as he is known to his
supporters, is able to challenge Arroyo is testimony to the broad
disaffection, particularly among the poorest layers of the population,
with the president and the entire political establishment. Poe,
a film star who specialised in appearing as the hero of the downtrodden,
has no experience in political office and virtually no policies.
While he has the backing of sections of the ruling elite associated
with former military dictator Ferdinand Marcos, he also has no
political party.
Those backing Poe have attempted to make the 2004 election
a rerun of the 1998 election when Joseph Estrada, also an action-hero
film star, won the presidency by making populist appeals to the
poor. Like Estrada, Poe has been able to capitalise on the hostility
generated by the impact of the economic restructuring measures
imposed by the incumbent administration.
There is also considerable popular anger over the manner in
which Arroyo ousted Estrada and her slavish support for the Bush
administration, including the ongoing US military occupation of
Iraq and intervention in Afghanistan. At home, she has enacted
harsh new anti-terror measures and stepped-up attacks
on democratic rights. In the lead up to the poll, Arroyo has attempted
to whip up a climate of fear with warnings about terrorism and
the arrest of terrorist suspects. Some 3,000 troops
have been mobilised on polling day to patrol the streets of Manila.
Under the countrys constitution, the president can only
serve a single term. Arroyo is only able to run for a second term
because of the anti-democratic way she was installed. Having won
the vice-presidency in 1998, she was inserted as president in
January 2001 in what amounted to a coup, backed by sections of
business, the state apparatus, the courts and the military.
In late 2000, Estrada became embroiled in a series of corruption
scandals. After a drawn-out process of impeachment failed, Arroyo
and her supporters, including former presidents Cory Aquino and
Fidel Ramos, mounted a campaign of protests to demand Estradas
removal. These largely middle-class demonstrations were given
a thin progressive veneer by the support of various
left parties and organisations, including the Communist
Party of the Philippines (CPP).
As the peoples power protests mounted, the military
stepped in to announce their support for Arroyo and the countrys
Supreme Court gave its legal blessing to her blatantly unconstitutional
installation as president. Estrada was eventually detained and
put on trial but he is yet to be convicted of any corruption charges.
He is currently being held in a military compound, Camp Capinpin.
While the pretext for removing Estrada was corruption, the
real concerns in the ruling elite were his administrations
failure to implement economic reforms. His image as a champion
of the poor was wearing thin and his limited attempts at
restructuring had started to generate popular opposition. There
was also resentment over his open favoritism towards former Marcos
business cronies and the exclusion of some well-connected families
from government circles.
As soon as she assumed office, Arroyoa Harvard-trained
economist and scion of the Philippine ruling class, rapidly shed
any progressive pretensions. Her lack of support among the poor
quickly became evident as large demonstrations erupted in April
and May 2001 following the arrest of Estrada and led to sharp
clashes with the police and military. While opposition politicians
had a hand in them, the protests were as much anti-Arroyo, as
pro-Estrada. With the backing of the military, Arroyo responded
by declaring a state of rebellion and rounding up
key opposition figures.
From the outset, Arroyo sought the support of the US to shore
up her shaky hold on power. She immediately saw the September
11 attacks on the US as an opportunity to cement closer ties with
the Bush administration. The president visited Washington in November
2001 and returned with a package of more than $4.6 billion in
financial assistance as well as investment pledges. In return,
she has been one of the foremost advocates of the so-called war
on terrorism within the South East Asian region.
Despite opposition in her own administration, Arroyo agreed
to the dispatch of US troops to the south of the country to combat
the armed Islamic separatist group, Abu Sayyaf. The US troops
ostensibly functioned as trainers to circumvent the
constitution, which prohibits operations by foreign troops on
Philippine soil. The step reinforced her ties with the Philippine
military, which was keen to reestablish close ties to the US and
to receive US technical aid and supplies. Under Arroyo, Manila
signed a pact with Washington to allow the US military to establish
storage and support services in the Philippines.
At the same time, Arroyo has, despite Congressional opposition,
pressed ahead with the IMFs program of market reforms. She
has pushed through unpopular measures that have resulted in sharp
increases in electricity and water rates, and in 2003 reduced
the budget deficit for the first time in five years.
Arroyos policies have produced growing resentment, including
among sections of the military. In July 2003, some 300 junior
officers and soldiers staged a short-lived mutiny in central Manila
to highlight their grievances over corruption in the military.
They also circulated copies of a rightwing populist program that
called for a national leader with a strong political
will to deal with crime, insurgency and to moderate
the pace of globalisation. Arroyo quickly put down the revolt
with the backing of the military top brass.
Arroyo was so unpopular that in December 2002 she melodramatically
announced that she would not be running for another term of office
and would use the remainder of the term to concentrate on ending
the countrys economic crisis. She only reversed her decision
last October.
It was only in these conditions that the Poe campaign was able
to win any popular support. Like Estrada, Poe is a rightwing populist
with close connections to the Marcos family and its business cronies.
As part of his campaign, Poe visited the tomb of the former dictator
and obtained the endorsement of his widow Imelda Marcos. In what
is an indictment of the so-called democrats who followed Marcos,
Poe appears to have gained some support by appealing to nostalgia
for the seeming economic and political stability of the Marcos
era.
Over the last decade, particularly since the 1997-98 Asian
financial crisis, the social conditions of working people have
deteriorated markedly. About 40 percent of the population live
below the official poverty line and eight out of 10 Filipinos
live on $US2 a day or less. One in three children are under nourished.
The official unemployment rate is 11 percentone of the highest
in Asia.
For most of the campaign, Arroyo has been trailing behind Poe
in the polls. She was only able to claw back his lead last month.
Crucial to this reversal has been the backing of key sections
of big business in Manila. Though critical of Arroyo for not going
far enough in implementing market reforms, corporate leaders are
concerned that Poe would be a disaster. Poes comments in
March vaguely calling for a restructuring of the countrys
debt provoked a sharp fall in the peso and were immediately criticised
by the central bank.
Business endorsement for Arroyo has not been overwhelming,
however. Manila economic analyst Alex Pomento commented recently:
Arroyos last three years are a story of missed opportunities.
The election could give her the mandate to focus on reforms to
pull the country out of its mess. A vote by the influential
Manila Makati Business Club, which includes 800 executives from
the countrys major corporations, gave Arroyo just 47 percent
as the preferred president. Poe received none.
Corporate leaders and foreign investors are demanding an end
to the continuing large budget deficits, which are adding to mounting
debt. At present, 38 percent of government revenue is used for
debt repaymentup from 22 percent in 1999. Declining foreign
investment has hit the economy hard. Investment in fixed assets
and factories fell 45 percent in the first nine months of 2003
and by a quarter in 2002 and 2001.
In order to secure the support of big business, Arroyo has
promised to balance the budget by 2009. But to do so, her administration
will have to implement measures that directly impact on the living
standards of the poor. The IMF has called for increased taxes
including on cigarettes, alcohol and petroleum products and higher
electricity tariffs.
To wind back Poes lead, Arroyo has had to pull out all
stops. As a vice-presidential running mate, she chose a television
news anchor, Noli De Castro, who has a broad following. His job
along with a small army of political consultants has been to try
to put a populist gloss on Arroyo and her unpalatable policies.
At the same time, the president has not hesitated to use government
money to promote her campaign. Government billboards and newspaper
advertisements have praised her term in office and some 150,000
road sweepers have been hired with t-shirts that read Work
provided by GMA.
Whether these measures are enough to ensure Arroyos victory
remains to be seen. None of the candidates, however, have any
fundamental differences with her political and economic agenda.
Whoever wins, the next administration is certain to step up the
attacks on the social position of the working class and rural
poor.
See Also:
Philippine president
renews her pledge of loyalty in Washington
[28 May 2003]
Setback for US plan
to send combat troops to the Philippines
[14 March 2003]
US troops to be involved
in combat operations in the southern Philippines
[22 February 2003]
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