HE current
political situa-tion is seething with people demonstrating in the streets of
Manila and other cities, joined by influential leaders of business, civil
society, labor, students and professors in academe, and Catholic clergy and
other religious groups. And ranged against them are Gloria, who has been
metaphorically described as "evil," and her fawning cohorts and frenetic
spinmeisters manning the ramparts of Malacañang. It is very much like a
quicksand. The more they shield her from grave charges of corruption and other
grave charges, the deeper they’ll sink in it!
This political quicksand, as the whole world knows well, did
not form overnight. It has been building up from the time she stole the
presidency twice in 2001 and 2004. And its development quickened with the
infamous "Garci" taped conversations which all the more cast doubt in the public
mind about the integrity of that 2004 presidential election.
Of course, Gloria and her phalanx of political cronies and
propagandists vehemently denied any massive cheating then even to this very day.
But how many of the millions of Filipinos believe them?
They remember when Gloria publicly professed in a Rizal Day
speech in 2003 that she would not run for president in 2004. Oh, how noble she
seemed then when she proclaimed that she would rather focus on serving the
nation. Well, soon enough she turned around and violated her promise. That was
the beginning of the erosion of her credibility.
And when senior members of her own Cabinet came to realize
that she was more obsessed about staying in power than in good governance, they
resigned en masse. They yelled for her resignation, but alas, their sense of
moral outrage failed to ignite another display of people power.
Today it’s a different story altogether. Two persons who were
privy to the multi-million ZTE-NBN scandal bravely came out in the open and blew
the whistle. The first whistle blower was quickly subjected to a demolition job
that included the unceremonious ouster of his father as Speaker by opportunistic
members of the House that has been derisively called the "home of
‘representatives’".
It’s the second whistleblower who has elicited the sympathy
of the nation. Jun Lozada, a virtual "David" dared face the "Goliath" that is
the Arroyo administration. Soon after confirming the testimony of the first
whistleblower that dragged the names of Arroyo and the First Spouse, and key
government officials in the scandalous deal, Lozada has since been lampooned,
swamped by insinuations, phoned threats, and he even underwent the agony of
being "kidnapped" in the hands of police operatives for hours.
Call Lozada an "actor" when he tearfully narrated his ordeal
soon after his arrival from Hong Kong, where he hid himself for fear of his
life, when he was forcibly dumped into a waiting vehicle, never even allowed to
see his wife and family at the terminal, and driven outside Metro Manila – all
against his will. If that was not a case of kidnapping, what was it? Certainly
not to give him security! More probably to prevent him from telling the truth of
what he knew before the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee.
And so, when Lozada testified under oath that his good friend
Romulo Neri, then Director-General of the National Economic Development
Authority, had told him repeatedly that "Gloria is evil," how come Neri failed
to make a categorical denial? Instead, he said, "I don’t remember having said
that? How selective can Neri’s memory get?
Unfortunately for Gloria Arroyo, one might well say, "Hindi
nag-iisa si Jun Lozada"!
The media, particularly the independent print and broadcast,
the Management Association of the Philippines, the Financial Executives of the
Philippines, the Makati Business Club, the Integrated Bar of the Philippines,
students and teachers in colleges and universities, Overseas Filipino Workers,
former government officials, yes, superiors of Catholic religious communities
and leaders of the Catholic clergy and other religious groups, have found common
cause with Jun Lozada.
Yes, indeed, there is a gathering storm that Gloria Arroyo
and her administration will not be able to stop this time. In the eye of this
political storm is the Filipino nation’s indignation.
For Malacañang to blithely dismiss the revival of what the
Catholic bishops call a "new people power" is to misread the sign of the times.
Those now in power and their political, police and military minions, and frantic
propagandists are relying on a highly defective barometer.
A timely reminder for all of them, in the words of Wagner’s "Gotter-damerung":
"Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make them mad!"