LINGAYEN-DAGUPAN Archbishop Cruz yesterday
said President Arroyo’s political intentions cannot remain
hidden from the public with her continued silence as it is quite
obvious that she is bent on "going yet staying."
"Promises are winds. Dreams of drawings.
These appear to be the living principles and applied norms of
the present government of Malacañang, by Malacañang, for
Malacañang," the former CBCP president said.
In an interview in Japan, Arroyo on Saturday
reiterated her government’s commitment to push through with the
2010 local and national polls.
She also said the move to amend the
Constitution is not an effort to stop the holding of the
elections.
Arroyo, however, was mum on her political
plans.
Cruz noted empty promises have been a regular
fixture in Arroyo’s statements.
"No Charter Change. No term extension under
any guise and pretense. Honest, orderly, peaceful and credible
May 2010 automated elections. Any taker of such promises? Any
dreamer of such dreams?" Cruz said.
Cruz said the President’s desire to stay in
power "was further strengthened by the passage of the House
Resolution 1109 by her allies in the House of Representatives
earlier in the month, which seeks to convene Congress into a
Senate-less Constituent Assembly (Con-Ass)."
"The ‘going yet staying’ paradox, in other
words, is such the detestable and thereby disturbing case when
someone – like a distinctly persona non grata before the general
public – is rightfully expected to leave, eagerly anticipated to
depart and disappear. The same character however insists in
staying, persists in remaining and decided in holding on," Cruz
said.
Cruz said Arroyo is now open to all options
for the law to allow her continued stay, including the
declaration of an emergency rule and Charter Change.
"This is when all options are open – right or
wrong, legal or illegal – such that any and all human and
financial means are used to attempt in justifying an evil end,"
Cruz said.
Political adviser Gabriel Claudio said it is
"unproductive" for the people to continue to speculate on
whether President Arroyo would run for Congress in 2010 and if
she needs to resign should she decide to run next year.
Claudio added that Comelec chairman Jose Melo
was merely stating a "legal fact" when he said Arroyo does not
need to quit her post to seek an elective position.
"Chairman Melo is just stating a legal fact
and position without partisan judgment."
"While it is clear that the President is not
compelled by law to resign if she runs for another position in
2010. Nobody knows – probably with the exception of her
immediate family – if she will or she won’t," Claudio said.
Speaker Prospero Nograles appealed to critics
to respect the President’s privacy.
"Let’s not needle her on this. That’s what
right to privacy means even if one is president of the Republic.
Please let her be," he said.
CIBAC Rep. Joel Villanueva said the people
should not allow themselves to be thrown into Arroyo’s direction
and focus on the 2010 elections instead.
"The people around her (Arroyo) lead
everybody in confusion, her aim is to confuse and to disrupt the
political landscape – let us all stop letting her do that," he
said.
Rep. Edno Joson (Ind., Nueva Ecija) said when
Arroyo says that they are not out to scrap the elections, "we
should expect that the same frogs that poison our democracy will
try to cling to power in Malacañang and commit plunder forever."
– With Jocelyn Montemayor and Wendell Vigilia