Philippines socialists on the phenomenal rise of presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte

The phenomenal rise of Rodrigo Duterte (pictured), the mayor of the southern city of Davao who is now leading in the polls ahead of the May 9 Philippines presidential elections, has shaken up the country's political landscape. His outsider campaign, with talk of the need for a "Duterte revolution" against expected electoral fraud to prevent his election, has galvanized much of the existing discontent towards the political class. Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal have republished two pieces, one by Sonny Melencio from the Party of the Labouring Masses, and the other by left Senate candidate Walden Bello, looking at what the Duterte phenomenon means for the Philippines and the left.

Party of the Labouring Masses: The Duterte phenomenon and out attitude towards it

Prepared by Sonny Melencio, Chairperson, Party of the Labouring Masses (PLM) May 3, 2016 – Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal reposted from PLM website with permission – This discussion paper aims to examine the phenomenal showing of Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign for presidency. It sets out our attitude to his campaign, especially the call of his forces for a "Duterte revolution" against the massive electoral fraud being prepared by the administration party on May 9. The author argues that we must campaign against the Liberal party administration’s electoral fraud and join the protests against it. He suggests that we can march side by side with the Duterte camp against electoral fraud, without merging with them. By intervening in this way we can also put forward demands that do not call for his installation as president, but around the need to establish a government of the masses to replace the rotten governing system. The paper outlines some of the scenarios that the Left and progressive forces have to prepare for during the possible eruption of protests on election day and thereafter.
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  1. Like it or not, Rodrigo Duterte has been leading the presidential polls in successive surveys. The latest non-commissioned survey under the "Pulso ng Bayan," placed Duterte in a 35% lead over the far distant figures of 23%, 17% and 16% for Grace Poe, Mar Roxas and JojoBinay, accordingly. Duterte led the votes in all socioeconomic classes: 43% of Classes ABC (upper and middle classes), 32% in Class D (poor) and 40% in Class E (poorest). 2. Apart from the surveys that can be manipulated, the demonstration of Duterte’s surge in the campaign is the growing number of spontaneous masses pouring into his sorties. This is not only in Mindanao and the Visayas, but also in Luzon and Metro Manila. In Alabang, an upper and middle class enclave, thousands waited to hear his talk. In Hong Kong and in many other places with OFWs, the sorties overflowed even without Duterte’s presence. How to explain this phenomenon? 1. First, it is a clear sign that the people were fed up with the old trapo and elite forces which have long ruled the government since the overthrow of Marcos in 1986. There has been a growing disenchantment to succeeding regimes that many believe are worse than before. 2. In particular, it represents the frustration and the disgust that the masses feel under the leadership of the “Yellow forces,” from the mother Cory to the son. Its target now is President Noynoy Aquino and the bunch of his ineffectual Cabinet members. In the elections, it is marked by LP bet Mar Roxas’ always tailing behind in the surveys. Duterte’s surge in the campaign is a sign of the rejection of the masses, including of the middle class, of the Yellow leaders and government forces. 3. There is a negative fallout in the rejection of the yellow forces. For some, it means supporting Bongbong Marcos as vice-president. Although both are labeled "strongman,” the difference between the two is that Bongbong, who’s an integral part of the Marcos dictatorship, still waxes ecstatic over the so-called golden years of martial law and has been active in blocking every effort to retrieve the spoils of wealth they’ve stolen from the people. 4. Compared to the weak, incompetent, and spineless Aquino government and the previous Yellow administration, Duterte has fostered an image of a no-nonsense leader. This is the character of the president that the masses long for today – not a clueless and spineless character who cannot be trusted to solve the problems confronting the people, from corruption to traffic congestion and crimes. 5. The worsening criminality in the country, which is a main issue in the Duterte campaign, strikes at the heart of the people, from the well-off to the poor, and from the call center agents to the OFWs and their families victimized by drug addiction, theft, rape and other heinous crimes in the country. 6. The people have long lost their trust in government to provide them with jobs or protect their lives. For those who toil hard abroad just to provide for their families, it is most tragic to know that the fruits of their labor can easily be stolen, and the families they left behind will be victims of crimes that the government has no power to control. Here comes the aspiration for a ‘strongman leader’ who rules with an iron hand that can effectively strike at drug and criminal syndicates, like what they perceived Duterte has done in Davao City. Whom does Mayor Duterte represent? 1. It is important to understand that the mayor also comes from a faction of the ruling class in the Philippines. The main faction is represented by the old oligarchy which has been based in Manila and Luzon. Duterte, like Erap, appears to be outside of the traditional oligarchy or ruling class in the country. The Dutertes are a political clan in Mindanao. His father was a mayor of Danao, Cebu who migrated to Mindanao and became a governor of Davao. His mother was a Roa, a political clan that ruled Leyte for a long time. Duterte’s cousin was the mayor of Cebu City in 1983-86, a position also held by his cousin’s father in 1957-59. The Dutertes are also related to the political clans of Almendras and Durano in Cebu. 2. The oligarchy that have long ruled the Philippines originated from Luzon, or are otherwise based in Metro Manila. Duterte’s campaign slogan of "Change is coming" projects a "fresh face," an outsider ready to do battle against the ruling elite in "Imperial Manila." Imperial Manila is a term local politicians use to denote that the trapos in Luzon and Metro Manila are the ones lording over them, and dictating the terms of sharing of power and resources in government. 3. Duterte, on the other hand, represents the local politicians or warlords who have long been resisting the rule of Imperial Manila. They’ve even come together to press for the implementation of a system of federalism in the country, where the local trapos can be given "equal opportunities" with the trapos in Luzon and Metro Manila. From the point of view of the local trapos, it would be more democratic to divide the spoils of rule among everyone rather than leave it in the hands of factions closer to the Malacañang palace. 4. No wonder then that Duterte’s campaigns in areas outside Imperial Manila always get the enthusiastic support from local politicians. The issues that Duterte always emphasizes in his speech, but largely left unreported by the media, are the issue of federalism and the problem of war in Mindanao. He always mentions in his speech that the war in Mindanao, which has not been resolved by succeeding governments, will spread nationwide, including in Metro Manila, unless effectively dealt with. People have known of this looming threat for a long time: the periodic bombings of bus stations, LRTs, malls, public markets, and government buildings in several cities outside of Mindanao have been imbedded in people’s psyches. Our stand on the Duterte phenomenon 1. We do not see anyone we can support as president in this election. All the presidential candidates uphold the rotten system of rule in the country, and we have no illusions that any one of them can deliver us from poverty, exploitation, and abuse. However, there is the Duterte phenomenon that we have to understand and take a position on with a view to intervening in the struggles ahead. 2. The central issue in the Duterte phenomenon is the growing support of the masses themselves for Duterte’s candidacy.  Even among our local candidates in PLM, many are rooting for Duterte in this election. 3. We must also clarify that Duterte’s brandishing of socialism in his speech is pretentious. Duterte tries to sound populist, i.e., he uses words that suit his audience. At best, the maximum content of Duterte’s program and ideology is still bourgeois reformism, although even this is overshadowed by constant threats of resort to fascistic methods of rule in order to deliver his promises. 4. However, we know that the masses have strong illusions in Duterte as their savior from the Yellow apocalypse. The material basis of this illusion comes from their concrete and direct experience of debilitating poverty, exploitation and abuse under the Yellow administration. 5. So even though we know that the masses are on the wrong path, that they are harboring illusions of a strongman leader who can deliver them from perdition, we cannot leave them behind. We need to be with them to patiently explain and demonstrate in practice the fallacy of illusions with Duterte. 6. How do we do this? 7. We need to explain the class character of the government and the ruling parties and what “Tuwid na Daan” really stands for, i.e., a neoliberal program to prop up and serve the interests of the ruling class. We need them to see the class character of Duterte and the program and ideology that he stands for. Most importantly, we need them to understand that the solution to their woes cannot come from a strongman, but from relying on their own strength and actions. 8. And it is correct that every time Duterte lets loose of a barrage of statements against women, LGBT, workers and other sectors of society – such as the “rape joke" and the propagation of backward views in his talks – we must reject them unconditionally. He is running as a president, so we should not allow him to sneak derogatory statements on issues and commitments that we have long been struggling for. This is also one of the reasons we cannot support Duterte as president. 9. We also have to clarify that the greater risk in Duterte becoming a president is his avowed threat to use an iron fist against the opposition. Although this is only framed against his war on drugs and corruption, the method includes severe violation of human rights, including the rights of women and children, who were also victimized during Duterte’s anti-drug campaigns in Davao City. 10. But we must also say that our condemnation of the threat of fascist rule under Duterte is not based on the one-sided, bourgeois and liberal interpretation of "rule of law" that favors only the ruling family and forces (who are the ones who make the laws). The spirit of democracy is not the "rule of law" but the rule of the majority of the exploited and oppressed in society. Only through the rule of the majority will we have laws that can truly protect and promote the interests of the masses. Juan Peron in the Philippines? 1. One of the characteristics of the Duterte phenomenon is the coalition of the Right and Left forces supporting him. The Right forces include the ultra-rightist groups whose main agenda is the restoration of the Marcoses and the reimposition of martial law to "wipe out criminals and discipline the people.” They are clamoring for Bongbong Marcos to be the vice-president, and ultimately, to become the president. 2. The CPP-NPA-NDF has long been in a coalition with Duterte, as he himself has admitted to in various statements. In today's election, Duterte is supported by organizations, partylist and forces associated with the CPP. It is also true that under Duterte’s long reign in Davao, he supported the NPAs and the NPAs backed him up in many issues. This arrangement is not unlike the coalition that politicians in other provinces built with the NPAs (for instance, the Dys of Isabela, the Yaps of Escalante, etc.) to maintain themselves in power. 3. This Left and Right coalition in support of an individual politician reminds one of a former president of Argentina who served three terms after the Second World War until 1973. It was Juan Peron, who became a popular president, a strongman, who gathered the support of the middle classes and the workers, the Left and the Right forces, during his reign in Argentina. 4. Peron formed an alliance with the militant labor group CGT and the socialist groups and movements. He supported the trade unions and its demands on wages. In the early days of his presidency (1946-1952), he implemented an extensive social welfare program for the unions. He also promoted nationalist policies, such as the nationalization of the central bank, railways, public utilities, and export of agricultural products. He also adopted an independent stance on the cold war politics of that time, and opened relations with the USSR and Cuba. 5. However, when faced with the severe crisis in the late 1940s, coupled with a surging strike movement, he attacked the CGT and the trade unions. He replaced the CGT leaders with his own supporters, and jailed all those resisting. Peron built his dictatorship and resorted to iron hand rule. He arrested and tortured the labor leaders who were the opposition, and closed down oppositionist papers. 6. The two main groups that supported Peron - the middle class and the trade unions - both suffered Peron's fascist attacks. Under Peron's second term presidency in 1952-55, the only remaining alliance was with the army generals and the extreme Right forces. But he was still deposed by a coup d’etat in 1955 and deported out of the country. He returned to Argentina in 1973 and was elected president that same year, although he died before he could finish a year in office. 7. In Peron’s third and last term as president, he intensified the repression against the CGT, formed para-military groups, and unleashed his fascist adviser, Jose Lopez Rega, to organize the Triple A. These are the death squads that operated not only against the Left but also against the moderate opposition. A number of Left groups went underground and launched guerrilla struggles against the government. 8. We are not equating Duterte with Peron because they exist under different circumstances and historical contexts. We are looking into the phenomenon of the coalition of the Right and Left forces, which is also a phenomenon we can see in the Duterte coalition. 9. But even Peron, who started with a program that was clearly pro-worker and pro-Left forces, reverted back to his class character and position after few years of rule. He resorted to fascist and Rightist rule after the failure of his administration to resolve the crisis and stem the tide of mass struggles in Argentina. 10. So the danger awaiting the masses if Duterte becomes the president is already looming in the horizon. The danger also comes from Duterte’s character: like a classic provincial warlord, he is his own king, and whether he turns Right or Left is a matter of his own choosing. 11. But as a president, more powerful forces will encircle him. If the illusion of the masses for Duterte is high, so will be their expectations and they will push for real change under his rule. Duterte is more likely to turn against them, since the military generals and the local trapos and warlords who support him, will not allow Duterte to adopt a pro-Left program. The Left’s armed groups cannot immediately neutralize the AFP and PNP forces which will pressure Duterte to take the Rightist position. These are the dangers that will mark what could be a short period of Duterte presidency if ever he assumes the executive post. Alliance against the government and our call 1. However, Duterte is not the main enemy of the masses today. It is the gang of Yellow forces ruling in government and threatening to cheat our votes in the elections on May 9. The Duterte presidency becomes the main threat if and when Duterte becomes the president. 2. On May 9, the election scenario does not bode well for an easy victory for Duterte. The scripted scenario being rumored about is that the horse of the administration – Mar Roxas (although others say that Grace Poe is the “hidden horse” of the PNoy administration) – will make a sprint on election day. The surge of votes for Roxas will surely make the blood of the forces supporting Duterte curdle.  3. On May 9, what is at stake and what is needed is the formation of the broadest opposition against electoral fraud. Duterte is the only presidential candidate who is right now calling on his supporters to prepare protests against electoral fraud. The protest will start on May 7, in a call to his forces to occupy Luneta, not only to show support to Duterte but as a demonstration to the administration of what is in store if the planned electoral fraud continues. 4. Without merging with the Duterte camp, we can march side-by-side with them and jointly undertake other forms of direct action of the masses, in the face of electoral fraud perpetrated by the government and the ruling Liberal Party. We need to prepare for this. Make sure that the wind of change will not pass over to the celebration of the government and the ruling Liberal Party, but will lead to the outbreak of street protests. The protests that will erupt at the polling places can be the spark that will lead to national conflagration. 5. In the upsurge of protests, our call should not be to merely install Duterte or the cheated candidate/s in the post. We don’t support a Duterte presidency; we are against electoral fraud. We should hammer on the fault of the cheating administration and the demands and electoral rights of the masses that were blocked and violated by massive fraud on election day. 6. We can call for the declaration of a failure of election and the failure of government and its institutions to safeguard the election.  It will not be simply remedied by repeating the elections under the Comelec or other institutions that instigated the fraud. We must renounce all the institutions that are involved in the fraud and the failure of election. 7. And the only institution that can bring back the confidence and trust of the masses to the election is the Congress of the People. Not the Senate Electoral Tribunal, the Comelec, and all other government institutions involved or tainted with fraud. We should call for a Congress composed of genuine representatives of people’s organizations in different regions and provinces in the country, a Congress that can plan appropriate changes and policies and prepare for genuine democratic elections. 8. This is the only way that we can ensure justice will be dispensed after the collapse of the electoral process. On May 9, a storm is brewing. We must prepare to ride the storm and steer it in the direction that will sweep away the obstacles to the real changes aspired by the people.

Biggest threat to democracy is using fear of a Duterte win to justify stealing elections

By Walden Bello May 3, 2016 – Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal reposted from InterAksyon – Like many advocates of human rights, I am very troubled by the prospect of a Duterte presidency, and I have expressed a number of times my strong disapproval of Mayor Rodrigo Duterte’s stands on due process, labor, women, and foreign policy.

But at this point, I am more troubled by the increasingly expressed opinion that the democratic process has run out of control, that it may bring to power someone who does not share values deemed to be universal.

There are increasing references to the fact that Hitler came to power via elections in 1933. There are more and more comparisons of the Duterte for President movement to fascist movements in the past. This may well be the case, but, hey, these are the risks of being a democracy.

Probably for the first time ever in our country, vast numbers of people are planning to use the ballot box as a mechanism of protest. 

It is clear that they have had enough of the hypocrisy and double standards of Daang Matuwid, and this is one of the reasons they are going for Duterte.

I broke with the Aquino government and resigned from Congress in March 2015 because I felt that the administration’s double standards in dealing with corruption were eroding not only the credibility of Daang Matuwid but deepening people's distrust of politics.  Moralism and hypocrisy are always a deadly combination.  When administrative ineptitude is added into the mix, it becomes a veritable witches’ brew that poisons the political process. I knew that many shared my concerns, but I thought they had turned to cynicism, expecting that the elite democratic process would produce more of the same hopeless mess. Now someone has catalyzed all that cynicism, anger, and disgust that was just below the surface and converted it into an electoral insurgency.  What Duterte actually stands for is drowned out by what people wish him to be: the bearer of their fears and hopes and the sword that will bring about the radical measures they feel are necessary to contain the rot of the system. The pro-Duterte voters may be mistaken in their choice of a champion, but democracy is all about allowing people to make their choice, even if this is mistaken.

Is Duterte the greatest threat to our democracy at this point?  He poses a threat, but the biggest threat we face at this juncture is that, playing on the fears of many people of a Duterte presidency, the Liberal Party machinery, which is universally acknowledged to be the most formidable in the country, is gearing up to try to steal the elections.  The prospect of a Duterte victory is being used to persuade people to countenance subversion of the electoral process.

Is this being paranoid?  Hardly.  Already, LP operatives have admitted, Secretary Butch Abad has been going around distributing "bala" or government largesse to local officials to ensure a Roxas victory.   Here in the province where I am campaigning, non-partisan sources have expressed dismay that mayors are being handed P5,000 each of government money and thousands more via late releases of “Bottom-Up-Budgeting” (BUB) funds to ensure that their voters go for Roxas.  In Pampanga, LP bankroller Gov. Lilia Pineda in Pampanga, also known as the jueteng queen, has disbursed massive amounts to wavering local officials to ensure a straight LP ticket.  Aquino, Abad, Pineda and the whole Daang Matuwid gang would all face prosecution should the administration candidate lose to any of the rival candidates, so they have their own sordid reasons to try to subvert the will of the people.  

That is something that must not be allowed to happen.  An effort to install Roxas as president at all costs will not only severely damage democracy.  It will be deeply destabilizing, producing a government with very little legitimacy.   Moreover, as one political figure told me, “You risk breaking up the country, with Mindanao most likely going its own way.”

A Duterte presidency may be a great threat to our values, but let us reject those who spread the suggestion that subversion of the democratic process might be needed to save democracy.   

Democracy may not always yield the best results.  It may not even yield good results.  But thwarting the people’s will by hijacking the elections will certainly produce the worst results.

I do not agree with Mayor Duterte’s approach to problems.  I fear the threat that a Duterte presidency may pose to values I hold dear.  But let us cross that bridge when we come to it.  At this juncture, let us focus on the more immediate threat to our democracy: its subversion by a powerful machinery bent on holding on to power at all costs.

Walden Bello, former Chairman of the Committee on Overseas Workers’ Affairs in the House of Representatives, is running for the Senate as an independent candidate.
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"The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear." This whole election feels like watching the muck of Philippine society bubbling unto the stage of history. From way out here in Canada, it feels as though the Left back home may be underestimating the danger posed by this election.
Taking a broad view, the failure of the current administration's "daang matuwid" (straight path) as well as their insistence on sticking to it appears to demonstrate the deadlock not merely of Liberal Party policy, but of Philippine capitalism itself. Yes, some things could have played out differently -- in particular the window for establishing a just peace in Mindanao seems almost closed as a result of a military gaff (unless it was not a gaff, but there is no point to speculation). But what the LP did, and from the perspective of the capitalist class it was an historic achievement, was to unite the most productive sections of the class around a plan for development centered on resource extraction, the special economic zones, urban construction, the service industry (esp call centers), and, of course, as ever, OFW remittances ($30B in 2015, $20B in 2014). To put this in perspective, there are now at least 288 special economic zones in the Philippines in which industries pay a rent of 5% of their gross income and ZERO taxes. Fully 178 of these zones are dedicated to IT parks and centres -- I could not find the breakdown of these, but it is a safe bet that call center work is one of the largest segments of these. Workers employed in these zones, often as PBOs (outsourced labour), have some of the worst conditions and are among the most poorly organized.
There are 17 “Agro-Industrial” zones, but a proportion of these are actually ports and warehouses. At least one is dedicated to bio-fuel. In other words, to the extend that the agricultural industry has been given the “incentives” of the ecozones, this has not gone into food security. In the SONA2015, the administration actually claimed that the Philippines had hit 96% rice self-sufficiency and had stocked up for the drop that they already knew the El Nino would cause. Who knows what statistical magic they have used to come up with these claims. Either people are hungry because there is not enough rice, or there is indeed enough rice but they cannot afford it. The poverty rate among farmers remains crushingly high -- above 38%. Almost 40% of the labour force is employed by this sector -- somebody do the math, how many food producers are hungry? Of course, not only farmers are hungry. The administration crows about consistent growth rates (about 6.5 on average since 2010), but the agricultural sector (according to the government’s own entirely unreliable statistics) only grew at less than half that rate. This does not necessarily mean much for physical production, except to show that agriculture has not been a significant part of the development plan of the daang matuwid. It is an historical accident that 2015 saw a drop in agricultural production -- the neglect and suffering that farmers have been subjected to in the light of the El Nino is emphatically not an accident.
What is clear is that the path to internationally competitive development paved by Noynoy is (in general terms) the only one available to the Philippines and countries like it. It is not an accident that contractualisation has expanded to such a degree that it has become an electoral issue nationwide. Nor is it an accident that at the start of his term, the president attempted to break PALEA in their struggle against contractualisation. Noynoy paved the path of Philippine development against workers, against farmers, against small time capitalists, against the petty bourgeoisie -- and, interestingly enough, against the old but relatively unproductive fractions of the Philippine ruling class. The most dynamic sections of the class (eg the Makati business club) fully back the Liberal Party because his plan has worked extraordinarily well for them. But make no mistake, what we saw was an attempt to restructure Philippine capital, and sections of the ruling class were also left out in the cold in that process.
Into this comes Duterte and Marcos. By no means ingenue in the world of Philippine politics but both, in a sense, locked out of the set that rules in Manila. The rise of Duterte begins with the abject and repeated failure of Malacanang to ‘manage’ its rule over Mindanao. Duterte has a long record of (at least verbally) supporting an end to the civil war on the basis of a recognition of the Bangsamoro and supported the Bangsamoro Basic Law and All Out Peace in Mindanao. He opposed Estrada’s “all out war” and has explicitly said that the armed Moro resistance groups need to be included in any peace. Appealing to the rapacity and officiousness of “Imperial Manila,” he has brought the question of federalism back into political discourse. In light of widespread suspicions (that is to say, certainty) that the LP engages in massive electoral fraud, he has made the fairness of the elections a key issue. But the mistrust of and dissatisfaction with the government is not only an issue for the ‘periphery’ -- massive inequality in the cities, the utter shambles of the roads and public transportation (the consequences of which are well nigh unimaginable in the first world), the ever increasing precarity of life in the midst (one wants to say because) of consistent economic growth, has meant that at the Malacanang sits at the heart of a blisteringly discontented, desperate, and angry population. A population that deposed a sitting president in 2008 and very nearly unseated the president that came after.
Duterte has completely outflanked the Left on all these issues. His massively attended miting de avance was called “Occupy Luneta,” the byline on a poster of the campaign’s facebook page reads “we are the 99% who are tired of: corruption, crime, poverty, drama in the government, traffic, selective justice, war in the South, etc.” and, amazingly, informs Duterte that he doesn’t “need money to campaign! We are here to support you!” People are drawing parallels between Duterte and Trump, fair enough, but his campaign is positioning him differently. Here is how a prominent member of his campaign is writes of Duterte and the rally “I cannot miss a historic event because many years from now, when I am old sitting in a rocking chair, I could tell my grandchildren a complete story of a people's movement, you could even call it a revolution, which pushed the most unlikely person to become President of the Philippines. The Luneta Event will be the denouement of a national drama where people worked, campaigned, supported and defended a presidential candidate who does not have the money and resources. Saturday will be history unfolding.” All this is sufficiently eye-brow raising, given that Duterte is part of a fairly significant political dynasty -- as Sonny Melencio pointed out: “His father was a mayor of Danao, Cebu who migrated to Mindanao and became a governor of Davao. His mother was a Roa, a political clan that ruled Leyte for a long time. Duterte’s cousin was the mayor of Cebu City in 1983-86, a position also held by his cousin’s father in 1957-59. The Dutertes are also related to the political clans of Almendras and Durano in Cebu.” And also given that his backers appear to include king makers in Mindanao as well as the former president and unanimously reviled semi-human, GMA.
The point, however, is that he has given the Left almost no space to operate. The Partido Lakas ng Masa are tailing him -- joining the rally on the basis of the demands while insisting rhetorically on their independence. Melencio again on the possibility that the LP will steal the election: “Without merging with the Duterte camp, we can march side-by-side with them and jointly undertake other forms of direct action of the masses, in the face of electoral fraud perpetrated by the government and the ruling Liberal Party. We need to prepare for this. Make sure that the wind of change will not pass over to the celebration of the government and the ruling Liberal Party, but will lead to the outbreak of street protests. The protests that will erupt at the polling places can be the spark that will lead to national conflagration.” Well he is not wrong about that -- but what happens if Duterte’s forces are not above calling protests of their own, what if they too decide that a “national conflagration” might be useful? If a failed election is declared, Duterte’s forces will be well positioned to take Malacanang. The PLM’s perspective is that “the only institution that can bring back the confidence and trust of the masses to the election is the Congress of the People. Not the Senate Electoral Tribunal, the Comelec, and all other government institutions involved or tainted with fraud. We should call for a Congress composed of genuine representatives of people’s organizations in different regions and provinces in the country, a Congress that can plan appropriate changes and policies and prepare for genuine democratic elections.” But this will not be the general orientation of the people who will march on this issue, nor is the PLM strong enough to raise this demand and have it be carried.
Duterte’s campaign rests on precisely the same ground as this perspective: that the government has no validity. Whether we call this populism, Peronism, or fascism (premature), it is clear that Duterte makes his appeal in much of the same ground on which a principled Left should have been hegemonic. More than that, to a significant degree, his rise has set the terms in which these issues will be cast for many of the same social forces that the Left wants to organise. In part, the “Left” itself bears responsibility for this: the re-affirmists (the Nat.Dems., CPP, NPA -- i.e.: the Moaists), inveterate opportunists that they are, have worked in coalition with Duterte in Davao for ages (rumour has it, they comprised part of his death squads) and the official line is support for his campaign, although it seems that there are mutterings of disagreement with this. Once again, the Maoists are sabotaging things for the ‘rejectionists’ (the various groups that broke with the CPP line) by their sheer strength relative to the rest of the Left. A principled opposition by the CPP and its various satellites would help to de-legitimize Duterte’s populist appeal, and it would go a long way towards creating the kind of organised and armed opposition that will become necessary if he turns out to be as good as his word. As it stands, the force on the Left with the most extensive roots among the farmers and working class, the force which is almost hegemonic in its strength is giving Duterte their imprimatur. It is not at all clear how the rest of the Left can intervene in this situation. PLM’s position risks strengthening Duterte’s forces. As far as I can tell, the Partido ng Manggagawa (PM, Workers’ Party) has written no position document on the issue. They are calling for an abstention in the presidential election, which is certainly correct -- but how to position itself in relation to the forces supporting Duterte?
Whether or not Duterte will push it as far as it can go (and he might), the current situation may well be the beginning of a deep legitimation crisis for Malacanang. This will almost certainly create opportunities for the Left, but in the event of a victory for Duterte, these may come only after he very literally turns his guns on it (as, indeed, he has already basically promised to do). In the long run, this crisis may become the most important factor, but not yet -- in the mean time, there is the problem of survival.
It is easy enough to point out Duterte’s contradictions. He is a populist capable of taking genuinely left wing positions. But he is an avowed authoritarian who, as mayor, built most of his political capital by organising the paramilitary Davao Death Squads (DDS) which he used against the ‘criminal element’ -- he emphasizes rapists, drug pushers, and kidnappers, but naturally his targets were the criminal poor in general. And, as is well known, he killed quite a few people who he mistook for accused criminals. Since they were poor and powerless, there were no consequences. He wants to murder rapists, but openly regretted not having gotten the chance to rape an Australian missionary. He campaigns on the basis of eradicating poverty and opposes contractualisation. But he has also vowed to shoot strikers that make things difficult for his administration. He calls out the anti-democratic vote buying of the LP. But he has also promised to shut down congress if they attempt to impeach him (This last contradiction is perhaps not such a riddle, though: the same LP accused of electoral shenanigans also controls congress).
From the outside (and maybe from the inside too?), it’s harder to make an accurate measure of Duterte and his ability to make good on his threats. Clearly, there are two possible scenarios coming from this election: either Duterte wins or he loses. It is worth taking both in turn.
If Duterte wins, as all the polls currently suggest that he should he will be the commander in chief of the police and the army. He has already promised that he would swiftly kill 100,000 ‘criminals,’ and dump so many bodies into Manila Bay that the “fish will grow fat” on their bodies. It is not at all clear that he will be able to make good on these promises. His supporters outside of Davoa do not have a direct experience of what this entails. Extraordinary police powers and a massive ramping up of its surveillance powers, certainly, but also the active participation of citizens as informants or as actual members of the death squads. It is a measure of how bad things have gotten in the rest of the country that a policy developed in the context of the social pressures generated by civil war should be gaining traction outside of Mindanao. Still, it is not at all clear that the movement pushing Duterte forward will furnish him with the same active support that he has gotten in Davao. It may well be the case that simply attempting to transfer his policies unto the national arena will cost him all his political capital. Duterte is polling at around 33% (LP bet Mar Roxas is at 22, Grace Poe is at 21, and Jejomar Binay is at 17) -- if these numbers reflect what will happen on Monday Duterte will win, but he will still have gotten about 9% less than Noynoy did in 2010. Promises to salvage half the population aside, one man, no matter how foul, cannot make a police state on his own.
Moreover, he will be in the heart of the Manila oligarchy’s power. Duterte will face an analogous problem to that faced by the LP: he cannot help alienating powerful sections of the ruling class. If he squares off against congress set on impeaching him, the struggle will almost certainly involve various sections of the elite mobilizing the “masa.” It is impossible to say who would win such a contest. But it may create openings for the left.
In the meantime, Duterte will give the police carte blanche authority to murder and kill.
If Duterte loses the elections, there will be a widespread feeling that he will have had it stolen from him. Even those sections of the Left who despise Duterte are not happy to stand by and let the ruling party commit electoral fraud. Just as if he wins the election, the key variable will be how willing and able Duterte is to mobilise his supporters AFTER the election. If a large proportion of his supporters are willing to become activists in the long term, Duterte can make much of the Philippines next to ungovernable. In either case, Mar will come to power with no credibility as the heir of an administration that is wildly unpopular among the lower and middle income segments of the population.
There are, of course, 2 important other factors: the Vice Presidential race, and the armed forces.
The armed forces remain a major political factor. Mampasano scuttled the BBL, Kidapawan badly hurt the administration’s chances. The previous administration had to consistently bribe the generals to keep them on side, but even that did not prevent the Oakwood mutiny or the Occupation of the Manila Peninsula by the lower ranking officers. The conflict in Mindanao remains a political issue, and therefore the political state of the military is of vital importance. It seems pretty clear that the police would love the freedom that Duterte is promising them, but unfortunately the internal dynamics of the military remain fairly mysterious.
Regarding the VP race, the LP must be thanking every god it can think of that Robredo’s fate does not hinge on a Mar victory the way it would in the US. Right now, she is neck and neck with Bongbong Marcos (Duterte’s nominal running mate, Escudero, has no chances). Congress will only risk impeaching Duterte if Robredo wins VP, alternatively, if Marcos wins not only will he be next in line for the presidency, his ability to bring the weight of the far North into the political arena will drastically increase. The Manila oligarchy and the regional powers that have made their bed with them will find themselves pincered between North and South.
The return of the Marcos family to the national arena in the last senatorial election is shocking, but not inexplicable. He has the support of the Solid North behind him, and this is not merely the result of Ilocano provincialism: the Marcoses run their home turf like a fiefdom with all the concomitant noblesse oblige. That is a voting bloc in excess of 6 million, and he will get the majority of it. But more importantly than that, there has been a long and extraordinarily well funded effort to revise Philippine memory. It has to be said that the failures of Cory and Ninoy Acquino’s son has been an exceptionally useful foil for this work.
It is commonly held that the ‘millennial’ vote is bulking up Marcos’ popularity, since after all, we never lived through the horrors of Marcos rule. This is a very convenient fiction that easily ignores the fact that ousting Marcos merely made it possible for other sections of the elites to jocky for political power. Ordinary Filipinos, young and old, have had to deal with the fallout of this fraternal feuding.
In point of fact, however, millennials do not constitute the bulk of Marcos’ vote. At the moment, Marcos actually trails just behind Robredo in percentage of 18-34 year olds voting for them (29% vs 26%), but he leads in both the 35-54 and the 55 and up age groups (31% to Robredo’s 28%, and 33% to 30% respectively). Moreover, at the start of polling, it was Escudero (who voted for the Reproductive Health bill so popular among millennials and who before that was so prominent in the attempts to impeach GMA) who lead among 18-34 year olds -- as his viability waned, Robredo seems to have won more of his young votes than Marcos did, rising from a flat 18% all throughout January to April before leaping 11% at the start of May.
According to Rappler, Marcos is the preferred candidate among voters in the top 3 income brackets (ABC). This is probably an exaggeration, but it says something about the kind of revolution that EDSA I was: the kind that mobilised the entire population right down to the poorest squatters in order to allow a different section of the elites to take over. The gains of that revolution should not be discounted, but this fundamental reality remains. What we are talking about here are rival fractions of the entire ruling class, fractions, moreover whose borders are exceedingly porous. Hence Enrile can be Marcos’ defense minister before defecting then support Marcos Jr. once again to no one’s surprise. Hence the presence of the Cojuanco’s on either side of the fence. Even where individuals do not skip fences as easily as one might change a shirt, the ABC is composed of siblings, cousins, friends, classmates who each back one horse or another but maintain their connections. The political prospects of the Marcos’ were not eliminated because their class remained in power -- and with this class, they are fundamentally close, tied by blood, acquaintance, culture, sensibility, and money.
I have a bit of an inside ticket into this culture. My family’s set is generally liberal enough, but growing up it was not unheard of for quite close friends or relations to wax nostalgic about the discipline and order of those happy days where the police could tell a boy how short to crop his hair. The development of Philippine capitalism is today disintegrating its own social structure and criminality and anxiety are on the rise. Elites are having to share congested roads with hoi polloi who won’t be put in their place because no place exists. The nostalgia of the rich who may well have marched against the dictatorship for the good old days is the affect of a class that wants to keep on raking in the profits without having to suffer the blow back of a dispossessed population.
It is also interesting that Marcos does not only take the North, he also takes Central Luzon and the National Capital region. If not for his thoroughly understandable unpopularity in Mindanao and Robredo’s popularity in her home region in Southern Luzon and the Visayas, he would sweep the VP elections by a landslide. The ‘Solid North’ does not explain Marcos’ strength: the administration’s track record does. The most important indicator of voter support for Marcos is not location or age. It is dissatisfaction with Acquino. Those who highly trust the president vote Robredo, those who don’t overwhelmingly vote Marcos. Marcos may be the preferred candidate of the ABC (although I doubt Rappler’s claim here), but it is clear that most ordinary Filipinos are dissatisfied with the administration as well. It was Acquino Jr. who wound up paving the way for Marcos Jr.
We need to be clear, however, about the kind of responsibility that Acquino bears. In a sense, what Noynoy has done (and he is perhaps unique in this regard), was to try to use the office of the presidency to make the Filipino capitalist class behave as a class. To make Filipino capital competitive on the international scene. In the context of a sluggish global and ASEAN economy, he actually has had success in this regard. The situation is such that this could not be done without the special economic zones, without the extraction economy, without OFWs and PMOs, without contractualisation. The development of capitalism means the development of profitability for the ruling class -- there is no necessary correlation between this and improvements in the situation of the poor. But clearly, the poor were no better off in the days before Noynoy where the state existed to funnel money and power to various little kings without regard to the general development of the economy.
The competence and coherence of the ruling class is not an issue for the Left. We need take no sides in their squabbles.
Nevertheless, we need to be clear about what they mean. This election has revealed a political limit in built into the structure of Philippine capital -- this limit will be persistent, especially given the international situation. One way or another, we are seeing a return to the instability that has been the major characteristic of Philippine politics since EDSA I. We should not be complacent about this -- the administration has been an exception to the rule. Even if Mar wins, and even if he sees off the first challenge that the forces of Duterte might raise, he will face a longer term political challenge that will be difficult to resolve. The elections will likely usher in a new period of instability similar to the days of Estrada and GMA, but the forces are not the same and the anger is deeper. Moreover the challenge to the legitimacy of Manila itself is new.
These factors are extraordinarily mercurial, even a character like Duterte can have difficulty controlling such anger. The wind is blowing in favour of reaction at the moment, but even that may change quickly. The Left is out of step with current developments, but new opportunities are very likely to emerge, as well as old and new dangers. What all of this demonstrates with heartbreaking clarity is that the challenge of building an independent, principled, revolutionary Left remains as the fundamental condition for breaking the deadlock of Philippine capitalism.

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