{"id":501,"date":"2005-07-01T12:53:25","date_gmt":"2005-07-01T04:53:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.quezon.ph\/blog\/?p=501"},"modified":"2005-07-03T15:38:32","modified_gmt":"2005-07-03T07:38:32","slug":"reflections","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.quezon.ph\/2005\/07\/01\/reflections\/","title":{"rendered":"Reflections"},"content":{"rendered":"
The big news yesterday was Cory Aquino’s statement<\/a> and the interesting decision by the majority in the House to go along with the playing of the Paguia tape<\/a>: talk is that the administration has decided to raise the ante by preparing to release new tapes that show at least two opposition senators also talked to Garcellano (if this happens, the result will be that those senators will have no choice but to share the same fate as the president). Also, a new Civil Society coalition has called for the Comelec’s resignation.<\/a><\/p>\n Cory Aquino’s statement, I believe, is part of her efforts to arrive at some sort of national consensus that transcends party lines. Contrary to what some observers feel, she has not closed any options to herself. She has hinted, though, that she will have to make some sort of public, and thus, highly influential, decision, in the coming days.<\/p>\n But she has shown the self-imposed limitations under which she will work. First of all, that she will not support a coup, or a junta, or a revolutionary government. That, second, she remains dedicated to peaceful means; third, that those peaceful means are only those permitted by the present Constitution. Those options are many: peaceable assembly and petition; calls for resignation; impeachment; even, perhaps, censure of the President by Congress.<\/p>\n People knowledgeable of her ways told me that Cory Aquino’s strategy started going into effect when she quietly met with Susan Roces on June 17.<\/a> She may have heard that Susan Roces was preparing to make a public announcement, and felt it would be better to show good faith by meeting with her before then. Cory was moved by Roces’s call for sobriety in the wake of her meeting with Atty. Ong. And the question, perhaps, for one widow as she met the other, was: perhaps we have some things in common? It seems they do. Both do not want things to end up with an uncontrollable explosion of anger in the streets. Does this common desire show a potential for a meeting of the minds? This, is, perhaps, what Cory is praying over now.<\/p>\n As for me, let’s be clear: no to a junta, no to a revolution, no to extra-constitutional options or means. However: it is fear that is motivating people to refuse to even explore or discuss the constitutional options, and this worries me.<\/p>\n Window dressing<\/a> is the editorial of the Inquirer, with this thought-provoking section:<\/p>\n To sacrifice others, whether out of tactical considerations or a genuine desire to appease the people, evades the preeminent expectation of accountability. The President continues to evade the clamor for her to personally account to the country as to her conduct during the national elections last year. She must do this without equivocation. She must do this by responding, point by point, to the questions raised by the opposition. She must eliminate all doubts that remain concerning the close to 17 percent of the vote even the election watchdog Namfrel can’t vouch for. This is how both moral and political courage — which she has tried but failed thus far to show — can be proven.<\/em><\/p>\n There is only the beginning of a Civil Society and middle class consensus, and I think the minds of people have not been made up so long as there remains the chance the President will favorably react to a proposal for a Truth Commission. If the President either rejects, or drags her feet, on the commission proposal, then matters may accelerate as Civil Society and middle class (and business) types wrestle with the dilemma of clinging to the President out of fears of Noli de Castro, or losing control over, or relevance in, coming events. The fears of many people of things spinning out of control is reflected in entries such as Jove’s, in his blog,<\/a> where he explains the prudence required of his work, and his own personal belief, and his need to be consistent with his own views.<\/p>\n