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    Southeast Asia
     Mar 28, 2008
First ladies part ways in the Philippines
By Donald Kirk

MANILA - The movement to oust President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has lost its most visible leader with the hospitalization this week of the only other woman ever to lead the Philippines, Corazon Aquino.

One of the most outspoken critics of allegedly profligate corruption in the Arroyo government, Aquino is not expected to be able to resume her crusade any time soon while undergoing chemotherapy for colon cancer, said to be in an advanced stage after she ignored early warning signs of the disease. Arroyo joined a chorus of well-wishers, offering prayers for Aquino "to surmount this as she has conquered all other trials", but Aquino's forced retreat from the front line of Arroyo's critics no doubt comes as an immense relief to her and her husband, "First Gentleman" Jose Miguel Arroyo.

Arroyo and Aquino might appear on one level to have much in


 

common, as women who rose to the presidency of their male-dominated society as a result of People Power revolutions. But Aquino's attacks against Arroyo have embarrassed the first couple amid fears of another display of People Power aimed at toppling her government.

As far as Aquino was concerned, Arroyo and her husband represented a reversion to the era of Ferdinand Marcos, the long-ruling president who imposed martial law and then masterminded the assassination of Aquino’s husband, Benigno, as he was returning from exile abroad in August 1993. It was Benigno Aquino's assassination on the tarmac of the airport that led to the massive protests of the People Power revolution and catapulted his wife to the presidency in February 1986 after a "snap election" called by Marcos rebounded against him.

Although widely regarded as a weak president, with little understanding of economic issues, Aquino is credited with one signal achievement. Under her, a commission drafted a constitution, approved in a nationwide plebiscite, limiting the president to a single six-year term. Never again, if the constitution was upheld, would the Philippines have to endure the iniquities of 20 years of corrupt, dictatorial rule by the likes of Marcos.

Supported by Jaime Cardinal Sin until his death in June 2005, Aquino remained an idealistic crusader whose loyal fans never forgot the wild enthusiasm that engulfed her takeover of power behind a revolt led by General Fidel Ramos and Juan Ponce Enrile. Wearing a yellow dress, Aquino mesmerized a nation yearning for change from rule not only by Marcos but also by his free-spending, money-and-power-hungry wife, Imelda, and inner-circle "cronies" who controlled all major business.

Although Marcos died in exile in Hawaii three and a half years after he and his family boarded a US Air Force plane out of Clark Air Base, Imelda, her son and two daughters, as well as the cronies, all returned to regain their financial empires and much of their political power. Imelda's wily attorneys continue to stave off efforts at recovering "hidden wealth" that Filipinos, inured to tales of corruption at all levels, are sure will remain in hers and her extended family members' control in perpetuity.

The spectacle of a return to the bad old days and ways inspired Aquino to fresh crusades - first against any thoughts that her one-time ally, Ramos, elected to a six-year term over a field of candidates as her successor in 1992 - might have entertained revising the constitution and running again. Next, she turned on Ramos' successor, Joseph (Erap) Estrada as his own corrupt tendencies surfaced in an expose of all the loot he allegedly made from illegal gambling, known locally as jueteng. Impeach him too, she demanded, as crowds gathered on EDSA, the 12-lane Epifanio De Los Santos, in January 2001 for a reenactment of People Power I.

Effete elite
Aquino at the time appeared to have much in common with Arroyo, who had been elected vice president, running on a separate ticket from Estrada, in 1998. The 2001 People Power protests, though, would not be quite the same. The idealistic fervor that had infused and legitimized People Power I was missing. Many observers, both in the Philippines and abroad, viewed Estrada's forced ouster and subsequent arrest on corruption charges, however well-founded, as more akin to a coup d'tat than a people's revolution.

The two women - Aquino and Arroyo, both from hugely wealthy families and with national followings - were at odds almost from the outset. One reason may have been that Arroyo, with an academic background in economics, was widely viewed as far more pragmatic, knowledgeable and competent than Aquino when it came to coping with the country’s never-ending financial problems.

Another may have been that Arroyo, by family background, was mired in the world of corrupt Philippine politics - her father, Diosdado Macapagal, had served as vice president and then as president before his defeat by Marcos in 1965. Sometimes called "the incorruptible" by friends and allies, he too had come to be widely regarded as corrupted by the time he stepped down.

Aquino, a daughter of the super-rich Cojuangco family, remained above such charges, having long since disavowed connections with her cousin, the top Marcos crony Eduardo "Danding" Cojuangco. On the basis of a strict Catholic upbringing, both in the Philippines and then in the US, she maintained her commitment to idealistic causes despite her inability to come up with programs and policies capable of redressing enormous economic imbalances and social injustices.

Aquino's criticism of Arroyo crested after her election in 2004 to a full six-year term, when a wiretapped conversation revealed that Arroyo was trying to manipulate the results of a prolonged vote count in which she was finally declared the victor over challenger Fernando Poe Junior. The fact that Poe, like Estrada, had been an actor with little comprehension of governance or policy did not deter Aquino from demanding that Arroyo make "the supreme sacrifice" and give up her post. The crusade on his behalf did not end until his death from a heart attack near the end of 2004.

Increasingly, as illness silently stalked her, Aquino's crusade has appeared almost quixotic. After Arroyo finally let Estrada out of house arrest last year, Aquino actually appeared on the same platform with him - Aquino calling for Arroyo to resign while Estrada applauded. The main complaint has been corruption associated with Arroyo’s husband, the First Gentleman, known in headlines, in true Philippine style, as "FG".

Widely regarded as the manipulator behind the first family's finances, he was implicated most recently in schemes for reaping percentages from deals with China for a state-tendered national broadband network. A Supreme Court, packed with Arroyo appointees, most recently has rejected demands by senators for Arroyo's former socio-economic planning secretary, Romulo Neri, to reveal details of the role of the first couple in the deal. He was entitled, said a majority of the justices, to "executive privilege".

Nonetheless, the two women, president and former president, still have much in common. Aquino survived half a dozen coup attempts, while Arroyo has survived at least two of them. All of them have had the backing of military officials. One prominent foe of both women has been Gregorio Honasan, a former military officer and graduate of the Philippine Military Academy, who is now back in the Philippine Senate.

The bottom-line question, though, is, if not Arroyo, who? Signs of an alliance between Aquino and Estrada hardly inspire confidence, and Aquino's vice president, Noli De Castro, is a former TV newsreader with virtually no political experience at all. "Estrada is trying to package himself as an alternative," said long-time political analyst and journalist Carlos Conde.

"He's one of the weakest links in the opposition. It was a big turn-off seeing him on stage with Cory after she helped bring him down." But with Aquino out of the way, Arroyo seems increasingly likely to see through the end of her term in 2010. As Conde put it, "We ain't got much by way of options."

Journalist Donald Kirk is a frequent visitor to the Philippines and is the author of the books
Philippines in Crisis: US Power Versus Local Revolt and Looted: The Philippines after the Bases.

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