The toughness of Binay has been underestimated by his opponents and detractors time and again...
Remember, Binay was once a tough battalion commander of the Philippine Marines
The “how” of destroying Binay with the agenda of crippling him before the 2016 presidential campaign, is constrained by this factor: Binay is not an enemy of the Aquino political camp…
A long list of mestizos—from the sons of the late Mesyong Yabut to Bobby Brilliantes to Edu Manzano—all fell for this “Binay is a puny pansy” theory. In the end, as the battlefield accounting of losses is made, what remains are the wasted bodies of the mestizo-detractors.


WHO IS AFRAID of VP JOJO BINAY?

In a nation of crabs, a political stock that soars is often met with a volley of darts and arrows. Think Oca Orbos, the brightest political name in the early 90s, and how a conspiracy managed to irreparably damage what could have been an ascent to the presidency.

Of course, Oca himself—his bent and his mindset and his genetics—was part of the reason why he did not become president.

He was too decent for politics. His late father wanted his sons to be priests, and not lawyers and politicians. Oca saw politics not as a blood sport but rather a pure form of civic duty. In the Philippines and elsewhere, you cant be president with this kind of predisposition and mind frame.

Currently, a posse of political crabs has another target—Vice President Jejomar Binay. This posse is intensely after him, and wants to bring down crashing to cruel earth Binay’s soaring political stock.

But—as this posse is finding out—this is easier plotted than done because of two things, namely:

1. The “ how” is a big problem
2. And, Binay, who practices politics as a blood sport, is of tough stuff

The “how” of destroying Binay with the agenda of crippling him before the 2016 presidential campaign, is constrained by this factor: Binay is not an enemy of the Aquino political camp. At his worst, Binay is a prodigal son. There are enduring stories indelibly linked to the late Cory Aquino’s presidency and one of this is Jojo Binay as Rambotito, the olive-clad and fully armed Jojo Binay ready to die in defense of the late President Cory.

There is no proof of loyalty more dramatic than this. And the plotters against Jojo Binay, whenever they are carried away by irrational exuberance, are reminded of Rambotito during the perilous years of the Cory Aquino presidency.

Going against Binay with full force and using all the ammunitions of the new dispensation may, in the end, not sit well with the Aquino family. This is something the detractors of Binay know fully well. This injects an element of caution into the get-Jojo plot.

The gloves can’t be off, the get-Binay move cannot be done heedlessly and recklessly.

The toughness of Binay has been underestimated by his opponents and detractors time and again. To their great woe, of course. The belief that Binay is an easy target may have stemmed from several factors: his long list of mestizo detractors have not been impressed by his size and skin tone. He carries around no intellectual air. He does not swagger and prance around like a king of his city.

A long list of mestizos—from the sons of the late Mesyong Yabut to Bobby Brilliantes to Edu Manzano—all fell for this “Binay is a puny pansy” theory. In the end, as the battlefield accounting of losses is made, what remains are the wasted bodies of the mestizo-detractors.

A little bit of contemporary political history will tell us one thing: that of the original OIC mayors appointed by Nene Pimentel as minister of local government in early 1986 for Metro Manila mayoral posts, only Binay never lost an election. In fact, most of the OIC appointees in 1986 have had dismal political careers. Let us take the three largest and oldest cities of Metro Manila: Manila, Quezon City and Kaloocan City.

In Manila, Mel Lopez won in his first election bid for mayor of Manila in 1988—the first local election under the new Constitution. But I don’t think he got re-elected. Same with Brigido “Jun” Simon Jr., who won in 1988 in Quezon City but lost in his re-election bid. Dr. Antonio Martinez, who was OIC mayor of Kaloocan City, lost in his first attempt to get elected in 1988.

The other OIC mayor who served three straight terms as mayor was Toting Bunye of Muntinlupa. But Bunye lost in his congressional try after leaving City Hall.

Binay’s political success and longevity cannot be solely attributed to saintly practices and good governance—though Binay practiced some of it. After becoming OIC of Makati City in 1986, Binay studied the iron grip of the mayor he replaced—Nemesio Yabut—over Makati politics.

He did not go to the UP NCPAG to immerse himself in theories. He did not go to the fancied schools of
governance based in the US. What he did was to study the political power structure of Makati, the vote delivery system, the political fiefdoms at the ward and grass roots level.

What Mesyong Yabut did, Binay improved on. Mesyong Yabut was tough, toughened by his being terminal king at unruly South Harbor, and the tough life at an impoverished coastal barrio in Pampanga.
Binay also had that hardscrabble beginning, but was toughened further by the long years of fighting the Marcos dictatorship.

Binay’s training as a lawyer, academic etc., provided him with the intellectual framework to complement his street smarts and savvy. He actually gave a sense of finesse and sophistication to the political operations of Mesyong Yabut—and this was the key to his virtual stranglehold over Makati politics.

So this is the Binay his detractors are up against. I just hope they would not fall for the “Binay is a puny pansy” narrative. The debris of failed mestizos littering the political landscape of Makati should be instructive.
BY MARLEN V. RONQUILLO

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Indecisive? Cabinet still unfilled at last minute

President-elect Benigno Aquino 3rd on Monday said that he would announce the members of his Cabinet today, just 24 hours before his inauguration as the 15th President of the Republic of the Philippines.
During an interview with reporters at the sidelines of his rehearsal for arrival honors ceremony at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City (Metro Manila), Aquino disclosed that there are still three Cabinet positions that need to be filled up.

When asked to tick off a few names from his prospective official family, the President-elect declined, saying that he would do the announcement today.

Aquino has named lawyer Paquito Ochoa Jr. as executive secretary, lawyer Edwin Lacierda as his spokesman, Corazon Soliman as Social Welfare secretary and Teresita Deles as presidential adviser on peace process.

The others who will reportedly be named as members of the official family are Aquino’s chief of staff, Julia Abad as Presidential Management Staff head, Cesar Purisima as Finance secretary, Makati Business Club Executive Director Alberto Lim as Tourism chief, lawyer Kim Jacinto-Henares as Commissioner of the Bureau of Internal Revenue and Lt. Gen. Voltaire Gazmin as Defense secretary.

Still others who were reportedly given positions are Chairman Leila de Lima of the Commission on Human Rights as Justice secretary, former Education Secretary Florencio Abad as Budget secretary, Jose Rene Almendras as Energy secretary, Jaime Aristotle Alip as Agriculture secretary, Guillermo Parayno as Bureau of Customs commissioner and Mayor Jesse Robredo of Naga City as Interior secretary.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo on Sunday confirmed that Aquino would retain him and De La Salle University-Manila said that its president, Brother Armin Luistro, also accepted the offer to become Education secretary.

Concurrent Environment Secretary Horacio Ramos will also stay in his post for one year.

Aquino is yet to name his choice to head the Philippine National Police but he earlier said that he would not accept the resignation of Director Gen. Jesus Verzosa, who heads the police force.
By Cris G. Odronia Reporter
“Will the time ever come when the members of Congress will pass laws that will keep them from behaving like pigs and prostitutes…? When that time comes there will be no need for so many members of Lakas-Kampi to crawl like worms to the Liberal Party… Poverty—makes most of us Filipinos agree to be treated like fools, to be robbed of the proper government services that our taxes have paid for, to be reduced to begging the government official or his mere clerk’s help to get what we are owed… What if Noynoy’s regime will ape that of GMA in the dispensation of pork and other funds...”

Out of 109 members of the Lakas-Kampi party who won seats in the House after the May 10 elections, only half have so far not defected to the Liberal Party. The LP is, of course, that of soon-to-be-inaugurated President Benigno Simeon Cojuangco Aquino 3rd. Don’t call politicians who switch party loyalties prostitutes. You could be insulting the latter. This is an old saw that columnists love to use as if the conceit was their original idea.

Others like to use animals. They say about their hated politician that he is like a pig and in the next breath declare that they are withdrawing their statement because it is an insult to pigs.

But you can’t say these ugly things about all of the scores of Lakas-Kampi congressmen (and—women) who have defected to the Liberal Party. Their defection guarantees Quezon City Mayor and soon-to-be QC Representative Feliciano Belmonte Jr.’s victory in the contest for the speakership.

And at the same time they are assuring themselves of getting their pork barrel. But they are doing so not necessarily for their own benefit. At least not all of them. They have defected for the sake of their constituencies.

Those who have been congressmen before know only too well how members of the House who were not allies of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo did not get their pork barrel allocation year after year. Not only that. They also couldn’t get their pet bills passed.

It’s unfair therefore unfair to condemn all congressmen, or all governors and mayors, who join the new MalacaƱang officeholder’s party, for being greedy and unprincipled pigs and prostitutes. Yes there are some of these who have defected thinking only of themselves and their wives and mistresses. But most of the others have switched party affiliations for the sake of their constituencies for whom no public market, schoolhouse or medical clinic would be built if they do not swallow their pride and join the new ruling party.

What if Noynoy’s regime will ape that of GMA in the dispensation of pork and other funds?

We have this political culture of opportunism and aversion to virtues and values.

That culture allows us to be beggared by the victor, to kowtow willingly to the victor and be reduced to nothingness—morally and physically—in exchange for patronage.

Poverty—or desperate need for something vital, something most basic to our feeling of comfort—makes most of us Filipinos agree to be treated like fools, to be robbed of the proper government services that our taxes have paid for, to be reduced to begging the government official or his mere clerk’s help to get what we are owed.

Most beggars smilingly receive the insults mean people mutter before plunking a peso coin into their plastic cups. The beggars are demeaned by the insults. These add to their loss of self-respect.

There are a few among us who have the faith-based power to use the humiliations that come from being needy into a source of spiritual good. But most of us are like the beggars who smile away the insults. Most of us often have to beg for fairness from a boss or a government clerk, or clemency from a kotong cop.

As a result our sense of self worth is shriveled. We are bereft of that sense of dignity proper to children of God.

So we end up feeling and behaving to each other as beings that are less than fully human.

Foreigners who have observed us Filipinos wonder how and why so many of us can be so uncaring toward each other, so irresponsible as parents, so unfaithful as spouses, so dishonest as employees and bosses.

Will the time ever come when the members of Congress will pass laws that will keep them from behaving like pigs and prostitutes? Pass laws that will curtail the excesses of their class? Prevent their dynasties from reigning forever and ever?

That time will come—will return—when more Filipinos recover their sense of values and honor.

When that time comes there will be no need for so many members of Lakas-Kampi to crawl like worms to the Liberal Party.

Maybe that time has come.

For President-elect Noynoy had proposed laws that would compel presidents to be faithful to the purposes for which funds are allocated. He authored House Resolution No. 788 to create a Congressional Oversight Committee to monitor and check how intelligence funds are used by government agencies.

Congress could thus ensure that lawfully allocated funds are actually used for the purposes they were originally intended.

In the Senate he authored the Budget Impoundment and Control Act (SB 3121). “Impoundment” is the presidential power to refuse to have funds released that Congress has allocated in an appropriation law. It is this power that has let the Arroyo MalacaƱang take over the power of the purse from Congress. Sen. Noynoy Aquino filed SB 3121 to control the president’s impoundment powers. It would require a president to seek congressional approval each time a part of the budget is to be impounded.

If President-elect Aquino maintains his principles even when he has become the sitting president, he would then make sure all—including members of the opposition—get their pork barrel allocations. He would make sure funds allocated by law to benefit the provinces and constituencies of opposition figures are released. That would make our country a refreshingly equitable one.

Authority and power imposes a moral obligation on the power holder. The obligation is for the authority to use his power only for the good of those over whom he rules. (The Manila Times)