The family in politics

If anyone is still looking for confirmation of the determining role that the Filipino family plays in the nation’s political life, he will not find better proof than the results of this year’s national and local elections. It is the victory of entire clans that is being heralded – particularly that of the Arroyos of … Read more

Filipinos carry on love affair with PCOS machine

The precinct count optical scanner (PCOS) did what it was supposed to do—read the votes from the precincts and rapidly transmit the results to computers that automatically add them up at both local and national levels. With only about 15 percent of the results [as of Thursday] waiting to be transmitted due to mechanical malfunctioning, … Read more

Why trust remains crucial

As in previous elections, political programs once more took a backseat to issues of personal character in the current presidential campaign. What has been projected is not how we will solve our problems as a nation, but who we can trust not to abuse political power if elected. Indeed we demand so little of our … Read more

Risa’s generation

Risa Hontiveros-Baraquel is 44.  She belongs to that generation of Filipino leaders that, if they are not already in command of the nation, should firmly be in the line of succession to the nation’s leadership. Historically, the builders of our country have been much younger. Rizal, Bonifacio, Aguinaldo, and the countless others who fought to … Read more

Modern governance and the Constitution

The most important testament to our aspiration to be a modern democratic state is the Constitution no less.  Although some of its formulations may sound traditionally moralistic, one cannot fail to detect in all its basic provisions the unequivocal commitment to modern values such as equality before the law, separation of powers, supremacy of civilian … Read more

Political parties and grassroots movements

In modern democracies, the ideal role of political parties is to listen to the problems and aspirations of citizens, and, in the course of this, to organize and empower them. The outcome of this effort should be a collective force devoted to a vision of the common good and subscribing to set of well-defined policies … Read more

How to live at 90

At the annual Lenten gathering of the David family on Black Saturday, I asked my brother Bishop Ambo if he could lead us in a collective reflection on death — not Jesus’ but our own.  This unusual request startled my siblings and their spouses, who discreetly inquired if there was any terminal illness in the … Read more

Who will save the Supreme Court?

The Supreme Court is the highest court of the land.  It is the final interpreter of the Constitution – the basic law that constitutes us, the Filipino people, into a distinct nation-state.  Indeed, the Constitution is what the Supreme Court says it is.  To be able to perform this crucial function in any reliable way, … Read more

The Supreme Court’s way of seeing

The Supreme Court has ruled that President Macapagal-Arroyo can exercise the power to appoint any member of the judiciary – if the occasion arises, even up to the very last day of her presidency. The constitutional ban on presidential midnight appointments does not apply to appointments to the judiciary. I carefully read the majority opinion … Read more

Political change

Approaching the end of its protracted term, after wielding power for more than nine years, the Arroyo administration is now engaged in what can only be called a pathetic effort to banner its achievements. It has been buying advertisement space in the mass media to show how much progress has been attained under Ms Arroyo.  … Read more