Home » Business and Politics, Chizmiz sa Barberya

Quite another story, the conclusion

19 May 2010 13 Comments

Kaloka reading Conrado’s item. Holding my breath ang lola nyo. But before you read this last part, basahin nyo muna ang 1st part of the story which you can read here: Quite another story. I also blogged it here.

So, heto na ang conclusion nang tele-seryeng to.

Conclusion of “Quite another story”

By Conrado de Quiros

(Conclusion)

Just as well, the hijacking of the campaign, or the betrayal of the dream, was never about the junking of Mar Roxas by Kamag-anak Inc. The hijacking of the campaign, or the betrayal of the dream, was about the junking of Edsa by Roxas Inc.

I wrote those couple of columns last November criticizing the Liberal Party because it was giving the campaign a trapo (traditional politician) image. That took the form in particular of contemplating bringing in “winnable” candidates like Jinggoy Estrada and even Bongbong Marcos into its senatorial roster. It went beyond contemplation in the case of Ralph Recto, a staunch Arroyo ally whose conscription so pissed off Serge Osmeña that he quit the group altogether. The logic of this idiocy was that after Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III won he would need allies in the Senate to push his reform agenda.

It was idiotic because, one, it assured Noynoy would not win. It was the clearest sign the party never understood where his numbers came from, imagining those numbers would keep even if his larger-than-life image of being the inheritor of the impossible dream were shattered. And, two, because it presupposed that the best way to push reform was to enlist the aid of allies who were resolutely opposed to it.

All this did not just turn Noynoy into another candidate with feet of clay, it did not just turn the election into another exercise to choose the next flagellant, it turned Noynoy into just another trapo, or threatened to. Later the same group would chorus, after Noynoy’s numbers tumbled (which I kept warning them about), “Alas, the Cory magic is dead!” Like snipping off a bird’s wings and lamenting, “Alas, it can’t fly anymore!”

And with that observation, they went from abandoning the Edsa spirit to abandoning Edsa itself.

I kept saying at the start of the campaign that I couldn’t see how Noynoy could possibly lose when he had a natural ally in January and February this year. Those two months are Edsa months, January being the month of Edsa 2 and February being the month of Edsa 1. All he had to do was stick to the Edsa story, the one that said the choice was a starkly moral one, the choice was between tyranny and freedom, between Arroyo and Noynoy (forget the other candidates, they didn’t really matter), just as the choice in the snap elections was between Marcos and Cory and just as the choice in the US elections was between “Dubya” and Barack, and bring it to a culmination with the two Edsas.

Never happened. Tsk-tsking that Edsa was dead—and Mar probably blaming it for killing his dream of becoming president (which he never would have been even if it hadn’t arisen; Chiz or Manny would have trounced him)—Mar Inc. trotted out all sorts of fuzzy messages except the one that had made the campaign possible. January came and went and not one squeak, not one peep, not one utterance escaped the lips of the Aquino camp about the People Power that had ousted Erap and its beneficiary who betrayed it. February came and went, and only a pale display of People Power arose to celebrate the 25th itself, one held in a site utterly without symbolic value, the Araneta Center, giving the celebrations the air of being just another concert in competition with the one Willie Revillame put up for Villar in the Mall of Asia, which was better attended.

I told friends then that if Noynoy lost his campaign, it would be because he traded his birthright for a pot of porridge.

In the end, his campaign revived partly out of luck (Johnny and Jamby jammed Manny’s surge) and partly out of Noynoy rediscovering his Edsa origins. Mar himself would resort to Edsa, the one thing he scorned, when Jojo Binay pulled neck and neck with him, and trade his blue shirt for yellow. Alas, too late, blue would remain his color, his band playing “Blues for Mar.”

Which brings us finally to who abandoned whom.

Mar would say at the end that the reason he stumbled was that he devoted time and energy coming to Noynoy’s aid when he was down. That is all very well, except for a couple of things.

One, why should his campaign suffer by devoting his energies to Noynoy if they had a single identity, if they shared a common bond, if they were partners in a cause grander than merely winning an election? In fact, they did not. In fact, they were not. Mar made it a point to be a separate entity; he made it a point not to owe Edsa (which he already did by getting a rocket boost to his career by the “sacrifice” of sliding down for the greater glory of Edsa); he distanced himself from Noynoy when the sun was shining on his side of the hill. He insisted on being blue to Noynoy’s yellow, and it didn’t turn out to be velvet.

Two, proof of which you see with what he did—or did not do—when Villar closed in on Noynoy and when he was far ahead of his rivals, enough to taunt Loren and Binay with “Good luck fighting it out for No. 2.” (Those words have come to haunt.) Later, when he had gotten desperate, he would get Noynoy to say earnestly, “Mar Roxas is my only vice president.” But when he was enjoying his lead, when all sorts of Island-of-Dr.-Moreau creatures like “Villar-Mar” and “Gibo-Mar” were sprouting all over the place, did we ever see him shouting at the top of his voice: “Noynoy Aquino is my only president”?

The Noynoy campaign began not with the Liberal Party, the Hyatt 10 and the Firm but with the volunteer groups. It succeeded not because of the Liberal Party, the Hyatt 10 and the Firm but because of the volunteer groups. Noynoy’s government should begin not with the Liberal Party, the Hyatt 10 and the Firm but with the volunteer groups. It should succeed not because of the Liberal Party, the Hyatt 10 and the Firm but because of the volunteer groups.

Or so if there is justice in this world. Or in this government.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Viewed 10074 times by 2563 viewers

WP Greet Box icon
Uy! Ka barrio, kung first timer ka dito sa Barrio Siete o kaya naman ay napasaya ka ng aming mga writers, inaanyayahan ka naming mag subscribe sa RSS Feed namin! Pwede mong gamitin ang Google Reader para dito.
is one Uragon and a Filipino-American, has many years of public accounting & auditing, broadcast investments, housing tax credits and equity investments as his background. Based in the US, he maintains his personal and humor blog at reyna elena dot com. A graduate of Aquinas U, he went to GWU and Temple U in the United States.

13 Comments »

  • conchita bampira says:

    sinisi niya si Mar Roxas? kaya pala kahit sinabi niyang Noynoy siya, hindi niya sinabing Mar Roxas siya o Binay. ibig sabihin ba nito, BINAY si Conrado???

    kumareng lee! tanungin mo nga si kapitana!

  • Snow says:

    “I told friends then that if Noynoy lost his campaign, it would be because he traded his birthright for a pot of porridge.”

    Wala akong ma-say dito ah. Speechless kumbaga.

    But hey, I voted for Noynoy and I must say, winnable naman talaga siya ngayong Halalan 2010.

  • Jet says:

    Reynz,

    There is a John Nery response to this (dated yesterday) see in PDI too.

  • From the start, I considered myself among the volunteers who campaigned hard for Noynoy without getting any centavo. In fact, the reverse is true: I DONATED TO THE CAMPAIGN OF NOYNOY.

    These Hyatt 10, The Firm and Kamag-anak Inc. must shake off their heads so that they will know: THEY ARE THE ONES WHO CAUSED MANY NOYNOY VOTERS TO SUPPORT GIBO OR VILLAR.

    Hay, naku!

    We volunteers do not aspire for any position in the government. But if we are offered to serve, they will see how sincere we are and how to trounce corruption!

    One more hit, Conrad!

    • Jet says:

      Toto,

      I agree, my first turn-off of the Noynoy campaign was when his LP accepted all the turncoats from GMA’s Lakas Kampi….

      The Yellow Volunteers should continue to be actively supportive or even critically collaborative of the Noynoy Presidency, this way it would continue to heed the people’s clamor for real change and not the special interest groups’ jockeying for position…

    • Silver says:

      Suportahan na lang natin si Noynoy mismo. Hindi yang mga pistingyawang / pastilan na nakapaligid sa kanya.

      Mga pampagulo lang ang mga yan. Pustahan, kanya kanya nang vested interest yan dahil nanalo ang kandidato nila. Kawawa yung mga volunteer groups na nagpakahirap – que may pera or hindi, sige lang.

      Ambot sa mga yan. Di bale mga kabarrio, may karma naman. Tamaan ang dapat tamaan. Hmpt.

  • ajay says:

    Bakit hindi nya na-mention ang K-factor? Some believe na malas si Korina sa kanya. Those who know about Korina in real life did not vote for Mar, but for Binay instead. Ho-hum….

    • Snow says:

      I have to agree with you this one.

      Share ko lang:

      My sister-in-law used to work in a manufacturing company before she worked abroad for greener pasture. Korina Sanchez created a special segment for her show on that manufacturing company in the past. My sister-in-law told me that Korina was a diva and would only talk to ‘common people’ nicely when the camera is ‘rolling’.

      • Silver says:

        Matagal nang diva si Korina. I am hearing stories about her divanetch attitude daw. Grabe din daw ang bibig ng isang yan, not to mention, yung kasungitan.

  • fz says:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/10116913@N08/4600022472

    found this photo on the net. nakaka touch…

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Violent reactions are welcome. Kiver kahit anong sabihin mo. But try to stay on topic and avoid personal attacks. Only privileged Barrio people & readers are allowed to swear.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.