Of expectations, that is. When it was announced that the President
would address the nation on Sept. 11, the generation of martial law
babies and those older immediately (and ominously) connected it with the
great dictator’s birth anniversary. By the next day, the Armed Forces
had to issue the kind of statement that triggers panic — don’t panic, it
said.
Reacting to social media chatter and reporters picking up on the buzz
and asking the AFP if, indeed, there was an ongoing movement of armored
military vehicles, the Armed Forces replied, no; but even if there were
— and there are, and have been, and will be — movements of armored
vehicles, that’s to be expected in the vicinity of armed camps, so stay
calm, don’t panic, do not fall prey to the evil designs of
rumor-mongers.
But that can be explained away as an excess of zeal on the part of
the military. What really put the current state of the ruling Noob
Society on full display was when the Palace made an announcement early
yesterday afternoon. The next 20 minutes or so that gripped the nation
can be summarized as follows:
Presidential Communications Operations Office: No presidential presser anymore, we can’t say why.
Bong Go: No presser but speech to proceed at 3:15.
Salvador Panelo: No presser was scheduled in the first place.
Harry Roque: No cancellation happened; what was scheduled will push through but under modified format.
Indeed, what there would be, Roque purred, was a “tête-à-tête.”
Panelo would read questions from the media, which, however, would be
barred from the actual tête-à-tête. The Malacañang Press Corps had been
biding its time, literally kept in the dark — someone, somewhere, didn’t
think it was necessary to switch on the lights in the media briefing
room. But rumblings of discontent, shared by foreign and domestic media
practitioners alike, provoked a withdrawal of questions from the
forthcoming tête-à-tête.
In the end, the tête-à-tête proved a test of patience, as the
President’s complexion bore a startling — and distracting — resemblance
to Among Ed Panlilio (hopefully, a makeup artist somewhere is going to
take the blame). A foreign journalist from abroad commented online that
it was a scene straight out of the Vladimir Putin playbook. For the
domestic crowd, the only thing missing was the late Ronnie Nathanielsz,
though Panelo proved an equally obliging substitute — exclaiming, at one
point, with pointed enthusiasm, that the President looked very healthy,
indeed.
The President ended up revealing what had been clear since his
particularly ill-tempered press conference when he returned earlier than
expected from Jordan: The scheme of the Solicitor General to pin down
Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV has caused unforeseen complications, not just
in terms of a debate within the Armed Forces and general contempt over
the move’s legal reasoning on the part of the legal community, but also
the continuation of the erosion of the perception that the President’s
word is, literally, the law.
Judges dug in their heels — or, to be precise, shuffled their papers —
saying they had to hold hearings and study the case. This led to the
military and police taking on a more neutral stance, subordinating their
actions to the courts, leading, in the end, to a swift, surprising
consensus to let the courts handle matters without rushing to an actual
arrest.
If the past two months have seen the startling transformation of the
President from a strongman whom no one dared oppose, to a tired,
cantankerous senior citizen overwhelmed by events, then the Trillanes
saga offered the chance to prove who’s boss. It’s turning out that there
remains residual self-respect among legal practitioners to resist the
Executive’s whims—gently, but firmly enough (so far).
The President’s bullying and hectoring has found its match in
Trillanes, who has never been subtle and whose lack of subtlety is
apparently tailor-made for confronting the current Chief Executive.
Indeed, the whole message in the presidential tête-à-tête, if there was
one to be found, was that the President has discovered the limits to his
power and charisma. There are lines more and more of his subordinates
won’t cross. He needed to save face, and so he had a chat on TV.
mlquezon3@gmail.com
source: Philippine Daily Inquirer Column By: Manuel L. Quezon III
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