Noynoy's
gamble: Cleaning the stables or personal vendetta?
The start of the historic impeachment trial of
Philippine Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona may play out to be a
high-risk political move by President Benigno Aquino III, who remains popular
in his second year in office.
The trial, which began Monday on live
television, saw the Senate turned into an impeachment court to try Corona on
charges of corruption, loss of public trust and other issues. It is the outcome
of a battle, both political and personal, that began almost when Aquino was
elected president in May 2010.
Many observers have attributed the Senate
trial to the president’s drive to rid the country of endemic corruption, the
theme of his campaign promise. But some thought it would end just there, as a
promise.
Theoretically under the Philippines'
constitution, the presidential palace plays no role in the impeachment process.
The House of Representatives must decide exclusively to initiate the process
and the Senate has the sole power of impeachment. It has been clear from the
outset, however, that Aquino expended considerable political power in pushing
the 188 members of the House to vote an impeachment proceeding.
“Some people close to him didn’t think it
would go this far,” said a senior Cabinet member, who asked not to be named.
After winning the election, “they thought it would be a ‘let’s move forward,’”
focusing on raising economic standards. The idea of losing the impeachment
case, although slim for now due to his high approval rating, could obviously
weaken Aquino at such an early stage of his presidency, which ends in 2016.
But the president appears bent on making a
change, perhaps an indication of moving out of the shadow laid out by his late
parents, heroic leaders in the eyes of the people, and trying to undo his image
of a slacker and an underachiever. After persuading a majority of the lower
house to impeach Corona last month, he must now obtain the support of 16 of 23
senators to do the same thing in what would be the biggest gamble he has yet
undertaken.
Although the separation of powers
theoretically precludes Aquino from taking part in the process, the public
clearly regards the scenario as a proxy battle between the president and his
predecessor, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, currently under hospital arrest after she
attempted to leave the country in November, apparently to evade facing criminal
charges using health reasons.
The entire drama, according to one palace
aide, forced Aquino to crack the whip against the Supreme Court, whose chief
justice was clearly beholden to Arroyo and had attempted to permit her
departure before she was stopped at the airport, wearing neck braces and parked
in a wheelchair. The contest has played itself out in a variety of ways, with
the high court blocking Aquino's attempts to appoint a "truth
commission" shortly after his election to seek to bring Arroyo to justice.
After the president blocked Arroyo's attempt
to leave the country by preferring new charges against her, the court reopened
a case and voted to distribute Hacienda Luisita, a 6,435-ha sugar estate to its
workers. The plantation is owned by the Cojuancgo family, the family of the
president's late mother. The court, on a 14-0 ruling, also ordered Hacienda
Luisita to pay the farmers P1.3 billion (US$28.7 million) from the Cojuancgo
family’s sale of portions of land that were converted for industrial use.
The president is in a “game where he has put
everything at stake,” said analyst Romeo Bernardo of Global Source Partners, a
Manila-based think tank. “It’s a big risk for the country,” he added, in the
amount of the president’s political stock and resources he could have to give
in – if it would come to that – to senators looking into mid-term elections
next year or possibly a handful of them harboring presidential ambitions in
their own right.
“They haven’t made up their minds” regarding
Corona, conscious of the public perception that the trial is viewed largely as
a political exercise and not necessarily a judicial one, and despite the
Senate’s decorum of impartiality on the first days of the hearings. Aquino told
reporters he was confident of a victory, the charges raised being “solid,”
first on the fact that Corona had been appointed by Arroyo during a ban in the
election interim.
The Chief Justice pleaded not guilty to eight
counts brought by the Lower House, whose chief prosecutor displayed a
PowerPoint show of Corona’s luxury properties, allegedly acquired from
ill-gotten wealth while in power.
Though not required to appear at the Senate
court, Corona sat in the first row of the gallery with his wife, wearing a
dapper suit. In a public rally earlier in which he and his supporters wore
black, he played the part of the underdog, saying this was all part of a plot
to get him out of the way and that he would fight to clear his name “until
death” – which could foretell a long, bitter, divisive trial. (A former Supreme
Court associate justice heads his defense team.)
The personal and the political aside, an
impeachment could mean a lot more for the sake of jurisprudence, said Raul
Pangalangan, former dean of the College of Law of the University of the Philippines.
“If he (Aquino) wins this, it will re-calibrate the balance in the separation
of powers,” placing the judiciary in its “proper check.”
That puts this issue in the context of recent
history, in which the pendulum has swung from the years of martial law to a
democratic transition: a new constitution drafted under the government of
President Aquino’s mother 25 years ago gave the Supreme Court powerful judicial
review as protection against fears of authoritarian rule, but in the process
inadvertently slowed government reforms in a number of cases involving national
policy, mining for one.
The Supreme Court meanwhile has been losing
its moral ground over the past years, with some justices known for switching
decisions, being susceptible to favors, lowering legal standards, and
plagiarizing written court cases. Aquino may yet have to see the implication of
his move in the long run; and “even if he loses, if the goal is to put them
(the justices) on notice,” said Pangalangan, “he’s achieved that.”
Criselda Yabes
Asia Sentinel
(Criselda Yabes is the co-author with Marites
Danguillan Vitug, Our Rights, Our Victories, a critical look at the Philippine
Supreme Court. She can be reached at cdyabes@yahoo.com.)
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Consulting, Investment and Management, focusing three main economic sectors: International PR; Healthcare & Wellness;and Tourism & Hospitality. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programs. Sign up with twitter to get news updates with @SaigonBusinessC. Thanks.

No comments:
Post a Comment