MANILA - An Associated Press story recently published in the Boston Globe in Massachusetts Says that President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is carving out a reputation as a true political survivor.
In analyzing the recent decision of the House to throw out the second impeachment attempt againt her, reporter
Paul Alexander said: They call her tough, clever, opportunistic or just plain lucky, but her opponents know better than to underestimate Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who is carving out a reputation as a true political survivor.
He continued:
The Philippine president, one of Washington’s strongest
backers in the war on terror, has been the target of constant coup rumors since
she was swept into office in January 2001 by the country’s second “people
power” revolt. Now she has just performed another escape act by fending off a
second impeachment attempt.
The late-August victory prevented a
potentially explosive trial in the Senate-an opposition stronghold-on
allegations of vote-rigging, corruption, human rights abuses and violations of
the Constitution. As a result, she has gained an aura of political
invincibility, immune from the opposition’s best shots while she manages a
never-ending string of crises, including natural disasters, terror attacks and
other emergencies. Despite plummeting poll ratings, the former economics
professor and one-time college pal of future President Bill Clinton at Georgetown University, has shown a knack for
cutting deals and bending rules, even the Constitution.
“She works hard, she’s a fighter,” said
Rep. Roilo Golez, Arroyo’s former national security adviser who has switched to
the opposition. “She really fights to the point of going over the edge.” Her
critics claim she has gone too far in trying to squelch dissonant voices, and
the Supreme Court generally agreed when it ruled that she illegally imposed a
weeklong state of emergency and other measures to quash a coup plot last
February that allegedly involved the military, communist rebels and shadowy
financial backers. The ruling didn’t much matter. Arroyo, the 59-year-old
daughter of a president, already had sent her message by cracking down on an unfriendly
newspaper and getting arrest warrants for several alleged coup plotters.
Any momentum that they might have gained
was long gone by the time the court ruled.Two impeachment moves were hastily
killed off by the overwhelming dominance of her supporters in the House of
Representatives, ensuring the allegations wouldn’t make it to trial in the
Senate. With a one-year ban on filing another complaint, Arroyo now has
breathing room ahead of spring local and congressional elections. Any major
opposition gains seem unlikely in that voting, however; Arroyo’s party is
generally popular, particularly outside Manila-a
strength that won her a six-year term in 2004 despite losing the vote in the
sprawling capital. Arroyo’s
troubles started almost immediately after she was sworn in to replace
Joseph Estrada, the action film star-turned-politician who fled the
presidential palace in January 2001 amid mass protests over his alleged
corruption in office.
While disgraced, Estrada retained
support, particularly among the urban poor. His arrest three months later
sparked days of protest that culminated in a bloody but unsuccessful attempt to
storm the palace. Street protests continue and the opposition has vowed to
maintain pressure on Arroyo, but the public is growing apathetic and Arroyo
skillfully works the political establishment."She knows how to distribute
favors and how to cut deals," said Alex Magno, a political science
professor at the state-run University
of Philippines who is
regarded as pro-Arroyo. “She’s like Jekyll and Hyde. She’s an astute
economist and an astute politician. The two things don’t go together usually.”
Arroyo’s legislative record is mixed. She pushed through a value-added tax
against strong opposition and the economy has benefited, soothing the middle
class. She has put in long hours and courted the urban poor. But an
antiterrorism bill and the national budget have been casualties of Congress’
constant distractions over the impeachment bids, with spending on
infrastructure and education suffering most. Her political position was
strengthened by the death of the opposition’s main candidate in the 2004
election just months after the vote, and no unifying voice has emerged to rally
her opponents. “The people want a face. There are many leaders who are eligible
but no one comes forward. We admit it’s our weakness,” said opposition
spokesman Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano.
Growing up in the palace helped prepare
Arroyo for anything, even jousting with the no-holds-barred Philippine media.
A reporter once asked Arroyo at a news conference how much sex she was
getting. The married mother of three barely paused before retorting: “Plenty.”
She has also shown deftness in
complicated crises. She obtained the release of truck driver Angelo de la Cruz,
appeasing his kidnappers in Iraq
by withdrawing the Philippines’
small military contingent a month earlier than planned. The decision was
applauded at home, and she got away with only brief criticism from Washington and other
allies. The latest crisis was over allegations that she conspired to fix
the 2004 election that she won by a million votes. Arroyo admitted she
shouldn’t have talked with an elections commissioner during the protracted
ballot count, but claimed she didn’t influence the results. She has been
hospitalized twice in recent months and there are rumors of a liver problem.
And political survival may not equate to
success for the Philippines.
With four years left in her term, she has shown more skill at stamping out the
political fires than putting the nation on firm path for economic progress.
“We won’t have the ability to do
long-term planning and long-term execution,” Magno said. “Gloria will win but
all of us will lose in the long run.”