 |
x
SUCS, YOUTH GROUPS LINK ARMS FOR PRE-SONA EDUCATION
PROTESTS
[17 Jul 2011 | View Comments | 220 views]
Picking up from the massive education protests last year, the Philippine
Association of State Universities and Colleges (PASUC) and national youth
groups on Friday have vowed unity to push for education demands through a
nationwide walkout and protest actions on July 19, in preparation for the
State of the Nation Address (SONA) of President Benigno Aquino III.
The 112 SUC-strong PASUC in a unity statement said that “In preparation
for the State of the Nation Address of President Aquino on July 25 and the
budget talks following that, it is crucial that we revitalize our unity
and collective action to call for a sufficient increase in the budget of
public higher education.”
Kabataan Party-list Rep. Raymond ‘Mong’ Palatino, after clinching the
commitment of PASUC, said that the “partnership will definitely reinforce
our concerted efforts in the education fight. Our united resolve to push
for a sufficient budget increase for our SUCs will impact SONA and the
budget talks. If we need to mobilize ourselves for another massive strike
to make President Aquino listen, then so be it.”
Palatino said that on July 19, SUCs and youth groups will do a “white
ribbon” protest and a nationwide walkout to symbolize “the call for
justice for public tertiary education.” He said that SUCs have suffered
continuous budget cuts through the years .
PASUC said that its 2011 budget of P24 billion is grossly insufficient to
fund the operation of SUCs. It added that the budget cuts have invariably
limited the people’s access to education.
Palatino said that an alternative SUC budget is now being drafted with
PASUC to be submitted to the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) and
President Aquino before his SONA. ###
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PASUC declares solidarity for greater state
subsidy, July 19 day of action
on JULY 16, 2011
In its officers’ meeting yesterday, the Philippine Association of State
University and Colleges declared their resolve to fight for greater state
subsidy and set July 19 as Day of Unity and Action. They agreed to wear
white for education and hold various mass actions nationwide. Signatories
of the manifesto include Dr. Ricardo Rotoras, PASUC President; Serafin
Ngohayon, PASUC Auditor; Dr. Olympio Caparas, TUP President and VP for
NCR; Dr. Miriam Pascua, VP for Luzon.


|
|
ANATOMY OF PHILIPPINE POLITICS
by Jose Maria Sison
(Originally published in the October 26, 1968 issue of The Philippine
Collegian, official student newspaper of the University of the
Philippines.)
Economic Power Makes Political Power
IT IS beyond doubt that economic power makes political power. A political
system is possible and can last only because it is based on an economic
foundation, on the mode of production that gives sustenance to the
political ideas and institutions in the superstructure of a society. With
this basic assumption, we may start to make a comprehensive presentation
of the anatomy of Philippine politics.
However, we cannot really make a profound critique of Philippine politics
if we do not grasp the historical principle that the masses of our people
in a semi-colonial and semi-feudal country can build up their own
political power in the countrywide in the course of a struggle entailing
the area-by-area and step-by-step elimination of the political and
economic power of the local exploiters and local bullies, without as yet
being in full control of the national economy. We keep this principle in
mind even as our topic is the anatomy of Philippine politics as it is now.
To know well a political system or a particular form of society, it is
necessary to comprehend the basic political contradictions that are at
work, emerging from basic contradictions of socio- economic classes even
if these should at first appear as being in equilibrium. If we try to make
a presentation of the Philippine political system without considering its
basic socio-economic contradictions, then we would be merely trying to
depict a lifeless skeleton seeming to have the quality of permanence. It
is the relentless conflict of classes in our society that keeps our
politics dynamic and impermanent. The very existence of class exploitation
gives away the fact of class struggle, no matter how suppressed or
obscured by one means or another, and also gives away the prospect of
social revolution, no matter how much it is restricted by the state power
of the ruling classes.
If we are interested in the anatomy of Philippine politics as if it were a
dead or passive structure, all that we have to do now is to read and
reread the Philippine Constitution. So, we would just say that we have a
republican and presidential form of government which has three basic
branches-executive, legislative and judicial-in equilibrium under a rule
of check and balance; that the Filipino electorate has the democratic
right to vote in and vote out men in the government; that electoral choice
is mainly provided by a two-party system ensured by a constitutional
provision on electoral inspectors; and that in-between and during
elections, the Filipino people are formally gifted with a bill of rights
which is supposed to allow them to act in and speak out their interests
collectively and individually.
But, in these turbulent times, we cannot afford to be naive and
superficial. We cannot refer dogmatically to formal rights and say that
sure enough we have democracy in this country. We have to investigate the
national and social reality. Especially at a time that more and more
people are getting dissatisfied with the political system and its
political processes, it becomes more compelling in our part to look into
the most vital struggles that are now severely straining the ability of
the system to contain. In other words, we have now to see Philippine
politics in the light of fundamental issues and demands that divide social
classes and political aggrupations daily driven on the course of
irreconcilable disagreement or conflict.
THE CLASS BASIS OF POLITICAL TENDENCIES AND TRENDS
We have to have a clear perception and knowledge of the economic classes
within our semi-colonial and semi-feudal society. Their basic demands are
of a political character, involving relations of members within the same
class, relations between classes, relations within the nation as a whole
and relations with other nations. Political tendencies, trends, issues and
possibilities are founded on these classes existing and operating within
Philippine society. What can sustain a political movement or a political
system is a definite economic class or an alliance of economic classes
that have certain interests or that have certain aspirations and demands.
It is not possible, in a class-divided society like that of the
Philippines, for all classes to have common or similar interests to
protect and advance. The fact is that some classes are united against
other classes because of a basic contradiction of interests. Thus, the
diametrical opposition of basic political standpoints.
With regard to the basic struggle for national democracy to which all
patriotic Filipinos should be committed, the entire range of social
classes in the Philippines is divided into two camps. There is the camp of
those classes who wish to achieve the completion of the
national-democratic revolution and there is the opposite camp of those
classes interested in the perpetuation of imperialist and feudal power in
this country.
The masses of workers and peasants, the intelligentsia, the petty
property-owners and nationalist businessmen are interested in the success
of the struggle for national democracy.
On the other hand, the imperialists, their comprador agents, their
landlord and corrupt bureaucrat allies would rather have semi-colonial and
semi-feudal Philippines which they can easily exploit.
The Filipino workers who are enlightened with the most advanced ideas of
this era are interested in a national democracy in the Philippines because
this rejects and supplants the political power of foreign monopoly
capitalism and landlordism. Because this means actual sovereignty and
genuine independence, Filipino- owned industrialization, a thoroughgoing
land reform and the opportunity of the working class to establish and
build up the democratic power of the people and lead in the march to
social revolution and progress.
The Filipino peasants are interested in national democracy in the same way
that the workers are, but they are most interested in national democracy
because it breaks feudal chains and provides them the substance of
freedom.
All other patriotic segments of the population are interested in national
democracy because they are adversely affected by the ill state of the
nation and principally by the prevailing interests of the big foreign
businessmen, the compradors, the landlords and the corrupt bureaucrats.
The State as an Instrument of Ruling Class Interests
The present state in the Philippines signifies the long-drawn rule of
certain classes over other classes. The class interests that today dictate
the state are those of the imperialists, compradors and the landlords. The
theory is bandied about that it is the "ordinary citizens" who have
created the present state and who can use it as their own instrument. But
this is contrary to the fact that the state is merely the executor of the
will and interests of those exploitative classes ruling our society today.
A time has yet to come when the nature and character of the state is
changed by the national-democratic movement. The present state is an
instrument of the ruling classes to command order and submission to the
existing class relations in Philippine society even if these are
disadvantageous and antagonistic to the class interests of the vast
majority of the people. The power of the state to command lies in its
essence as an institution of violence. What does the state have the armed
forces, the police, courts and prisons for, if not to keep the peace and
order that preserves a particular social order? When all suasive means
have failed to mislead or appease the oppressed people, the coercive power
of the state is ruthlessly used by the exploiting classes to pacify the
national and social unrest that arises.
The nature and character of the present state in the Philippines can
easily be seen also in the regular operations of its civil bureaucracy,
its executive, legislative and judicial branches. Look at the unfair
executive agreements and treaties made with the U.S. government. Look at
the programme of the government and the kind of contracts it expedites.
Look at the prevailing interests of congressmen and senators in their
legislative deliberations. Look at the pitiful common man who cannot
afford the cost of litigation in courts. There are many more things we can
bring up that can expose which classes are the subject of the pacifactory
or concessionary efforts of the state which is primarily interested in the
preservation of the ruling classes.
We have today a state that serves imperialist and feudal interest and
opposes the national democratic interests of the Filipino people. And yet
it is still pontificated that the Philippine government is a government of
the people, by the people and for the people.
The Elections and Political Parties
The elections are supposed to be a decisive process or measure by which
the Philippine political system is to be established and preserved.
Elections are supposed to allow the people to choose their representatives
democratically. But the question that should be propounded by serious
students of the Philippine political system is this: Is the electorate
actually allowed to make a real and fundamental choice, say, a choice
between political parties and candidates who stand for national democracy
and those who stand for opposite interests?
It is superficial to say that a basic political choice is made possible to
the electorate with the mere existence of two parties. A study of the
platforms and the principal driving forces behind the Nacionalista Party
and the Liberal Party shows that they are basically the same.
Political campaigns require heavy financial support. It is standard
operating procedure for the two parties to collect from moneyed interests,
imperialist comprador and landlord. Nationalist businessmen give modest
financial support to the political parties and candidates but they are not
as hard-driving a force as the imperialists and the compradors who have
the greater capability for financing electoral campaigns.
The basic similarity of standpoint of the two parties is such that big
vested interests play it safe by giving financial support to both parties
and all candidates. Whoever wins, it is still the vested interests that
prevail.
It is not only the fact that the electors go through the motion of voting
for their candidates that create the illusion that a free and democratic
choice of leadership is possible in this country. It is also the fact that
there are so many politicians who style themselves as men of humble
origins and as men of the masses. And yet it is clear that they run for
public offices because they themselves are members or running dogs of the
exploiting classes.
A percipient study of the Philippine politics would reveal that to become
a mayor in a municipality, one must ordinarily have the support of the
landowners who dictate blocs of passive tenant votes and that of the
municipal bourgeoisie which includes the town professionals and the barrio
captains who are usually rich peasants as ward leaders.
To run for congressman or governor, one has to get the same kind of
classes support that a mayoralty candidate gets on a smaller scale. Within
the province, the issues fought out skirt the problem of land although the
basic class demand of the majority peasant population in the province is
land reform. If it is ever mentioned in electoral campaign, what is
skirted is the necessity for the poor peasants or the sharecroppers to
band themselves together as a political force independent of the political
control by rich peasants and the landlords themselves.
On the national scale, the politicians play it safe by not antagonizing
the big vested interests who are potential or tested campaign contributors
or partners in business. The big conservative politicians play to the tune
of the ruling class interests. They often do not mind when they discover
that certain corporations and business groups put money on both sides of
the electoral campaign unless the disparity of support amounts to
"non-neutrality".
The interests of the Filipino "middle class" may at times be orated upon
by certain politicians and this would make them appear "progressive". But
all their words are meant to "reconcile" opposing class interests.
The Nacionalista Party and the Liberal P{arty today monopolize the
elections as the organizational instruments of basically the same vested
class interests. Even the Progressive Party of the Philippines, which
apparently received a great deal of financial support from conservative
sources, has shown its utter incapability to beat the electoral machinery
of the Liberal Party and Nacionalista Party.
The stability of the two-party system will for sometime signify the
stability of the regime of the ruling classes. But let us watch with the
keenest interest the growing realization by the people that the NP and LP
are no different from each other and are not wholesome for the masses of
the people. The masses are beginning to demand a new alternative party,
truly different from the well-established conservative political parties.
They are beginning to see the elections as a farce, as a mere occasion for
the vested interests at the top to give the electorate the false illusion
of democratic choice from among a highly limited range of personalities
who have no basic political differences but who agree on taking personal
advantage of their public offices, the winning of which is so expensive
that the normal outcome consists of corrupt bureaucrats.
The Making of "Public Opinion" and Political Power
Outside of the party machinery and outside of the government facilities
that an incumbent government official can use to make his political
campaign, there are other instruments which can be used to make "public
opinion" and build up political power. There are the mass media and the
mass organizations that are always dictated upon by a definite class or
some definite classes. These are intermediate instruments in the building
of political power and influence either within the established political
system or without and against it.
The mass media, newspapers, radio, TV, movies and others are accessible
mainly to political personalities and parties that can afford to shoulder
the necessary fees and are in a social position to influence the slant of
information, programmes and opinion campaigns. The ownership of the mass
media is, in the first place, in the hands of corporations that are
controlled and influenced businesswise by imperialist and reactionary
interests.
It takes not a few millions of pesos to finance an electoral campaign
under the Philippine political system. There is a curtain of finance that
shuts out the political organizations of the working class and peasantry
from having an "equal" chance to utilize the reactionary mass media.
The big corporations are themselves organizations of the big vested
interests that can exert a great deal of political influence, especially
among their stockholders and among employees who may not as yet be
radicalized. These corporations are in turn organized into chambers of
commerce and advertisers groups which serve as important lobby groups.
Individual big businessmen are leading members of civic clubs, like the
Rotary, Lions, Jaycees and other American-style clubs, which include a
good number of social-climbing professionals and managers. All these
seemingly harmless aggrupations serve as contact points not only for
business connections but also for political combinations.
There are organizations of landlords, whether they are sugar and coconut
exporters or rice and corn dealers. There are also organizations of big
loggers and mining magnates. They serve as political pressure groups on
the government, political parties and personalities. Their scope of power
is both national and local.
The "middle class" has the professionals' organizations, highly localized
merchants' associations and community clubs. These serve as channels for
"public opinion" from the top. Members of the middle social strata have
the special talent for echoing opinion that they derive from the mass
media. They are newspaper subscribers, TV watchers, and radio listeners.
When it comes to opinion of national significance, they merely echo the
dominant going opinion in the mass media. Through their mass organizations
they take the initiative of adopting some collective opinion but this
opinion is usually of limited scope and, unwittingly, they merely apply
locally the "public opinion" that the big political interests at the
center of communications are trying to spread.
At the lower levels of our society, there are the trade union in factories
and mines, peasant association in farms, the official barrio councils and
neighborhood clubs. But these aggrupations of workers and peasants have
various class tendencies.
Among the barrio councils in the Philippines today, the vast majority are
still controlled by rich and upper middle peasants who oftentimes are
political agents of the landlords and the municipal bourgeoisie. Among
peasant associations, there are those controlled by landlords themselves
or by their political agents. There are those controlled by rich and
middle peasants associations which are controlled by poor peasants and
lower middle peasants and are well-led.
In city slums and in the farms, there are special organizations controlled
by agencies of the United States government and the Philippine government
and by religious corporations. They play the role of restraining the
masses from taking part in any serious national democratic movement.
As in the case of the mass media, class analysis must be made in the case
of mass organizations. We have to stick to class standpoint in studying
even the supposedly lower-class organizations.
The type of mass organizations predominating in the Philippines now is
also part of the curtain alienating the true interests of the masses from
those of the native oligarchy and imperialism. This curtain also serves to
block off the political advance of the working class and the peasantry.
The predominating mass organizations which maintain basic allegiance to
the ruling class interests are purveyors of wrong ideas misleading the
masses.
For the political power of the masses to develop, the working class and
the peasantry must recognize their own class interests and struggle for
them; and establish and develop mass organizations, a system of
public-opinion making and a political party that would genuinely struggle
for their own class interests.
|
 |