Friday, May 14, 2010

Aquino Platform: a Step Back?

Well, the Noynoy Campaign site is now defunct. They only left a thank you page and a promise to transition to the official site of the President. One of the casualties of this move is his revised platform. What's funny is the 404 page claims that corruption caused the platform to vanish. I wonder if the web admins realize what they're implying.

I hope that platform returns soon otherwise we only have this old platform to look towards. Actually, calling the old document a platform stretches the definition. There are no action plans. Without concrete measures all we have is a wish list. The expected outcomes are suspect given the vague statement of the nation's problems. It makes you wonder if the candidate really thought through the situation. Like I said before, this won't cut it.

The move also leaves a bad impression: that Noynoy thinks winning is the end goal. Once that's been achieved, there's no need for a platform because solving the country's problems is not on the agenda. Sounds bad right?

Transitions are always a confusing time. Lets hope things clear up; the sooner the better.

Noynoy's Platform

 I am placing this here for posterity.

 Noynoy’s Platform

A National Leadership in Need of Transformational Change
  • Its legitimacy is under question;
  • It persecutes those who expose the truth about its illegitimacy and corruption;
  • It stays in power by corrupting individuals and institutions;
  • It confuses the people with half-truths and outright lies;
  • It rewards, rather than punishes, wrongdoing;
  • It offers no lasting solutions for the many problems of the country;
  • It weakens the democratic institutions that hold our leaders accountable.
  • It hinders our local governments from delivering basic services;
  • It has no vision of governance beyond political survival and self- enrichment.

A People Crying out for Change
  • Corruption robs our children of their protection, nutrition and education.
  • Corruption destroys our families and communities.
  • Corruption steals from our farmers and workers.
  • Corruption deters businessmen from investing in our economy.
  • This has eroded our spirit as individuals, as communities, as a people.
  • We have lost trust in the democratic institutions we so courageously re-established after the dictatorship.
  • Our proven capacity for collective outrage and righteous resistance has been weakened.
  • We have ceased to depend on the patriotism and civic engagement that used to animate many of our efforts.
  • We have become divided and alienated, focusing only on ourselves and on our individual pursuits.
  • Our moral faculties as a people have been paralyzed.
  • We have retreated into a dark world of self-absorption and cynicism. Our collective despair has reached its lowest point.
Then finally, the gift of Light
Cory Aquino passed on to the next life. From our sadness, we awakened to a shaft of light cutting through the darkness. She left the
Filipinos a legacy of selfless love for country and people. Filipinos’ connection with each other was rekindled.
In death, she enabled us to hope again for decent government. The millions who connected with Cory at her funeral represented something more than euphoria, sentiment or transient emotions. They represented the reverent memory of a good leader in the past and the firm hope of having a similarly good leader in the future.
A People’s Campaign of Renewed Hope…
  • Anchored on Ninoy’s and Cory’s legacy of change through the ways of democracy
  • Embraces the qualities of integrity, humility and trust-worthiness in public leadership
  • Recognizes the absence of these qualities in government as a major cause of widespread poverty, misery and despair.
The Vision for the Philippines:
A country with…
  1. A re-awakened sense of right and wrong, through the living examples of our highest leaders;
  2. An organized and widely-shared rapid expansion of our economy through a government dedicated to honing and mobilizing our people’s skills and energies as well as the responsible harnessing of our natural resources;
  3. A collective belief that doing the right thing does not only make sense morally, but translates into economic value as well;
  4. Public institutions rebuilt on the strong solidarity of our society and its communities.
Our Mission:
We will start to make these changes first in ourselves—by doing the right things, by giving value to excellence and integrity and rejecting mediocrity and dishonesty, and by giving priority to others over ourselves.
We will make these changes across many aspects of our national life.
A Commitment to Transformational Leadership:
  • 1. From a President who tolerates corruption to a President who is the nation’s first and most determined fighter of corruption.
  • 2. From a government that merely conjures economic growth statistics that our people know to be unreal to a government that prioritizes jobs that empower the people and provide them with opportunities to rise above poverty.
  • 3. From relegating education to just one of many concerns to making education the central strategy for investing in our people, reducing poverty and building national competitiveness.
  • 4. From treating health as just another area for political patronage to recognizing the advancement and protection of public health, which includes responsible parenthood, as key measures of good governance.
  • 5. From justice that money and connections can buy to a truly impartial system of institutions that deliver equal justice to rich or poor.
Economy
  • 6. From government policies influenced by well-connected private interests to a leadership that executes all the laws of the land with impartiality and decisiveness.
  • 7. From treating the rural economy as just a source of problems, to recognizing farms and rural enterprises as vital to achieving food security and more equitable economic growth, worthy of re-investment for sustained productivity.
  • 8. From government anti-poverty programs that instill a dole-out mentality to well-considered programs that build capacity and create opportunity among the poor and the marginalized in the country.
  • 9. From a government that dampens private initiative and enterprise to a government that creates conditions conducive to the growth and competitiveness of private businesses, big, medium and small.
  • 10. From a government that treats its people as an export commodity and a means to earn foreign exchange, disregarding the social cost to Filipino families to a government that creates jobs at home, so that working abroad will be a choice rather than a necessity; and when its citizens do choose to become OFWs, their welfare and protection will still be the government’s priority.
Government Service
  • 11. From Presidential appointees chosen mainly out of political accommodation to discerning selection based on integrity, competence and performance in serving the public good.
  • 12. From demoralized but dedicated civil servants, military and police personnel destined for failure and frustration due to inadequate operational support to professional, motivated and energized bureaucracies with adequate means to perform their public service missions.
Gender Equality
  • 13. From a lack of concern for gender disparities and shortfalls, to the promotion of equal gender opportunity in all spheres of public policies and programs.
Peace & Order
  • 14. From a disjointed, short-sighted Mindanao policy that merely reacts to events and incidents to one that seeks a broadly supported just peace and will redress decades of neglect of the Moro and other peoples of Mindanao.
Environment
  • 15. From allowing environmental blight to spoil our cities, where both the rich and the poor bear with congestion and urban decay to planning alternative, inclusive urban developments where people of varying income levels are integrated in productive, healthy and safe communities.
  • 16. From a government obsessed with exploiting the country for immediate gains to the detriment of its environment to a government that will encourage sustainable use of resources to benefit the present and future generations.
This platform is a commitment to change that Filipinos can depend on. With trust in their leaders, everyone can work and build a greater future together.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

End of Elections 2010

Despite setbacks, rumors and equipment malfunctions the elections managed to push through. On the second day nearly all precincts have been tabulated and it looks like a landslide win for Senator Noynoy Aquino. Pretty much everyone's conceded except for Erap and Nick Perlas. Erap is currently at second place and Nick is hoping for a miracle.

Thankfully this election was not as badly marred by irregularities and violence. Some Poll officials joke that this was a pretty boring year. I'm sure they and the poll watcher are just as relieved as the rest of us.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

JC de los Reyes

JC de los Reyes is truly an alternative candidate. For starters he wants to alter current philippine culture. His model apparently is drawn from Catholic Teachings.

If there's anything I like its this statement from Ang Kapatiran's Passport to a New Philippines:

A post-evaluation of EDSA I and EDSA II shows that while we
have succeeded in throwing the undesirables out of power, we
have failed to give the successors a “list of our clear aspirations”
for them to achieve for us.
Despite all the People Power Revolutions, we've failed to create a consensus as to what we want for the country. If we don't know where to go we'll get nowhere fast.

The party proposes to change the Filipino as a means of changing the Philippines.

Ang Kapatiran openly declares their adherance to the social teachings of the catholic church. If you're allergic to religion, leave now.

Just as they've said they want to change the behavior of the people. Many of their platform items address this. They want to abolish gambling, create a gunless society, eschew the glorification of sex and violence. They plan on raising savings rates. Pretty lofty and admirable goals.

While their end goal is clear, the action plans are not mentioned in many crucial items. Take savings rate. How do they plan on increasing this when a lot of people have barely enough to survive? Are they imposing forced savings schemes on productive workers? Will OFWs get their remittances appropriated? We can come up with some scary scenarios simply because the plan is not articulated.

On the other hand, some other plans are actually fairly simple and should not pose problems. Prohibiting officials from writing regular columns or having their pictures plastered alongside government projects might only take an executive order.

If we've historically lacked a clear vision to guide action I think Ang Kapatiran suffers the reverse condition. There's a clear vision with no visible means of getting there.

You may  find it strange that I have yet to speak about their candidate. Given the methods, JC de los Reyes is peripheral to the party goal.  He is simply considered the most qualified member to run for the presidential post. If people find that strange its because that is how party politics operate. We are simply unaccustomed to this.

In any event he seems to be a capable leader having experience in local government and in business. I just wish he had used a different company name than Lego Brick. It gives off the wrong impression.