We couldnt resist the comparisons: if we had a race as tight as the one in the United States, by now there would be rallies in the streets, with opposing camps lobbing shrimp paste or bagoong bombs at each other. Every senator and congressman would be shooting his or her mouth off, and both sides would be crying poll fraud. Every survey firm would jump into the fray, announcing conflicting results and adding to the confusion. There could be riots and even some fatalities in drunken brawls.
Joseph Estradas rise to power has made national leaders consider ways of picking the head of government with more discernment, without subverting democracy or thwarting the peoples will. There are those who can barely contain their frustration that the nations destiny for the next three generations may be in the hands of show biz fans and male chauvinist school dropouts enamored with a fellow kanto boy.
You can be sure tomorrows rally in Rizal Park will have a huge turnout, considering that the El Shaddai and Iglesia Ni Cristo will be there. They voted for Erap and, like long-suffering First Lady Loi, are standing by their man. Surely Bro. Mike Velarde of El Shaddai will never admit that he has been a dismal failure as the Presidents spiritual adviser, that he is partly to blame for the national crises we now face.
With the current Malacañang occupant, even two years seems like an eternity for us, and the thought of four more years is a nightmare. If President Erap hangs on to power till 2004, that popular text joke may come true: the exchange rate will finally become one is to one one dollar for one kilo of peso bills, probably in thousand-peso denomination.
There are those who are now mulling a return to a four-year presidential term with one re-election, the same as in the US. At least if the masses pick a corrupt and greedy moron with many families to feed and shelter simply because hes popular, four years isnt too heavy a national cross to bear. If, on the other hand, his on-the-job training turns out to be productive, if he reforms and becomes an accomplished chief executive, then re-election will be his bonus, a reaffirmation of the peoples satisfaction with his administration.
Sen. Aquilino Pimentel Jr., on the other hand, is pushing for a shift from presidential to parliamentary system, where the prime minister can be unseated anytime by a no-confidence vote of his peers.
But any change in the present system will naturally require amending the Constitution, so forget it. Theres enough unrest in the streets without people fighting over Charter change again. In the meantime, were at the mercy of numbers games in rallies, in Congress, in elections.