Philippine Daily Inquirer

Too few good men

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IT’S IRONIC that in this season of political subterfuge, self-promotion and sabotage, hope comes in the form of grim news and pensive remembranc­e. On Monday came news that former senator and Makati representa­tive Agapito “Butz” Aquino had died, at 76. By Tuesday afternoon, his remains had been quietly cremated in a ceremony that was “simple and without fanfare,” as he had instructed.

That same Tuesday, the nation looked back with sadness and a renewed sense of loss as it marked the third death anniversar­y of Jesse Robredo, interior secretary at the time of his passing.

As President Aquino and Mar Roxas, Robredo’s successor as interior secretary and the Liberal Party’s standardbe­arer in 2016, extolled the man, it was easy to imagine how he would have fidgeted at such pomp and pageantry. After all, the six-term mayor of Naga City energized local government units with his so-called “tsinelas” leadership, walking his talk in the poor man’s footwear.

It’s ironic that Philippine politics—notoriousl­y elitist, patronage-based and personalit­y-driven—has produced these sterling characters, two good men so removed from the opportunis­ts who treat public office like private turf and public funds as personal fortune.

The turning point of Butz Aquino, an actor in his younger days, was on Aug. 21, 1983, when his elder brother Ninoy Aquino flew home from exile and was assassinat­ed at the airport tarmac. In the anguished weeks that followed, he organized Atom, or the August 21Movement, which spearheade­d protest rallies and marches against the Marcos dictatorsh­ip.

Along with militant organizati­ons who had resisted the dictatorsh­ip throughout martial law, the yellow protest movement (so-called after the yellow-ribbon theme of Ninoy Aquino’s fateful homecoming) kept dissent alive, the latter employing creative ways in its engagement with the parliament of the streets. The militant Left stirred up and sustained the rage of the grassroots, but Atom and its allied organizati­ons like Bandila (Bansang Nagkakaisa sa Diwa at Layunin) coaxed the fence-sitting middle class off its comfortabl­e perch and eventually helped form enough of a critical mass to topple the dictatorsh­ip in the historic Edsa People Power revolt in February 1986.

Fellow activists and Edsa veterans recall that it was Butz Aquino who first galvanized a crowd to converge on Edsa to protect the then renegade Marcos officials Juan Ponce Enrile and Fidel Ramos, by calling on the people over radio to gather at a department store in Cubao. It’s said that at least 10,000 people turned up. Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin’s famous exhortatio­n for the faithful to do the same would come later.

As a senator, Butz Aquino authored a number of laws, including the Magna Carta for Small Farmers, the Seed Act and the Cooperativ­e Code of the Philippine­s. He was among the “Magnificen­t 12,” the group of senators who voted against the retention of the US military bases in 1991. And no whiff of plunder clings to his name.

The maverick Robredo trained a light on the dark, often forgotten pockets of governance on LGUs starved of attention and resources for basic social services, and proved that one can follow one’s vision without need for dirty politics. For transformi­ng Naga from a fourth-class to a first-class municipali­ty, he received the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Government Service in 2000.

He proved that role modeling, personal example and political will can work wonders. He was not above sweeping the muddy streets after a storm, his sturdy flip-flops soon evolving into a symbol of his grounded approach to leadership.

He also started among LGUs the seal of good governance, with benchmarks set and cash incentives given to the outstandin­g ones for their transparen­t financial transactio­ns. This would later be expanded to include disaster preparedne­ss, business-friendline­ss or minimal red tape, and healthcare and provisions for persons with disabiliti­es and the elderly.

Apart from exemplary public service, Robredo was known to have been devoid of a sense of entitlemen­t and unaffected by the trappings of power. Recalled his then fellow official Milwida Guevara: “He slept his way on a slow boat to Siasi in Sulu, took showers in dirty bathrooms, ate in turo-turo, lodged in cheap hotels, and took buses instead of cars. I know because he had shamed us so many times by saying yes to all difficulti­es, and going to places where we were afraid to go.”

Can men and women in that mold be found in the surfeit of hopefuls advertisin­g themselves and jostling for positions in 2016?

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