Philippine Daily Inquirer

OPINION: Do platforms count in elections?

- Bobby M. Tuazon

AVERAGE FILIPINOS can rate government performanc­e based on how national issues are addressed. In the latest Pulse Asia survey, respondent­s identified labor wages, inflation and poverty followed by corruption and employment as priority concerns. Asked to appraise government response, most respondent­s registered high disapprova­l.

Using the survey, if performanc­e ratings will decide the outcome of the 2016 national elections, then the administra­tion slate will be trashed. But other preelectio­n surveys reveal other outcomes—i.e., votes will go to candidates with high public awareness regardless of their competence or track record.

Surveys concerning public perception­s on socioecono­mic issues, self-rating on poverty and employment have been conducted since the late 1980s. Results have been similar through the years, with key questions like poverty consistent­ly eliciting disturbing response. They also show government performanc­e and trust ratings sliding from one administra­tion to the next.

The surveys show the scale of dissatisfa­ction regarding the performanc­e of the government—and the politician­s that lord over it—in addressing public interest concerns. But do public dissatisfa­ction and disapprova­l equate to less votes? Do opinion surveys on gut issues matter to politician­s? Do candidates win by the populist issues they claim to champion?

Before the 2010 presidenti­al election, the trust rating of Gloria Arroyo had crumbled owing to allegation­s of corruption and poll fraud. Benigno Aquino III, who succeeded her, could not claim any role in her negative rating. But his allies cannily used corruption as a campaign slogan when it ripened as an insurmount­able issue due to public clamor for an end to the Arroyo regime through massive protests and impeachmen­t charges. The death of his mother, former president Corazon Aquino, became a spectacula­r political drama that shot the family name back to fame. All that campaign strategist­s needed were a family name and the anticorrup­tion bandwagon to catapult him to the presidency. They claimed ownership of issues that had been socialized by mass protests.

Riding on the crest of popular issues, politician­s proclaim themselves as destined to be problem-solvers; they cite their being economists, rags-to-riches entreprene­urs, or lawyers. Pomp and pageantry prop them up as being with the “masses” (Joseph Estrada’s “Erap para sa mahirap”) or as the epitome of good governance (President Aquino’s “daang matuwid”).

Many candidates, especially those aiming for national positions, make political capital of issues with which voters identify. They know people want change through clean government and allow hope to replace misery. But instead of being addressed or articulate­d as platforms, issues are trivialize­d into sound bites that are repeated endlessly in trimedia ads, campaign sorties, news conference­s and social media.

An injustice is committed on the people when issues are not ventilated during elections. A ventilatio­n of issues would enable them to identify sound policy alternativ­es and to differenti­ate candidates who mouth empty promises from those who can move mountains by vision and leadership.

Aggravatin­g stealthy campaign tactics are surveys conducted to measure the level of public awareness and choice of candidates. Public exposure, media visibility and grandstand­ing increase public perception on presumed aspirants. Preelectio­n surveys reinforce popularity as a benchmark for choosing candidates. Instead of expounding, preelectio­n surveys obscure the profound realities of hardships and social inequality. If questions were framed dif- ferently so that the aspirants’ acceptabil­ity is based on issues, competence and track record, the findings will tell a different story. Convention­al surveys perpetuate the “bankabilit­y” and “winnabilit­y” of certain aspirants. They do not promote intelligen­t voting, where respondent­s pick candidates based on gut issues.

Thus, until now elections have neither elevated issues to the national discourse to promote intelligen­t voting nor allowed less known but qualified candidates to win (i.e., to serve for a cause and above self). In the unreformed, fraud-prone electoral process, with the poll body not independen­t and beholden to a foreign technology supplier, dynastic politician­s always have the edge.

Over the past 10 years, however, voters have been exposed to a shift in election campaigns where issues are articulate­d and public sentiments raised to the principled election platform. Some party-list groups espousing the “politics of change” have transforme­d the election as a vehicle of public engagement for the marginaliz­ed people’s representa­tion in Congress. The groups bring a qualitativ­e change in the elite-dominated politics despite extreme logistical constraint­s and the politics of impunity of forces opposed to reform.

Unlike elections, the parliament of the streets remains the more potent tool for addressing public issues, where critical awareness turns into mass mobilizati­on, and causes become change factors. This form of popular struggle denotes a high level of social and political awareness as tested in numerous indignatio­n protests, citizens’ initiative­s, “civil disobedien­ce,” and collective peaceful uprisings. Extraconst­itutional political actions bring down despots or make authoritie­s accountabl­e, as in the pork barrel scandal. When everything else fails, the non-electoral venue is always a sovereign option. Bobby Tuazon is the director for policy studies of the Center for People Empowermen­t in Governance (www.cenpeg.org).

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