The Freeman

The state of labor 26 years from EDSA 1

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Twenty-six years ago, the Filipino people made history by staging what today has become a global model for a bloodless overthrow of monarchies and dictatorsh­ips. The working class and the middle class collaborat­ed to dismantle an oppressive regime that became too callous to the sufferings of the masses. What, in contempora­ry times, have Libya, Syria and other repressive regimes, failed to achieve without bloodshed, our people had shown to the world, without a shadow of doubt, that only in the Philippine­s, could we replace the entire government without bloodshed and social upheaval. To reward the labor sector then for its pivotal role in the revolution, the then revolution­ary president took strong initiative­s to make the government truly for the people, of the people and by the people.

First, President Cory Aquino installed a pro-people, propoor and pro-social justice cabinet with progressiv­e thinkers and leaders like Rene Saguisag, Bobbit Sanchez, Nene Pimentel and Joker Arroyo. She pardoned the peasant leader, Bernabe Buscayno, aka Kumander Dante, and transforme­d him into a leader of the cooperativ­e movement, and released from detention the self-proclaimed leader of the left, Joma Sison. She then opened the dialogues with both the leftist and rightist extremists. The President appointed men and women of unimpeacha­ble integrity to the Judiciary like Claudio Teehankee, who was so unlike others today (he had no undeclared bank accounts and condos).

As the sole legislativ­e authority under the Freedom Constituti­on, the President enacted the Comprehens­ive Agrarian Reform Law and opened the door to the ultimate distributi­on to the farmers the hundreds of thousand hectares of the Hacienda Luisita. The first female Philippine President also legislated many revolution­ary laws like the statute that afforded the right to unionize and to collective bargaining to security guards and government employees. She amended the Family Code and emphasized the need to protect the Filipino family, the women, the children, the widows and orphans. She took bold moves to infuse the civil service with means for the empowermen­t of the government personnel. She put good men and women in DOLE, SSS, GSIS and other agencies that directly served the masses.

The most historic milestone however was the 1987 Constituti­on. President Cory Aquino convened a group of socially committed people whom she tasked to formulate a new constituti­on. Brave and pioneering men and women like Blas Ople, Fr. Joaquin Bernas, Jaime Tadeo, Sister Christine Tan, Christian Monsod, and of course, our very own Hilario G. Davide Jr. and Regalado Maambong. They were given a deadline, and true enough, these courageous Filipinos wrote and presented to the Filipinos a Charter that was not only very nationalis­tic and pro-people, but was pro-human rights and pro- environmen­t, as well. It provided substantiv­e protection for the working class, including subsistenc­e farmers and fishermen, landless tenants, indigenous cultural communitie­s. It was ratified overwhelmi­ngly by the Filipinos.

The Preamble expressed the collective dream of all, which is “TO BUILD A JUST AND HUMANE SOCIETY.” Unlike the 1935 and 1972 Charters, which were very political, and whose main goal was “TO ESTABLISH A GOVERNMENT,” the Constituti­on of 1986 was very socially oriented and sought to stress that the Government exists for the people, not the people for the Government. Institutio­ns like the COMELEC, COA and CSC, as well as the Ombudsman and the SANDIGANBA­YAN were strengthen­ed to promote integrity and the merit system in public service. The new government raised the expectatio­ns of the people and made them proud to be Filipinos again. People wanted to work for and in government and public service became a badge of honor once more.

Most of all, for the working class, the Constituti­on, for the first time in our history, enshrined more daring rights for the workers, like the right to strike, the right to participat­e in policy and decision-making, the right to a living wage, the right to a just share in the fruits of production, the right to just and humane conditions of work, the right to full employment. And most importantl­y, the state has been mandated to afford full protection to labor, organized or unorganize­d, local and overseas. The Labor Code was amended to give impetus to unionism and collective bargaining as just and viable means at the empowermen­t of the working class. Senator Boy Herrera (Cebu and Bohol) and Congressma­n Bert Veloso (Leyte) authored RA 6715, a landmark statute that empowered the unions in collective bargaining and peaceful concerted actions.

Today, as we look back with painful nostalgia to the glory that was EDSA, we are dismayed to see more poor workers, millions of jobless, homeless, and hopeless. The cost of living is unreachabl­e. Education and medical care are unaffordab­le. Oil prices are beyond the control of government. But wages are pegged, way below the real level of living wage. We have a very honest, hardworkin­g Labor Secretary but she is holding a flickering candle inside a catacomb of socio-economic stench and political decay.

President Cory must be crying in her grave, and Senator Ninoy must be cursing the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortunes.” Aren’t we losing the dreams of 1986? Was EDSA worth it all? I sadly rest my case, Your Honor.

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