About this time last year, President Corazon Aquino told a most instructive
lie. Addressing the Filipino-Chinese Federated Chambers of Commerce on 9
March 1987, she described her appearance before them as a ‘homecoming,’
since her great-grandfather had been a poor immigrant from southeast
China’s Fukien province. [1] Doubtless her desperate need—given the
Philippines’ near-bankrupt economy and $28 billion external debt [2]—to inspire
feelings of solidarity and confidence among a powerful segment of Manila’s
business class made some embroidery understandable. But the truth is that
the President, born Corazon Cojuangco, is a member of one of the wealthiest
and most powerful dynasties within the Filipino oligarchy. Her grandfather,
putative son of the penniless immigrant, was Don Melecio Cojuangco, born
in Malolos, Central Luzon in 1871. A graduate of the Dominicans’ Colegio
de San Juan de Letran and the Escuela Normal, and a prominent agricultor
(i.e. hacendado) in the province of Tarlac, he was, in 1907, at the age of 36,
elected to the Philippine Assembly, the quasi-legislature established by the
American imperialists in that year. [3] One of his sons (Corazon’s uncle)
became Governor of Tarlac in 1941, another (her father, Don José) its
most prominent Congressman. In 1967, one of his grandsons (her
cousin), Eduardo ‘Danding’ Cojuangco, became Governor of Tarlac
with Ferdinand Marcos’s backing, and went on to count among the
most notorious of the Marcos cronies. Another grandson (her younger
brother), José ‘Peping’ Cojuangco, was in those days one of Tarlac’s
Congressmen, and is today again a Congressman—and one of the halfdozen
most powerful politicians in the country. Her marriage to Benigno
Aquino, Jr., at various periods Governor of Tarlac and Senator, linked
her to another key dynasty of Central Luzon. Benigno Aquino, Sr., had
been a Senator in the late American era and won lasting notoriety for
his active collaboration with the Japanese Occupation regime. At the
present time, one of her brothers-in-law, Agapito ‘Butz’ Aquino, is a
Senator, and another, Paul, the head of Lakas ng Bansa (one of the
three main ‘parties’ in her electoral coalition); an uncle-in-law, Herminio
Aquino, is a Congressman, as are Emigdio ‘Ding’ Tanjuatco (cousin),
and Teresita Aquino-Oreta (sister-in-law). [4] A maternal uncle, Francisco
‘Komong’ Sumulong, is majority floor-leader of the House of Representatives.
Nor was Corazon herself, on becoming President, quite the
simple housewife of her election broadsheets. For thirteen years she had
served as treasurer of the Cojuangco family holding company, which
controls a vast financial, agricultural, and urban real estate empire. [5]
Yet there is a core of truth in President Aquino’s claims of 9 March
1987 and this core offers a useful guide to understanding the peculiarities
of modern Philippine politics. The ‘-co’ suffix to her maiden name is
shared by a significant number of other dynasties within the national
oligarchy: Cuenco, Tanjuatco, Tiangco, Chioco, etc. It originates from
the Hokkienese k’o, a term of respect for older males; and it shows
that her family originated among the Chinese mestizos who bloomed
economically under the Spanish colonial regime and consolidated their
wealth with political power under the Americans. [6] It is the dominance
of this group which decisively marks off the Philippines from Spanish
America (mestizos frequently in power, but not Chinese mestizos) and
the rest of Southeast Asia (Chinese mestizos, indeed any mestizos,
removed from political power, with the ambiguous exception of Siam).
How did this happen?
Spanish Colonialism, the Church and the Mestizo Elite
By the time the Spanish arrived to conquer, in the 1560s, the empire
of Felipe II had reached its peak, and the islands, named after him,
were the last major imperial acquisition. Iberian energies were absorbed
in Europe and the Americas. The few Spaniards who did travel on to
the Philippines found little on the spot to satiate their avarice. The one
substantial source of rapid wealth lay not in mines but in commerce
with Imperial China. Manila quickly became the entrepôt for the ‘galleon
trade’, by which Chinese silks and porcelains were exchanged for
Mexican silver, to be resold, at colossal profit, across the Pacific and
eventually in Europe. It was not a business that required much acumen
or industry; one needed merely to be in Manila, to have the right
political connections, and to work out relationships with the Chinese
traders and artisans who flocked to the entrepôt. [7]
The absence of mines, and, until much later, of hacienda-based commercial
agriculture, meant not only a concentration of the Spanish in the
Manila area, but the lack of any sustained interest in massive exploitation
of the indigenous (or imported) populations as a labour force. At the
same time, the fact that the pre-Hispanic Philippines (in contrast to
Burma, Siam, Cambodia, Vietnam or Java) lacked any states with
substantial military or bureaucratic power meant that relatively little
force was required for the initial conquest and for its subsequent
consolidation. Small garrisons, scattered here and there, generally
sufficed. [8] Hence, in the provinces, to a degree unparalleled anywhere in
the Americas except Paraguay, Spanish power in the Philippines was
mediated through the Church.
The ardently Counter-Reformation clerics were fortunate in finding the
great bulk of the indigenous population to be ‘animists’. Buddhism and
Hinduism had not reached so far. And though Islam was sweeping in
from what today is Indonesia, it had consolidated itself only in parts of
Mindanao and adjacent southern islands. There it could be contained,
if never subdued. [9] Meanwhile a vast proselytization was launched
which has resulted in the contemporary Philippines being 90 per cent
Christian. [10] (Only in twentieth-century Korea has Christianization in
Asia been comparably successful.) The most noteworthy feature of this
campaign was that it was conducted, most arduously, not through the
medium of Spanish, but through the dozens of local languages. Till the
very end of the Spanish regime no more than 5 per cent of the local
population had any facility with the colonial language. Spanish never
became a pervasive lingua franca, as it did in the Americas, with the
result that, certainly in 1900, and to a lesser extent even today, the
peasants and fishermen in different parts of the archipelago could
not communicate with one another: only their rulers had a common
archipelago-wide speech.
Two other features of clerical dominion had lasting consequences for
the evolution of Philippine social structure. On the one hand, the
quarrelling Orders, parcelled among out the various islands by Felipe
II in the sixteenth century, pioneered commercial agriculture in the later
eighteenth century, at the prodding of Carlos III’s last, enlightened
governor, José Basco y Vargas (1777–87). It was they who built what,
in effect, were the first great haciendas. But these ‘conglomerates’
remained institutional, rather than family (dynastic) property. The friars
might liberally father children on local women, but they could not
marry the women, or bequeath property to the progeny. In due course,
the conquering Americans would dispossess the friars of their lands, as
the eighteenth-century Bourbons had dispossessed the Jesuits; and these
lands would fall like ripe mangoes into the hands of the likes of President
Aquino’s immediate ancestors. [11]1 The Philippines thus never had a
substantial criollo hacendado class.
On the other hand, the Church, at least in its early days, had serious
dreams of Christianizing the Celestial Empire. From the start it set
eagerly to converting those whom the Spanish generally referred to
as sangleys. [12] Usually unlucky with the itinerant fathers, they were
spectacularly successful with the children fathered on local mothers.
Spanish colonial law helped by assigning these children a distinct
juridical status as mestizos (in due course the word meant, typically,
not the offspring of Spaniards and ‘natives’, but of Chinese and local
women). Christianized through their mothers, organized in their own
guilds (gremios), compelled to avoid political transvestitism by wearing
a distinctive costume and coiffure, these children, and their in-marrying
further descendants, came to form a distinct stratum of colonial society.
In some cases, perhaps only the ‘-co’ suffix to their names betrayed
distant celestial origins.
They might, however, have remained a marginal and stigmatized group,
had it not been for the services of British imperialism. When Madrid
joined in the Seven Years’ War, London responded, inter alia, by
occupying Manila in 1762 and holding it for the next two years. The
local sangleys, frequent victims of Iberian extortion and contempt, rallied
to the invaders, who, when they retired, insouciantly left these humble
allies to the vengeful mercies of their erstwhile oppressors. Most were
then expelled from the Philippines, and further immigration was legally
barred for almost a century. Into the vacuum created by the expulsions
came the mestizos, who took over much of local trade, and began,
following the friars’ example, to move into small-scale latifundism. [13]
But they were, world-historically, several generations behind their
ladino confrères in the Americas. Among them there were still no
great rural magnates, no lawyers, few priests or prominent exporting
merchants; above all there was no intelligentsia. The Church, characteristically
reactionary, controlled printing and what miserable travesty of
educational institutions existed. Hence the great nationalist upheaval
that rocked the Americas between 1810 and 1840 had no counterpart
in the archipelago until the 1880s.
The nineteenth century, nonetheless, was kind to the mestizos. One
might have expected Spaniards to flock there after the loss of the
Americas. But the last galleon had sailed in 1811. Spain itself was racked
with ceaseless conflict. And Cuba was so much closer, so infinitely
richer. New people arrived, but the ones who mattered were not
Spaniards but Anglo-Saxons (British and Americans) and, once again,
sangleys, by now of course ‘Chinese’. In 1834 Manila was fully opened
to international trade, and Cebu City and other smaller ports followed
in due course; the ban on Chinese immigration was abolished. Chinese
discipline, austerity, and energy quickly drove the mestizos out of interisland
trade and small-scale urban business. On the other hand, the
internationalization of the economy after 1834 offered the mestizos—
now a quarter of a million strong in a four million population—new
opportunities in the countryside, in combination with British and
American trading houses. These businesses saw the possibilities in fullscale
commercialization of Philippine agriculture, and thus provided
the necessary capital and commercial outlets to permit the mestizos to
become, for the first time, real hacendados.
Nothing better illustrates this interplay between Anglo-Saxons, mestizos
and Chinese than the modern history of the island of Negros, today the
‘sugar island’ par excellence of the Philippines. Almost uninhabited
when British interests set up the first sugar mill there in 1857, the
island’s population had increased almost tenfold by the end of the
century, and 274 steam mills were in operation. [14] If the British supplied
capital, transoceanic transport, and markets, it was mestizos from Panay
and Cebu, threatened by the Chinese influx into the port-cities of Cebu
City and Iloilo, who managed the transfer of the peasant labour needed
to grow and process cane. In no time at all, these frontier capitalists
turned themselves, on the Spanish model, into ‘feudal’ hacendados in
the nouveau riche grand style. Thus, in the summer of 1987, when talk
of land reform was in the Manila air, Congresswoman Hortensia Starke,
one of the great sugar planters of Western Negros, could tell the
newspapers: ‘Your land is like your most beautiful dress, the one that
gives you good luck. If someone takes it from you, he only wants to
destabilize you, to undress you.’ [15]
The Growth of National Sentiment
The next step was to get educated. A serious education was not easy
to acquire in the colony, where the Church was violently opposed to
any inroads of liberalism from Madrid and controlled most local schools.
But the mestizos’ growing wealth, the internationalization of the economy,
and the steamship combined to make it possible for a number of
young mestizo males to study in Europe. Quickly termed ilustrados
(enlightened ones), they created during the 1880s the colony’s first real
intelligentsia, and began a cultural assault on benighted clericalism and,
later, on Spanish political domination. [16] No less significant was the fact
that, going to the same schools, reading the same books, writing for
the same journals, and marrying each other’s sisters and cousins, they
inaugurated the self-conscious consolidation of a pan-Philippine (except
for the Moro areas) mestizo stratum, where their elders had formed
dispersed clusters of provincial caciques. It was these people who, at
the very end of the century, began calling themselves ‘Filipinos’, a term
which up till then had designated only Spanish creoles. [17]
Wealthy and educated they might now be, but they had no political
power. Late nineteenth-century Spain was too feeble economically and
too divided politically to cope intelligently with rising mestizo demands.
Repression was the order of the day, culminating in the execution in
1896 of the brilliant mestizo polymath José Rizal, whose two great,
banned novels, Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo, mercilessly satiri-
zed, in Spanish, clerical reaction, secular misrule, and the frequent
opportunism and greed of his own class. [18]
Yet, not unsurprisingly, the inevitable insurrection did not originate
with the ilustrados. In 1892, Andrés Bonifacio, an impoverished autodidact
from the Manila artisanate, formed a secret revolutionary society
with the mellifluous Tagalog name of Kataastaasang Kagalanggalang na
Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan (The Highest and Most Respectable
Society of the Sons of the People—Katipunan for short), after the
Masonic model. [19] The Katipunan’s title already implied its reach and
limitations. The use of Tagalog, rather than a Spanish understood only
by a tiny elite, showed Bonifacio’s intention of appealing to, and
mobilizing, the indio masses. On the other hand, in those days Tagalog
was spoken only by the masses of Central and Southern Luzon, and
was incomprehensible in Mindanao, the Visayas, and even Ilocanospeaking
northwestern Luzon. [20] In August 1896, Bonifacio launched an
ill-prepared insurrection in Manila, which was quickly suppressed, but
the movement spread rapidly in the surrounding provinces, where
leadership was increasingly taken over by youthful mestizos. [21] Preoccupied
by the revolutionary movement that had broken out in Cuba in
February 1895, the Spanish fairly quickly gave up the struggle. In 1899,
a Republic of the Philippines was proclaimed under the leadership of
‘General’ Emilio Aguinaldo, a youthful caudillo from the province of
Cavite (who had had Bonifacio judicially murdered in 1897). [22]
It was, however, a fragile Republic, with more than a few similarities
to Bolívar’s abortive Gran Colombi´a. It had no purchase on the
Muslim southwest; parts of the Visayas seemed likely to go their own
independent way; and even in Luzon mestizo leadership was contested
by a variety of religious visionaries and peasant populists carrying on
the tradition of Bonifacio’s radicalism. [23] Moreover, the mestizo generals
themselves (who included the grandfathers of both Ferdinand Marcos
and Benigno Aquino, Jr.) began to follow the pattern of their American
forebears, by setting themselves up as independent caudillos. Had it not
been for William McKinley, one might almost say, the Philippines in
the early twentieth century could have fractured into three weak,
caudillo-ridden states with the internal politics of nineteenth-century
Venezuela or Ecuador.
But the McKinley Administration, egged on by William Randolph
Hearst, went to war with Spain in April 1898, claiming sympathy with
Filipino (and Cuban) revolutionaries. A week later Admiral Dewey
destroyed the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay; and by the Treaty of Paris
signed in December, the Philippines was ceded to the Americans. From
that point, ‘pacification’ replaced ‘sympathy’. By 1901 Aguinaldo had
surrendered, with most other caciques following suit, though peasant
resistance continued in some areas until 1910.
US Colonization and the National Oligarchy
The American colonization changed everything. [24] In the first place, it
ensured the political unification of the archipelago by smashing, often
with great brutality, all opposition. [25] Even the Muslim areas, which
Spain had never wholly subdued, were fully subjected to Manila, thereby
probably losing their last chance at sovereign independence. Secondly,
it vastly improved the economic position of the mestizos. The American
regime decided to expropriate much (about 400,000 acres) of the rich
agricultural land hitherto held by the Orders, and to put it up for public
auction. The mestizos, well-off hacendados even in late Spanish times,
were the group with the money and the interest to take advantage of
this opportunity, and most of the former ecclesiastical property fell into
their hands. Still more important, after 1909, by the terms of the Payne-
Aldrich Act, the Philippines were enclosed within the American tariff
wall, so that their agricultural exports had easy, untaxed access to the
world’s largest national market—where, in addition, prices, especially
for sugar, were often well above world norms.
But it was above all the political innovations of the Americans that
created a solid, visible ‘national oligarchy’. The key institutional change
was the stage-by-stage creation of a Congress-style bicameral legislature,
based, in the lower house at least, on single-district, winner-take-all
elections. [26] The new representational system proved perfectly adapted
to the ambitions and social geography of the mestizo nouveaux riches.
Their economic base lay in hacienda agriculture, not in the capital city.
And their provincial fiefdoms were also protected by the country’s
immense linguistic diversity. They might all speak the elite, ‘national’
language (Spanish, later American), but they also spoke variously
Tagalog, Ilocano, Pampango, Cebuano, Ilongo, and a dozen other
tongues. In this way competition in any given electoral district was
effectively limited, in a pre-television age, to a handful of rival local
caciques. But Congress, which thus offered them guaranteed access to
national-level political power, also brought them together in the capital
on a regular basis. There, more than at any previous time, they got to
know one another well in a civilized ‘ring’ sternly refereed by the
Americans. They might dislike one another, but they went to the same
receptions, attended the same churches, lived in the same residential
areas, shopped in the same fashionable streets, had affairs with each
other’s wives, and arranged marriages between each other’s children.
They were for the first time forming a self-conscious ruling class. [27]
The timing of American colonization also had a profound formative
influence on the emerging oligarchy and its style of rule. The America
of 1900–1930 was the America of Woodrow Wilson’s lamented ‘congressional
government’. The metropole had no powerful centralized
professional bureaucracy; office was still heavily a matter of political
patronage; corrupt urban machines and venal court-house rural cliques
were still pervasive; and the authority of presidents, except in time of
war, was still restricted. Hence, unlike all the other modern colonial
regimes in twentieth-century Southeast Asia, which operated through
huge, autocratic, white-run bureaucracies, the American authorities in
Manila, once assured of the mestizos’ self-interested loyalty to the
motherland, created only a minimal civil service, and quickly turned
over most of its component positions to the natives. In 1903, Filipinos
held just under half of the 5,500 or so positions in this civil service. By
the end of the ‘Filipinizing’ governor-generalship of (Democrat) Francis
Harrison in 1921, the proportion had risen to 90 per cent (out of a mere
14,000 jobs); and by the mid-thirties Americans held only 1 per cent of
civilian bureaucratic posts, most of them in the educational field. [28]
(American power depended on military dominance and the tariff.) As
in the United States, civil servants frequently owed their employment
to legislator patrons, and up to the end of the American era the civilian
machinery of state remained weak and divided.
The new oligarchs quickly understood how the Congressional system
could serve to increase their power. As early as Harrison’s time, the
Americans acquiesced in the plundering of the Central Bank of the
Philippines. House Speaker Sergio Osmeña, Sr., and his friends helped
themselves to huge, virtually free loans for financing the construction
of sugar centrals, and cheerfully ignored the subsequent bankrupting
of the bank of issue. In a more general sense, Congressional control of
the purse, and of senior judicial appointments, taught the oligarchy that
the ‘rule of law’, provided it made and managed this law, was the
firmest general guarantee of its property and political hegemony. (As we
shall see, it was Marcos’s suspension of the ‘rule of law’ that aroused
the alarm and hostility of significant portions of the oligarchy in the
1970s and early 1980s.)
One final feature of the American political system is worth emphasizing:
the huge proliferation of provincial and local elective offices—in the
absence of an autocratic territorial bureaucracy. From very early on
mestizo caciques understood that these offices, in the right hands, could
consolidate their local political fiefdoms. Not unexpectedly, the right
hands were those of family and friends. Brothers, uncles, and cousins
for the senior posts, sons and nephews for the junior ones. [29] Here is
the origin of the ‘political dynasties’—among them the Aquinos and
Cojuangcos—which make Filipino politics so spectacularly different
from those of any other country in Southeast Asia.
Those were palmy days. But after 1930 the clouds began to gather. As
the Depression struck the United States, Washington came under
increasing pressure from trade unions and farm organizations (who
opposed the influx of Filipino labour and agricultural products) to
impose independence on the colony. Though the caciques could not
decently say so in public, independence was the last thing they desired,
precisely because it threatened the source of their huge wealth: access
to the American market. Besides, they had now switched from Spanish
to English, and their children were going to school in Manhattan and
Boston. And they lacked the monarchical residues which, suitably
transformed, underpinned the imagined ‘national traditions’ of Khmer,
Burmese, and Indonesians: the mestizos had no Angkor, Pagan, or
Borobudur at their service. It was thus with real reluctance that in 1935
they accepted Commonwealth status. The one evident plus was the
initiation of a Filipino chief executive. The urbane, rascally mestizo,
Manuel Quezon, became Commonwealth president. [30]
The Japanese Occupation and After
Six years later, in December 1941, the armies of Imperial Japan struck
south. In a matter of weeks most of the Americans were sent packing,
including General Douglas MacArthur, who carted President Quezon
and Vice-President Osmeña along with him. [31] The rest of the oligarchy
(one or two celebrated exceptions aside) bustled to collaborate with the
invaders. Among the most prominent of these collaborators were
Corazon Aquino’s father-in-law (who became Speaker of the Occupation
Assembly and Director-General of the pro-Japanese ‘mass organization’
Kalibapi) and the father of her Vice-President (Don José Laurel, Sr.,
who in 1943 became President of the puppet republic then inaugurated
by Tokyo). [32]
But collaboration could do nothing to save the hacienda-based export
economy. Japan would permit no exports to America, and American
bombers and warships ensured, after 1942, that few crops would reach
Japan. The treasured ‘rule of law’ began to break down as anti-Japanese
guerrilla bands, sometimes led by the small Socialist and Communist
parties, expanded in the remoter rural areas, as inflation soared, and as
Japanese exactions increased. Former tenants and landless labourers
were emboldened to squat on hacienda lands and grow, not sugar, but
crops needed for their everyday survival. Many refused now to pay the
old brutal rents, and had the insolence to threaten the bailiffs who
demanded them. Above all in the Central Luzon of the Cojuangcos and
Aquinos, where rural poverty and exploitation were most acute, such
peasants joined hands with the guerrillas in forming the Hukbalahap
armies which harassed the Japanese and assassinated such collaborators
as they could reach. [33] Unsurprisingly, many of the oligarchs abandoned
their haciendas to their unlucky bailiffs and retreated to Manila, where
they turned their experienced hands to war-profiteering. [34]
One might have expected the returning Americans to punish the
oligarchs for their collaboration with the enemy. Senior officials in
Washington indeed made noises to this effect. But the on-the-spot
Liberator was, of course, MacArthur, who had close personal and
business ties with the prewar oligarchy, and who, like Lyautey in
Morocco, enjoyed playing lordly proconsul to native houseboys. [35]
Quezon having meanwhile met his incautious Maker, MacArthur in
1946 arranged the election of his old mestizo friend (and prominent
collaborator) Manuel Roxas as first president of the now sovereign
Republic of the Philippines. [36]
Roxas had only two years in power before he joined Quezon, but they
were exceptionally productive years. An amnesty was arranged for
all ‘political prisoners’ (mainly fellow-oligarchs held on charges of
collaboration). In 1947, an agreement was signed permitting the US to
retain control of its twenty-three (large and small) land, sea, and airbases
for a further ninety-nine years (this was what, as in 1900, most mattered
to Washington). [37] And the Constitution of 1935 was so amended as to
give American citizens ‘parity’ access to the resources of the newly
sovereign Republic (in return for which the oligarchy was granted
continuing access, for a defined period, to the protected American
market.) [38] There was an additional bonus in this move, since it guaranteed
activation for the Philippines of the Tydings Rehabilitation Act,
which offered $620,000,000 to those Americans and Filipinos who could
demonstrate that they had lost a minimum of $500 as a result of the
war. [39] (Since the average annual per capita income of Filipinos was then
a quarter of this sum, the major Filipino beneficiaries of Senator
Tydings’ generosity were the caciques.)
The next aim was to restore fully the pre-war agrarian and political
order. For three basic reasons this goal proved difficult to achieve. First
was the price of independence itself: removal of the American ringmaster
for domestic political competition, severe weakening of the state’s
capacity for centralized deployment of violence, [40] a fisc no longer
externally guaranteed, and a war-ravaged and near-bankrupt economy.
Second was the appearance, in Central Luzon at least, of an emboldened
peasantry backed by armed Hukbalahap forces, which, denied access to
constitutional participation by Roxas’s manœuvres, had little reason to
make accommodations. Third was a rapid expansion of the suffrage that
UN membership, in those innocent days, made it impossible to deny.
The Heyday of Cacique Democracy
Hence it was that in the last year of Roxas’s life the Philippines saw the
first conspicuous appearance of the country’s now notorious ‘private
armies’. Drawn from lumpen elements in both Manila and the countryside,
these armed gangs, financed by their hacendado masters, terrorized
illegal squatters, peasant unions, and left-wing political leaders, with
the aim of restoring uncontested cacique rule. [41] The term ‘warlord’
entered the contemporary Filipino political vocabulary. Unsurprisingly,
the new warlords found that their private armies were also highly
functional for a now unrefereed electoral politics. The presidential
elections of 1949, won by Roxas’s vice-presidential successor Elpidio
Quirino, [42] were not merely corrupt in the pre-war style, but also
extremely bloody and fraudulent: not so much because of central
management, as because of the discrepancy between state power and
cacique ambitions under conditions of popular suffrage and acute class
antagonism. [43] (Characteristic of the time was what Nick Joaqui´n, the
country’s best-known writer, called the ‘bloody fiefdom’ of the Lacson
dynasty in the sugar-planter paradise of Western Negros. Manila was
virtually impotent vis-à-vis Governor Rafael Lacson’s murderous ‘special
police’ and ‘civilian guards’.) [44]
This was not what the Americans had bargained for. Besides, China
had just been ‘lost’, Vietnam seemed likely to go the same way, and
major Communist insurrections had broken out in neighbouring Malaya
and Burma. Colonel Edward Lansdale was dispatched to restore order
through the agency of Quirino’s Secretary of Defence, Ramon Magsaysay,
one of the few prominent politicians of the era who did not have
cacique origins. Thanks to a mere million dollars in military and other
aid, the physical isolation of the Philippines, the restricted Luzon base
of the Hukbalahap, and the errors of the Huk leaders themselves, [45]
Lansdale prevailed. By 1954, the Huk rebellion had been crushed;
thousands of impoverished Luzon peasants transmigrated to ‘empty’
Mindanao [46] (where they soon came into violent conflict with the local
Muslims); and Magsaysay manœuvred into the presidency. [47]
The period 1954–1972 can be regarded as the full heyday of cacique
democracy in the Philippines. [48] The oligarchy faced no serious domestic
challenges. Access to the American market was declining as postindependence
tariff barriers slowly rose, but this setback was compensated
for by full access to the state’s financial instrumentalities. Under
the guise of promoting economic independence and import-substitution
industrialization, exchange rates were manipulated, monopolistic
licences parcelled out, huge, cheap, often unrepaid bank loans passed
around, and the national budget frittered away in pork barrel legislation.
[49] Some of the more enterprising dynasties diversified into urban
real estate, hotels, utilities, insurance, the mass media, and so forth.
The press, owned by rival cacique families, was famously free. [50] The
reconsolidated, but decentralized, power of the oligarchy is nicely
demonstrated by the fact that this press exposed every possible form of
corruption and abuse of power (except for those of each paper’s own
proprietors), but, in the words of historian and political scientist Onofre
Corpuz: ‘Nobody in the Philippines has ever heard of a successful
prosecution for graft.’ [51] It was in these golden times that Corazon
Aquino’s father, Don José Cojuangco, acquired 7,000 hectares of the
10,300 hectare Hacienda Luisita in Tarlac, and turned its management
over to his energetic son-in-law Benigno ‘Ninoy’ Aquino, Jr. [52]
But cacique democracy contained within itself the seeds of its own
decay, and these began visibly sprouting towards the end of the 1960s.
Uncontrolled and parasitic plundering of state and private resources
tilted the Philippines on its long plunge from being the most ‘advanced’
capitalist society in Southeast Asia in the 1950s to being the most
depressed and indigent in the 1980s. By the end of the golden era, 5
per cent of the country’s income earners received, probably, about 50
per cent of total income. At the same time, over 70 per cent of state
revenues came from regressive sales and excise taxes, and a mere 27.5
per cent from income taxes—largely paid by foreign corporations. [53]
Combined with a characteristically tropical-Catholic birth-rate of over
3 per cent (which since 1850 had increased the islands’ population
eightfold), the result was a massive pauperization of the unprivileged. [54]
Ferdinand Marcos: The Supreme Cacique
Cacique democracy in the independent Philippines also led to secular
changes in the operation of the political system. The oligarchs more
and more followed Chairman Mao’s advice to walk on two legs. Manila
was where the President resided and where Congress met, where pork
barrel funds were dealt out, where licences and loans were secured,
where educational institutions proliferated, and where imported entertainments
flourished. The dynasties began leaving their haciendas in the
hands of sons-in-law and bailiffs and moving into palatial new residential
complexes on the outskirts of the old capital. Forbes Park was the first,
and still the most celebrated, of these beaux quartiers, which remain
sociologically unique in Southeast Asia. Elsewhere in the region
luxurious houses are jumbled together with the dwellings of the poor. [55]
But the golden ghetto of Forbes Park was policed, as a complex, by
armed security guards; access even to its streets required the production
of identification papers.
This partial move to Manila combined with demographic increase and
the postwar expansion of the suffrage to monetarize political life. It was
less and less possible to win elections, even provincial elections, on a
forelock-tugging basis. The costs of campaigning increased exponen-
tially in the 1960s, not least because the period saw the renewed growth
of the private armies. In contrast to the late 1940s, these armed groups
were now deployed mainly in intra-oligarchy competition. [56] Corazon
Aquino’s husband was conforming to general practice in the late 1960s
when he campaigned for a senatorial seat in a black Mercedes ringed with
Armalite-toting bodyguards. [57] With splendid, grumbling insouciance,
Senator Sergio ‘Serging’ Osmeña, Jr., on losing the 1969 presidential
race to Ferdinand Marcos, complained: ‘We were outgunned, outgooned,
and outgold.’ [58] By then, at forty per hundred thousand head
of population, the Philippines had one of the highest murder rates in
the world.
So the stakes slowly grew, and American-era inhibitions slackened. The
crux was the presidency, which always had the potentiality of dislocating
cacique democracy. We noted earlier that the stability of the system,
and the solidarity of the oligarchy, depended on the Congress, which
offered roughly equal room at the top for all the competing provincial
dynasties. The one-man office of president was not, however, divisible,
and came to seem, in the era of independence, a unique prize. The
shrewder, older oligarchs had foreseen possible trouble and had borrowed
from the US the legal provision that no president could serve for
more than two terms—so that the office could sedately circulate within
the charmed circle. But it was only a matter of time before someone
would break the rules and try to set himself up as Supreme Cacique for
Life. The spread of military juntas and one-party dictatorial regimes
throughout the Third World in the 1960s made a break of this kind
seem more normal: indeed it could even be justified opportunistically
as a sign of liberation from ‘Western’ ideological shackles.
The final destabilizing factor was education. As noted earlier, in Spanish
times educational facilities were extremely limited, and the only ‘national’
language available was Spanish, to which, however, no more than
5 per cent of the indigenous population had access. Secular, twentiethcentury
American imperialism was a different sort of beast. Immensely
confident of Anglo-Saxon world hegemony and the place of English as
the language of capitalism and modernity, the colonial regime effortlessly
extruded Spanish [59] and so expanded an English-language school system
that by 1940 the Philippines had the highest literacy rate in Southeast
Asia. [60] After independence, the oligarchy, like other Third World
oligarchies, found that the simplest way of establishing its nationalist
credentials was to expand cheap schooling. By the early 1960s university
degrees were no longer a ruling class near-monopoly.
The huge expansion of English-language education produced three
distinct, politically significant, new social groups. Smallest was a radical
intelligentsia, largely of bourgeois and petty-bourgeois urban origins,
and typically graduates of the University of the Philippines. Among
them was Nur Misuari, who in the later 1960s formed the Moro National
Liberation Front in the Muslim southwest. Still better known was José
Maria Sison, who broke away from the decrepit post-Huk Communist
party to form his own, and, borrowing from the Great Helmsman,
founded the New People’s Army which is today a nation-wide presence
and the major antagonist of the oligarchy. [61] (The spread of English,
and, later, of ‘street Tagalog’, in nationalist response to American
hegemony, has made possible an archipelago-wide popular communication
—below the oligarchy—that was inconceivable in the era of
Bonifacio or the Hukbalahap.)
Next largest in size was a bien-pensant proto-technocracy, which also
included graduates from American universities. Drawn from much the
same social strata as the radical intelligentsia, it was enraged less by the
injustices of cacique democracy than by its dilettantism, venality, and
technological backwardness. This group also deeply resented its own
powerlessness. When Marcos eventually declared Martial Law in 1972
and proclaimed his New Democracy, it flocked to his standard, believing
its historic moment had come. It stayed loyal to him till the early 1980s,
and long remained crucial to his credibility with Washington planners,
the World Bank and the IMF, and foreign modernizers all and sundry.
Largest of all—if not that large—was a wider urban bourgeois and pettybourgeois
constituency: middle-level civil servants, doctors, nurses,
teachers, businessmen, shopkeepers, and so on. In its political and moral
outlook it can perhaps be compared with the Progressives (definitely
not the Populists) of the United States in the period 1890–1920. In the
1960s it made its political debut in campaigns for honesty-in-government,
urban renewal, crackdowns on machine and warlord politics, and
the legal emancipation of municipalities and the new suburbs. As might
be expected, this group was both anti-oligarchy and anti-popular in
orientation. Had it not been English-educated, and had not President
Kennedy secured a major change in the American immigration laws, it
might have played a major role in Philippine politics in the 1970s and
1980s. But these factors offered it enticing alternatives, such that, by
the mid-1980s, well over a million Filipinos (mainly from this stratum)
had emigrated across the Pacific, most of them for good. [62] This bourgeois
haemorrhage in the short run weakened a significant political
competitor for the oligarchy, but in the longer run cost it an important
political ally—one reason why the Aquino government has so little
room for manœuvre.
The Marcos regime, which began to entrench itself long before the
declaration of Martial Law in 1972, was an instructively complex
hybrid. [63] From one point of view, Don Ferdinand can be seen as the
Master Cacique or Master Warlord, in that he pushed the destructive
logic of the old order to its natural conclusion. In place of dozens of
privatized ‘security guards’, a single privatized National Constabulary;
in place of personal armies, a personal Army; instead of pliable local
judges, a client Supreme Court; instead of a myriad pocket and rotten
boroughs, a pocket or rotten country, managed by cronies, hitmen, and
flunkies.
But from another viewpoint, he was an original; partly because he was
highly intelligent, partly because, like his grotesque wife, he came from
the lower fringes of the oligarchy. In any case, he was the first elite
Filipino politician who saw the possibilities of reversing the traditional
flow of power. All his predecessors had lived out the genealogy of
mestizo supremacy—from private wealth to state power, from provincial
bossism to national hegemony. But almost from the beginning of his
presidency in 1965, Marcos had moved mentally out of the nineteenth
century, and understood that in our time wealth serves power, and that
the key card is the state. Manila’s Louis Napoleon.
Marcos Settles In
He started with the Army, which until then had been politically insignificant.
[64] The size of the armed forces was rapidly increased, the amplitude
of its budget multiplied, and its key posts allotted to officers from
the Ilocano-speaking northwestern Luzon from which Marcos himself
originated. The final decision to declare martial law, for which plans
had been prepared months in advance, was taken in concert with
the military high command—Corazon’s cousin Eduardo ‘Danding’
Cojuangco and Defence Secretary Juan ‘Johnny’ Ponce Enrile being
the only civilian co-conspirators. [65] The civil service followed, particularly
that ambitious sector identified earlier as candidate-technocrats.
The state would save the country from what Marcos identified as its
prime enemies—the Communists and the oligarchy.
Marcos exploited state, rather than hacienda, power in two other
instructive ways. The first was to deal with the Americans, the second
with his fellow-oligarchs.
He understood, more clearly than anyone else—including the Filipino
Left—that for Washington the Philippines were like Cyprus for London.
The huge bases at Subic and Clark Field had nothing to do with the
defence of the Philippines as such, and everything to do with maintaining
American imperial power along the Pacific Rim. It followed that Manila
should treat them as luxury properties, for the leasing of which ever
more exorbitant rentals could be charged. [66] So too the Philippine Army.
Raymond Bonner’s book, Waltzing with a Dictator, amply documents
how Marcos, at considerable personal profit, rented a (noncombatant)
army engineering battalion to Lyndon Johnson, who in 1965 was busy
hiring Asian mercenaries to bolster the ‘international crusade’ image
desired for the American intervention in Vietnam. Next to the South
Koreans, he got, mercenary for mercenary, the best price in Asia. (In
this effort he had considerable help from his egregious wife, who
splashed her way into high-level Washington circles in a way that no
Dragon Lady had done since the shimmering days of Madame Chiang
Kai-shek. [67]) But he also had the imaginative insolence to try to do to
the Americans what they had so long been accustomed to doing to the
Filipinos. According to Bonner, Marcos contributed a million dollars
to each of Richard Nixon’s presidential election campaigns—with, of
course, ‘state money’—thereby joining that select group of Third World
tyrants (Chiang Kai-shek, Pak Chung Hee, Reza Pahlavi, Rafael Trujillo,
and Anastasio Somoza) who played an active role in the politics of the
metropole. [68]
As far as the oligarchy was concerned, Marcos went straight for its
jugular—the ‘rule of law’. From the very earliest days, Marcos used his
plenary Martial Law powers to advise all oligarchs who dreamt of
opposing or supplanting him that property was not power, since at a
stroke of the martial pen it ceased to be property. [69] The Lopez dynasty
(based in Iloilo) was abruptly deprived of its mass media empire and
its control of Manila’s main supplier of electricity. [70] The 500 hectare
Hacienda Osmeña was put up for ‘land-reform’ somewhat later on. [71]
There was no recourse, since the judiciary was fully cowed and the
legislature packed with allies and hangers-on. But Marcos had no
interest in upsetting the established social order. Those oligarchs who
bent with the wind and eschewed politics for the pursuit of gain were
mostly left undisturbed. The notorious ‘cronies’ were, sociologically, a
mixed bag, including not only relatives of Ferdinand and Imelda, but
favoured oligarchs and quite a few ‘new men’.
At its outset, the Martial Law regime had a substantial, if restricted,
social base. Its anti-Communist, ‘reformist’, ‘modernizing’, and ‘law and
order’ rhetoric attracted the support of frustrated would-be technocrats,
much of the underempowered urban middle class, and even sectors of
the peasantry and urban poor. Shortly after winning absolute power he
announced that the state had seized no less than 500,000 guns from
private hands, raising hopes of a less visibly dangerous public life. [72] A
limited land-reform succeeded in creating, in the old Huk stampinggrounds
of Central Luzon, a new stratum of peasant-owners [73] But as
time passed, and the greed and violence of the regime became ever
more evident, much of this support dried up. By the later 1970s the
technocrats were a spent force, and the urban middle class became
increasingly aware of the decay of Manila, the devastation of the
university system, the abject and ridiculous character of the monopolized
mass media, and the country’s economic decline.
The real beneficiaries of the regime—aside from the Marcos mafia
itself [74] —were two military forces: the National Army and the New
People’s Army. Martial Law in itself gave the former unprecedented
power. But Marcos also used favoured officers to manage properties
confiscated from his enemies, public corporations, townships, and so
forth. The upper-echelon officers came to live in a style to which only
the oligarchy had hitherto been accustomed. [75] Military intelligence
became the regime’s beady eyes and hidden ears. Legal restraints on
military abuses simply disappeared. And there was only one master now
to determine postings and promotions. To be sure, the Old Cacique
packed the leadership with pliant placemen from his Ilocano-speaking
homeland, but there was still plenty to go round.
On the other hand, the dictatorship encouraged a rapid growth, and
slower geographic spread, of the Communist guerrilla forces. No less
significant than their expanding rural support was their organized reach
into urban areas. One of the most striking features of the last years of
the regime was the gradual adoption of a nationalist-Marxist vocabulary
by notable sections of the bourgeois intelligentsia, the lower echelons
of the Church hierarchy, and the middle class more generally. [76] Only
the militant Left appeared to offer some way out.
The story of the unravelling of the regime following the brazen assassination
of Benigno Aquino, Jr., at Manila’s airport on 21 August 1983 is
too well known to need detailing here. More important is an understanding
of the regime that has replaced it.
Riding the ‘People Power Revolution’
The initial coalition behind the dead man’s widow was wide and
(variably) deep: she was then above all Corazon Aquino rather than
Corazon Cojuangco. It was based on a huge groundswell of revulsion
against the Old Cacique and his manileña Miss Piggy. It included, from
the right, ambitious middle-ranking and junior officers of the National
Army, frustrated finally by the old regime’s visible decay and the ethnic
nepotism of its premier danseur; the ever-hopeful technocracy and the
non-crony segments of Manila’s business community; almost all factions
of the Church; the middle class; the non-NPA sectors of the intelligentsia;
sundry self-described ‘cause-oriented groups’ which regarded themselves
as the vanguard of a newly-legal Left; and the oligarchs.
The coalition was far too diverse and incoherent to last very long. Two
years after the ‘People Power Revolution’, it has become far narrower
and, as it were, more densely packed. First to go were its right and left
wings. For the cowboy activists of the Reform the Armed Forces
Movement (RAM), who had played a pivotal role in February 1986 by
betraying Marcos, the only genuinely tolerable successor to the old
regime was a military junta, or a military-dominated government under
their leadership. But this course had no serious domestic support, and
was, for a Washington basking in Port au Prince TV glory, in any
case out of the question. Besides, cold-eyed realists in the Reagan
Administration perfectly understood that the Philippine military was
far too factionalized, incompetent, corrupt, vainglorious, and ill-trained
to be given any blank cheques. [77] A series of risible brouhahas, culminating
in the Gregorio (‘Gringo’) Honasan coup de force of 28 August 1987,
only confirmed the soundness of this judgment. On the left, the situation
was more complex. Far the most powerful component within it was
the NPA, which had greatly benefited from the Martial Law regime, and
had now to decide how to respond to the new constellation of forces.
The issue of whether frontally to oppose the Aquino regime, or try
substantially to alter its internal equilibrium, was seriously debated in
1986–87. For a complex of reasons, too intricate to detain us here, and
the wisdom of which is yet to be determined, the die was cast, early in
1987, for confrontation. [78] The immediate consequence was the collapse
of the legal Left, and the manifest enfeeblement of the ‘cause-oriented
groups’, which, by the time of the Honasan comedy, had lost almost
everything but their causes. Out of these developments emerged the
real, unbalanced, and uneasy partners of the contemporary Aquino
coalition: the oligarchy, the urban middle class, and the Church.
During the new regime’s first year, when the elan of the ‘People Power
Revolution’ remained quite strong, the coalition’s junior partners were
optimistic. The restoration of an open-market press, greatly expanded
freedom for assembly and organization, and the crumbling of the crony
monopolies and monopsonies, filled the various sectors of the middle
class with giddy exhilaration. They could be fully themselves once again.
Business confidence would be restored and the Philippines rerouted onto
the path of progress. Good Americans were on their side. Honest
technocratic expertise would at last be properly appreciated and
rewarded. The intelligentsia (or at least major parts of it) now felt free
to detach itself from the radical Left; it had a new home on television
and radio, and in the press.
Furthermore, President Aquino’s inner circle included not only Cardinal
Sin but a number of idealistic human-rights lawyers and left-liberal
journalists and academics. And Corazon herself, perhaps taking a leaf
out of the Book of Modern Kings, made every effort to appear in public
en bonne bourgeoise. Tita (‘Auntie’), as she was now called, was a brave,
pious, unpretentious housewife who wanted only what was best for her
nephews and nieces. The treasurer of Don José Cojuangco’s holding
company and the coheiress of Hacienda Luisita remained mostly invisible.
There was a touching confidence that the country’s problems were
on their way to sensible solution. She had opened talks with the NPA
and with the Muslim insurrectionaries. A major land-reform—which
would not affect the middle class, but which promised to undermine
the NPA’s expanding rural base—would be enacted. The Americans
would provide substantial sums in support of restored constitutional
democracy. And People Power would, through free and honest elections,
create a progressive legislative partner for the President, giving
the middle class its long-dreamed-of chance to lead the country. In
substantial measure the ecclesiastical leadership shared these hopes,
trusting that the new situation would permit the Church to become
once again ideologically united and organizationally disciplined. [79] The
catchword of the era was ‘democratic space’, which is perhaps most
aptly translated as ‘middle class room for manœuvre between the
military, the oligarchy, and the Communists’.
The second year of the new regime dashed most of these illusions. The
talks with Muslim and Communist leaders broke down for essentially
the same reason: the Aquino regime found itself in no position to make
any attractive concessions. Haunted by nationalist dreams, even those
Muslim leaders who seemed prepared to accept ‘autonomy’, rather than
independence, still demanded a Muslim autonomous zone remembered
from the American colonial era. Yet ever since the Lansdale-Magsaysay
regime had begun transmigrating potential and actual Hukbalahap
peasant supporters to ‘empty’ lands in Mindanao, the island had been
rapidly ‘Christianized’, by spontaneous migrants, land speculators, logging
and mining conglomerates, large-scale commercial agribusinesses,
and so on. Even had it wished—which it did not—to accede to Muslim
dreams, this would have required the Aquino government either forcibly
to relocate these tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of ‘Christians’ (but
where to?) or to leave them to the political mercies of justifiably
angry Muslims. It lived by its own American-era dreams—a United
Philippines—and besides, the Army, which had suffered far more severe
casualties fighting the Muslims than combatting the Communists, would
not have stood for ‘weakness’. With the NPA the same was true. There
was nothing President Aquino could offer the Communists which they
did not already have or which the Army would be likely to permit. [80]
Nor were the Americans much help. The Reagan Administration was
preoccupied with its own survival, and a dozen ‘more important’ foreign
policy tar-babies. Its own financial recklessness meant that it had now
very little to offer the Philippines even in military aid (which remained
a pittance, more or less what it wished to give the Nicaraguan ‘contras’).
Talk of a ‘Marshall Plan’ for the Philippines vanished with the noise of
escaping steam. And the overseas middle class stayed put. Its members
might periodically return home with armfuls of presents for the relatives,
but they had decided that the future of the bourgeoisie in the Philippines
was too uncertain to be worth any substantial investments. [81] In the first
year of the regime there had been much bold talk of liquidating the
American bases, but by the second it was already clear that they would
stay put: the Aquino government felt it could not afford seriously to
antagonize Washington, and besides, it could not contemplate the loss
in income and jobs that closure would imply. (In the 1980s, the US
military was still the second largest employer—after the Filipino state—
in the country.) The one important service the Americans did provide
was explicit political support in the face of the various buffa coup
attempts that anticlimaxed in the ‘Gringo’ ringer of August 1987.
The pivotal issue for the regime coalition was, however, the ‘restoration
of democracy’, signalled by the 11 May 1987 elections for a reanimated
Senate and House of the Representatives, and the 18 January 1988
elections for provincial governors, mayors and other local powerholders.
The middle-class hope was that these elections would not only
set the provisional Aquino government on a firm constitutional base,
but would forcefully demonstrate to the Army and the Communists
where the popular will lay. Moreover, it would translate People’s Power
into sufficient institutional power to carry out the domestic reforms
deemed essential to the future leadership prospects of the middle class.
The Caciques Claim Their Own
It was now and here that the senior partners in the ruling coalition
finally made themselves felt. During the first year the oligarchy had had
its uneasy moments. Corazon herself might be sound enough, but some
of her closest advisers were not; the mass media, for the moment still
dominated ideologically by middle-class urban reformists, kept up a
constant drumfire in favour of a land-reform that hopefully would
destroy the basis of NPA rural power. Even the World Bank, along with
senior Japanese and American officials, were arguing the same logic.
And, pending the elections, the President held plenary powers. Who
could be sure that in a moment of frailty she might not do something
fatal?
The alarm was real, if probably ill-founded. COLOR (Council of Landowners
for Orderly Reform—500 magnate members) was hastily established;
it sent Corazon resolutions signed with (happily, its own) blood,
threatening civil disobedience in the event of serious land-reform. A
Movement for an Independent (Sugar) Negros appeared, claiming to
be ready to offer armed resistance to impending Manilan injustice. [82]
Lawyers were said, by the press, to be ‘going crazy’, reclassifying
agricultural lands as ‘commercial-industrial’, signing off surplus plots
to infant relatives, fraudulently antedating mortgages, etc. [83]
What was needed in 1986, as in 1916 and 1946, was cacique democracy.
If elections could be promptly and freely held, the oligarchy could hope
to return to its pre-1972 control of ‘the rule of law’, and put everyone—
the middle class, the military, their tenants, and the ‘rabble’—in their
respective places.
On 11 May 1987, national-level elections were held for twenty-four
senatorial, and two hundred congressional seats. The outcome turned
out to be eminently satisfactory. To quote a well-informed Filipino
study: ‘Out of 200 House Representatives, 130 belong to the so-called
“traditional political families”, while another 39 are relatives of these
families. Only 31 Congressmen have no electoral record prior to 1971 and are
not related to these old dominant families. . . . Of the 24 elected
senators, there are a few non-traditional figures but the cast is largely
made up of members of prominent pre-1972 political families.’ [84] Newlyelected
Senator John Osmeña—grandson of Commonwealth Vice-President
Sergio Osmeña, Sr., and nephew of defeated 1969 presidential
candidate Sergio Osmeña, Jr.—told the press: ‘One member of the
family who does not do good is one too many, but ten members in the
family doing good are not even enough.’ [85]
The results were widely interpreted as a triumph for Corazon Aquino
in so far as twenty-three of the twenty-four victorious senatorial candidates
ran as her supporters and as members of various nominal parties
in her electoral coalition. [86] Something comparable occurred in the
Lower House. [87] But probably the outcome is better designated as a
triumph for Corazon Cojuangco. The study quoted above notes that:
‘Of the 169 Representatives who belong to the dominant families or
are related to them, 102 are identified with the pre-1986 anti-Marcos
forces, while 67 are from pro-Marcos parties or families.’ A shake in the
kaleidoscope of oligarchic power.
Not that the shrewder caciques failed to recognize certain new realities,
including the genuine popular appeal of the President herself. (A
significant number of Marcos collaborators swung over to her bandwagon.)
When Congress finally opened in the late summer of 1987, it
proclaimed itself committed to land-reform, and appointed ‘outsiders’
to the chairmanships of the Senate and House committees in charge of
agrarian affairs. But within days the chairman of the House Committee
on Agrarian Reform, Representative Bonifacio Gillego, an ex-military
intelligence official converted to ‘social democracy’, was bemoaning the
fact that seventeen of the twenty-one members of his committee were
landlords—including presidential brother José Cojuangco, presidential
uncle-in-law Herminio Aquino, and the virago of Negros, Hortensia
Starke. [88]
A fuller revival of the ancien régime came with the provincial and local
elections which opened on 18 January 1988, and which found 150,000
candidates competing, à l’américaine, for close to 16,500 positions—an
average of nine aspirants per plum. [89] These elections were of such an
exemplary character that they deserve comment in their own right. In
some places they represented happy reconsolidations. On the island of
Cebu, for example, Emilio ‘Lito’ Osmeña, brother of Senator John,
won the island’s governorship, while his cousin Tomas (‘Tommy’), son
of Sergio ‘Serging’ Osmeña, Jr., defeated a candidate from the rival
mestizo Cuen-co dynasty to become Mayor of Cebu City. [90] A little to
the north, in the fiefdom of the Duranos, the eighty-two-year-old Ramon
Durano, Sr., ran successfully for mayor of Danao City, with the backing
of one violent son, Jesus ‘Don’ Durano, against the opposition of
another. The night after the election, losing candidate Thaddeus ‘Deo’
Durano, waylaid by intra-family assassins, ended up in critical condition
in a Cebu City emergency ward. [91] The old warlord, who for the duration
of Martial Law was a key Marcos henchman on Cebu, this time ran on
the ticket of the PDP-Laban, the machine of President Aquino’s brother
José Cojuangco—who successfully recruited many other Marcos
caciques under his sister’s banner. Similar victories occurred in Olongapo
—downtown from the Subic Naval Base—where Richard Gordon,
husband of Congresswoman Katharine Gordon, became mayor; in
Western Negros, where Congressman José Carlos Lacson was now
joined by governor-elect Daniel Lacson, Jr.; and so on. . . .
Not that the old dynasties had things entirely their own way by
any means. In some areas close to metropolitan Manila, middle-class
reformists mobilized popular elements as well as ‘minor’ dynasties to
break up old fiefdoms. The Laurel machine in Batangas collapsed, to
the embarrassment of the ineptly scheming Vice-President, Salvador
‘Doy’ Laurel. The Rizal empire of Corazon’s uncle, Congressman Juan
‘Komong’ Sumulong, was decimated. In Pampanga, out went the
Nepomucenos, Lazatins and Lingads. In the Iloilo fiefdom of the
Lopezes, Olive Lopez-Padilla, daughter of one-time Vice-President
Fernando Lopez and sister of Congressman Albertito Lopez, ran for
governor on the wonderful vulgarian-hacendado slogan of ‘Bring Iloilo
back to the Lopezes’, but was nonetheless soundly thrashed. [92] In
Mindanao’s Cagayan de Oro, the Fortich dynasty, described by The
Manila Bulletin as having run the place ‘since the beginning of the
century’, was humiliated. [93] No less interesting were certain military
participations. In the Cagayan valley of northeastern Luzon, ex-Lieutenant-
Colonel Rodolfo Aguinaldo, a key member of the Honasan rebel
group, out-intimidated the local caciques (Dupayas and Tuzons) to seize
the governorship. In Marcos’s old base in Northern Ilocos, the vicegovernorship
was won, from military prison, by ex-Colonel Rolando
Abadilla—once the dreaded chief of the Metropolitan Command Intelligence
Security Group under Marcos, a thug widely suspected of helping
to mastermind the assassination of Corazon’s husband, and a major
participant in the abortive coups of January and April 1987. [94]
Even the NPA was indirectly drawn in. It was widely, and credibly,
reported that in many areas where it had politico-military ascendancy,
the movement charged candidates substantial fees for permission to
campaign unmolested, and, here and there, lent unofficial support to
sympathetic local aspirants. [95] Not that the civil war seriously let up. A
day or two after the polls closed, Hortensia Starke’s Hacienda Bino was
burned to the ground, and the Hacienda La Purisima of Enrique Rojas,
a top official of the National Federation of Sugar Planters, barely escaped
the same fate. [96]
Politics in a Well-Run Casino
These variable outcomes need to be viewed in a larger framework for
their implications to be well understood. The key facts to be borne in
mind are these: No less than 81 per cent of the country’s 27,600,000
eligible voters voted. [97] One or other elective post was available for
every 1,400 voters. The average number of contestants per post was
roughly nine. In most places the contests were ‘serious’ in a rather new
way—forty-one candidates were assassinated by rivals (not the NPA) in
the course of the brief campaign. [98] In different ways, and to different
extents, almost all political leaderships, from right to left, participated
and could imagine that they had, up to a certain point, benefited.
Everywhere, local patronage machines were replacing the centralized
Marcos-era appointive apparat.
In any well-run casino, the tables are managed in the statistical favour
of the house. To keep drawing customers, the owners must provide
them with periodic, even spectacular, successes. A win is a splendid
confirmation of the player’s skill and heaven’s favour. A loss demonstrates
his/her misfortune or ineptitude. Either way, it’s back to the
tables as soon as possible. So with the blackjack of cacique democracy.
Each local triumph for reform promises a rentier future; each loss
signals miscalculations or ill luck. At the end of the week or the year,
however, the dealer is always in the black.
The truth is that American electoralism remains powerfully attractive,
even when, perhaps especially when, married to Spanish caciquism in
a geographically fragmented, ethnolinguistically divided, and economi-
cally bankrupt polity. It disperses power horizontally, while concentrating
it vertically; and the former draws a partial veil over the latter.
‘Anyone’ can get elected: look at the high, uncoerced turnout; look at
the number of competing candidates (you too can run); look at the
execrable colonels (better they campaign in the provinces than plot in
the capital); look at the (probably temporary) fall of the Laurels and
the Nepomucenos; look at the NPA’s electoral levies, which, from a
certain angle, can be aligned with the election-time exactions of the
warlords. [99] Precisely because the competition is violently real, it is easy
to be persuaded to cheer for, as it were, Arsenal or Chelsea, without
reflecting too hard on the fact that both are in the First Division, and
that one is watching the match from the outer stands, not playing in
it.
But, of course, by no means everyone enjoys spectator sports. Shortly
after the 18 January elections a curious reporter went to interview
employees at the Cojuangcos’ Hacienda Luisita, who had just voted
massively for Arsenal. What difference had it made to their lives that
Tita Cory had become President? ‘We used to get rice and sugar free,
now we must pay. We used to get free water from the pumps in our
yards. Now we must pay for pumped-in water because molasses from
the sugar mill has seeped into our wells.’ Daily wages? They had been
raised by 2.50 pesos ($0.12) for field-hands, and 8 pesos ($0.40) for millworkers.
Level of employment? Usually from two to four days a week,
in good times. One elderly man spoke of trying to survive by busing
to additional work in the neighbouring province of Pampanga: transportation
costs took 23 pesos from the daily wage of 40 pesos, leaving him
a net of 17 pesos ($0.85). It still made sense to go. The reporter was
told that a worker, who had been quoted in an international magazine
as saying that on the hacienda horses ate better than the hands, had
been ‘summoned’ by management. He had had to retract the slander.
But one of the interviewees concluded: ‘Of course it is true. The horses
get Australian grain and eggs, while we hardly have the meat.’ [100] All
those interviewed either refused to give their names, or asked not to
be identified.