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You do the Math

10/08/08

Posted under Philippine politics

The President’s pardoning Claudio Teehankee Jr. seems to have caused great offense. And yet first of all, it is an act that is irreversible. It is also an act that represents a net gain, politically, for the President regardless of its effects on public opinion.

If it is true, as the Justice Secretary claims, that the pardon was granted essentially upon the request of the convict’s brother, the President’s ambassador to the World Trade Organization, Manuel Teehankee, then the political context of the pardon becomes clear. Ambassador Teehankee has been a close and valued subordinate of the President, previously floated as a potential successor to the present Justice Secretary. The ambassador and his family also surely knew that they had a bigger chance of securing executive clemency now, than at any time previously or in the future: it involves a crime which accords absolutely no mitigating circumstances for the convict.

The Catholic hierarchy, too, is bound to the Church’s position of opposing the death penalty, and so cannot take the case too far -it would risk reopening the death penalty debate. The Church is too invested in opposing the Reproductive Health Bill, counts too much on the President being their ultimate bulwark in terms of exercising her veto power, not to mention doing her part to mobilize opposition to the bill in Congress.

The law-and-order types are also politically negligible now or in the near term. They failed to elect a law-and-order candidate for the presidency; they are not mobilized in Congress, on the local level, and will not be a swing vote in the Palace’s political projects: passing the 2009 budget and amending the Constitution.

The upper and middle classes will vent their spleen but nothing shows that they will divorce themselves from the President between now and 2010 (and who knows, even beyond). Those from these classes too stupid to have stayed out of jail in the first place can celebrate the release of Teehankee as a sign of potential presidential favors to come.

The poor, more often than not unjustly imprisoned, will continue to clamor for executive clemency and be supported in their appeals by the clergy.

So she pleases a subordinate she holds in high regard; she proves to her supporters up and down the line that she will bail them out; she knows sectors like the Church need her now more than ever, and those against her move have been against her anyway.

And public opinion? This, too, shall pass.

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2 Responses to “You do the Math”

  1. 2
    lea dizon Says:

    I know how the Hultman feels. My friend case of 5 years now with the Manila City Engineers office unde Engineer Andres is still pending, even with all the documents, jurisprudences presented. These new sets of city hall employees are still finding ways to “COVER - UP “the case in favor of the other party which is using “ALL ” means to make wrong a right. If his case will not propsper to the right direction then we might as well throw away ” THE LAW APPIES TO ALL OTHERWISE NONE AT ALL “. I still believe in dirty Harry, it’s the people below him which are the problem, I don’t think they subscribe to his motto.

    REMEMBER 5 long year and SHIT with them.

  2. 1
    Josh Centro Says:

    You hit the nail on the head right there. It just goes to show that we live in a country ruled by thugs. It’s not the first time this administration freed a criminal in the dead of the night (where is Daniel Smith?).

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