Strong Demands and Weak Institutions - The Origins and Evolution of The Democratic Deficit in The Philippines
Strong Demands and Weak Institutions - The Origins and Evolution of The Democratic Deficit in The Philippines
Strong Demands and Weak Institutions - The Origins and Evolution of The Democratic Deficit in The Philippines
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At the same time, the failure of the state to deliver public goods
leads many to seek to overturn the political system altogether. Alone
among the countries of East and Southeast Asia, the Philippines has a
by now more than three-decades-old communist-led insurgency-
encouraged in large part by the immense gulf in levels of wealth and
income between the elite and the millions of Filipino workers, urban
poor, and peasants below them. In the south of the country, the Muslim
minority has been in rebellion for most of this same period. These
insurgencies have elicited countermeasures that have led to persistent
violations of human rights and limits to the exercise of political rights
by organized groups of the poor.
In the first section of this article we provide a historical overview of
Philippine political parties in the American years, with particular empha-
sis on the early colonial era under William Howard Taft (1900-1913) and
the Philippine commonwealth under Manuel Quezon (1935-1941). We
shall locate the origins of Philippine democracy's institutional deficien-
cies in the early American colonial period and explore how the type of
patronage-oriented party that emerged in the first decade of the twentieth
century persisted in the midst of many changes-both in the scope of
democratic politics and the structure of the overall political system. In the
second section, we examine the continued evolution of patronage-ori-
ented parties, from the emergence of a mass electorate in the early post-
war years through the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos (1972-1986). In
the third section, we examine the character of post-martial law democ-
racy, focusing on how weak, patronage-based parties have endured under
very different styles of presidential leadership: from the administration of
Corazon Aquino (1986-1992) to that of Fidel Ramos (1992-1998) and
Joseph Estrada (1998-2001). The fourth section examines the current cri-
sis of democracy in the Philippines, focusing particular attention on the
fall of Joseph Estrada and the rise of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in early
2001. In conclusion, we argue that the impending process of constitu-
tional reform needs to begin with a clear understanding of the historical
origins and evolution of the democratic deficit, then proceed to promote
electoral and representational structures specifically geared toward the
strengthening of Philippine political parties.
There was nothing inevitable about this economic elite being trans-
formed into a powerful political-economic elite; rather, this change came
about through the very deliberate creation of new political institutions by
the American colonial leadership. In other words, institutional rather than
socioeconomic factors are most important to understanding the stature
that this elite came to possess during the early American period (and
which this elite has, indeed, enjoyed ever since)." As Benedict Anderson
explains, "It was above all the political innovations of the Americans that
created a solid, visible 'national oligarchy'" (1988: 11).
Although the efforts at "political tutelage" were proclaimed to be
part of an effort to teach Filipinos the virtues of democracy, Taft and his
fellow colonials made sure to limit the electorate to a very small, elite
segment of the population based on the Americans' belief that "the
masses are ignorant, credulous, and childlike" (May 1984: 46; Hayden
1942: 265, 267). In addition to limiting the rights of suffrage, the Amer-
icans actively discouraged any sort of popular mobilization that might
threaten the political dominance of the elite. Even after the intensive
military suppression of the Filipino-American war, nationalist groups
could not organize themselves into parties because the Americans
imposed an antisedition law declaring advocacy of independence a
crime punishable by death (Banlaoi and Carlos 1996: 49).
Throughout their more than four decades of colonial rule, Ameri-
cans steadily expanded the arenas of contention for Philippine elite pol-
itics. The indirect election of Philippine provincial governors by
municipal officials was instituted in 1902 and was a significant inno-
vation in Philippine politics. These elections encouraged the emergence
of new and more extensive types of intraprovincial linkages and fac-
tions, and for the first time municipal politics became systematically
tied into a larger network of provincial politics." This trend was fur-
thered after 1906, when provincial governors came to be directly
elected (by the elite electorate). As the American project of self-gov-
ernment moved beyond municipalities and provinces to the election of
an assembly in Manila, these provincial factions became a major build-
ing block of national-level political maneuvering (Cullinane 1989: 227,
255,513-514; see also Cullinane 2003). Thus one finds a political sys-
tem that is at the same time highly restricted and rapidly expanding: the
electorate remained confined to a small elite, but the opportunities pro-
vided to this elite for political contention were extended to increasingly
higher levels of government.
The Philippines' first national-level political party emerged very
early under American colonial rule. Founded in 1900, the Partido Fed-
had personal contact with villagers and because the military became
less abusive under his leadership" (Kerkvliet 1977: 238). Agrarian dis-
content was temporarily ameliorated through resettlement in Min-
danao, and U.S. proposals for land redistribution were blocked; with
the root causes of insurgency unaddressed, the left would eventually
rise again (Shalom 1986: 84-85; Steinberg 2000: 26).
Throughout the period 1946-1972 (since known as the period of
pre-martial law democracy), the Liberals and Nacionalistas alternated
in power under the rules formally established by the 1935 constitution.
Within a few years after the conclusion of the Pacific War, issues of
Japanese collaboration had been eclipsed by other concerns, notably
challenges from below and the never-ending struggles among political
factions to secure their hold on the patronage resources of the state.
Among the most important changes in the character of Philippine
democracy resulted from an enormous increase in the size of the elec-
torate. This was encouraged by the formal dropping of the literacy
requirement (Rood 2002: 150) and far exceeded the substantial com-
monwealth-era growth rates already noted above. By 1951, the number
of registered voters stood at 4.7 million (more than double that of
1940); this increased to 7.8 million voters in 1959 and 10.3 million vot-
ers in 1969 (Banlaoi and Carlos 1996).
Unlike in earlier years, therefore, political elites now had to con-
vince nonelites to vote for them. At first, patron-client ties and deeply
embedded traditions of social deference were sufficient. The organiza-
tional requirements of electoral campaigning remained relatively sim-
ple, as elites built factional coalitions in ascending order of complexity
from the municipal level upward to the provincial and national levels.
As Lande explains, local elite (often landholding) patrons used a vari-
ety of means-kinship, personal ties, and the offering of jobs, services,
and other favors-to build a clientele composed of those from lower
social classes. This clientele constituted a large vote bank, which could
be exchanged for money and power from national politicians:
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 priva-
tized "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 myriad pocket and rotten
boroughs, a pocket or rotten country, managed by cronies, hitmen,
and flunkies. (Anderson 1988: 20)
Cory Aquino's rise to power needs to be seen in the context of both the
antidictatorship and social justice demands of the opposition to her
predecessor, Ferdinand Marcos. Once in power, however, Aquino saw
her primary duty as restoring the structures of pre-martial law democ-
racy. To call this period a mere "restoration" of pre-martial law democ-
racy, however, only goes so far, given: (1) the degree to which Philip-
pine civil society was far more active and organized after 1986 than it
had been prior to 1972; and (2) the degree to which the Philippine mil-
itary had become a much more politicized force over the course of the
martial-law years.
The Philippines, of course, had changed a lot during the twenty-
one years that Marcos was in power. Aquino herself discovered this in
her difficult relations with two new centers of power: the military and
civil society. Disgruntled elements of the military launched a total of
nine coup attempts against Aquino and, in two cases, came close to top-
pling her from office (McCoy 1999: 259). Philippine nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) began to mushroom in the 1980s, as thousands
of groups formed to promote the interests of farmers, the urban poor,
women, and indigenous peoples (Silliman and Noble 1998). Despite
these major changes, the political system that Aquino reconstructed
with the 1987 constitution restored many political institutions that can
be traced to the 1935 constitution, most importantly a presidential form
of government that went back to the political system built by the Amer-
ican colonial authorities and Filipino leaders. Aquino's difficulties,
therefore, were not just those of moving from a dictatorship to consti-
tutional democracy. They also arose because the political system she
Estrada's rise and fall from the presidency are conflated with their
own long-standing struggle to lift themselves from poverty. Tradi-
tional politicians and Estrada himself used this view and the very real
class divide to obfuscate the issues. They peddled his prosecution as
an attack on the poor rather than on the very system of "old politics"
that Estrada represents and which has, in large part, prevented the lib-
eration of the poor.
Notes
tern of elected municipal and provincial officials, but its influence was short-
lived.
9. In his second major category, "externally mobilized" parties are estab-
lished by those outside the regime who do not have access to patronage and
instead rely on ideological appeals in their quest for a mass following. Exam-
ples, he explains, are "socialist parties in Europe and nationalist parties in the
Third World."
10. For further application of the Shefter framework to the Philippine
political system, see Hutchcroft (2000: 282, 296, 298).
11. Golay (1998: 235-269, quote at 243). Hayden reports two points at
which a two-party system began to emerge out of the Quezon-Osmefia rivalry:
after their formal split in 1922, and again in the early 1930s when the two
politicians feuded over the terms of the legislation establishing the common-
wealth. "Upon each occasion, however, the transcendent issue of national inde-
pendence was used to destroy the opposition as soon as it attained real
strength" (Hayden 1942: 452).
12. In the legislative sphere, this includes what Bolongaita calls veto, ini-
tiating, summoning, and endorsement and delegated powers; in the executive
sphere, great discretion over budgets, appointments of local government exec-
utives (and many others), and emergency powers (Bolongaita 1996: 99-100).
Sergio Osmefia, Quezon's former rival, was elected vice president.
13. The 1935 constitution provided for literacy but not property require-
ments and lowered age limits from twenty-three to twenty-one (Hayden 1942:
825). Lande (1965: 28) notes that "growing laxity in the enforcement of liter-
ary requirements" and "the spread of literacy" expanded the size of the elec-
torate in the early decades of the century, "in both absolute numbers and the
percentage of the population that voted." The 1907 and 1935 data on absolute
voters are from Banlaoi and Carlos (1996: 16, 17,20,34); 1907 and 1935 data
on proportion of voters to total population from Salamanca (1984: 57; Lande
1965: 29); 1940 data from Hayden (1942: 204).
14. "The landed upper-classes which were dependent on a large supply of
cheap labor were the most consistently anti-democratic force," write
Rueschemeyer, Stephens, and Stephens (1992: 8,60). "Any class that is dom-
inant both economically and politically will not be eager to dilute its political
power by democratization."
15. Ileto (1979); Kerkvliet (1977: 26-60); Golay (1998: 339-341, quotes
at 339, 341); see also Hayden (1942: 376-400). In 1940, moreover, the pro-
tenant Socialist Party registered strong gains in local elections in the province
of Pampanga (Golay 1998: 400).
16. The long-term weakening of patron-client ties had been an important
factor in the rise of the Huks during the Japanese occupation and the renewal
of armed struggle after the war (Kerkvliet 1977: 249-252).
17. Thompson (1995: 29-32). Eva-Lotta Hedman (2001: 7) argues that
strong movements for clean elections (in 1953, 1969, and 1986) can be seen as
part of larger "cycles of protest" in which a "dominant bloc of social forces"
not only protests authoritarian trends but also seeks to undermine extra-elec-
toral challenges from below.
18. One leading study describes the first post-Marcos legislature as "the
return of the oligarchs." Eighty-three percent of the House came from elite
families, 66 percent had previously participated in elections, and 22 percent
had been elected to Marcos's legislative body in 1984 (Gutierrez et al. 1992:
162). Similar trends persisted in subsequent legislatures. See Gutierrez (1994:
4).
19. On the political dynamics of the passage of the LGC, see Hutchcroft
(2001).
20. In the five-year period before the passage of the LGC, only 11 percent
of internal revenue collections were returned to local governments. The LGC
increased this to 40 percent and made the local government internal revenue
allotment automatic. Local government units were also given new taxing pow-
ers and the authority to incur debt. In those municipalities where economic
activity had significantly enlarged the tax base, these changes often brought
important changes in the architecture of local politics.
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