Posts belonging to Category 'Sen. Francis “Chiz” Escudero'

Pssst, let’s urge senators to elect Chiz Escudero as Senate President to avoid dangerous power vacuum

There’s a very easy, painless, legal way to avoid a dangerous power vacuum in case a new President is not proclaimed by June 30 – the same day the tenures of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Vice-President Noli de Castro, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile and House Speaker Prospero Nograles all lapse.

This is by electing a new Senate President between May 31 and June 4, 2010 when Congress officially resumes its sessions. If you want to see the Senate calendar, click on this link.

This morning, before I uploaded this entry, I heard University of the Philippines College of Law dean, Marvic Leonen, express the same legal opinion on radio.

I base mine on what I learned while covering the Senate as a beat reporter.

The Constitution specifies that the Senate President should serve as the acting President “until the President or Vice-President shall have been elected and qualified.”

In the Senate President’s absence or incapacity, the House Speaker takes over. But that would be impossible after June 30 since all congressmen would also be out of office by then.

However, 12 senators would still be in office beyond June 30. In fact, their tenures would only expire in the year 2013. That was how the Constitution designed it in order to avoid a vacuum.

Unfortunately, the incumbent Senate President Enrile is not one of those senators. He will also be out of office by June 30, which is why he is running again.

Let’s examine the 12 senators who will remain beyond June 30 and see how acceptable they might be to their colleagues:

  • Senators Benigno Aquino III and Manuel Villar are both running for President.
  • Senator Loren Legarda is Villar’s running mate.
  • Senator Alan Cayetano is aligned with Villar.
  • Senator Francis Pangilinan is aligned with Aquino.
  • Senator Joke Arroyo is aligned with President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo who is suspected of angling to stay on in office.
  • Senator Edgardo Angara is also aligned with Pres. Arroyo.
  • Senator Miguel Zubiri is also aligned with Pres. Arroyo and suspected of electoral cheating by veteran Senator Aquilino Pimentel Jr.
  • Senator Panfilo Lacson has gone missing because of double murder raps.
  • Senator Antonio Trillanes is in jail on rebellion charges.
  • And who will trust a habitual failed coup plotter like Senator Gregorio Honasan to assume the post of Acting President?

And so that leaves only Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero, a man without a political party – the man least likely to power grab for himself. A man who is credible and competent in law.

If you have a better suggestion, I would like to know.

Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero
sits out the 2010 presidential race

But don’t count him out just yet

By Raissa Robles

Two months before the deadline for filing of nominations to the 2010 presidential race,  I was able to interview Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero whom pollsters said at that time was running third in voters’ preference surveys.

Even then I sensed a certain hesitation on his part to answer questions that began with the phrase -   “if you were president” – or – “what would you do if you became president.” His ambivalence became more apparent as weeks went by.

Now I believe his mind was not fully made up to travel  the road to the presidency.

Chiz cropped3

Senator Francis "Chiz" Escudero - photo by Raissa Robles

Shortly before he bolted from his political party and withdrew from the race, two of his followers told me they were prepared to accept and follow whatever Sen. Chiz decided.  And fight another day.

It is for this reason that he could still be a factor in the race if he publicly backs any one of the candidates. Remember that as of late October last year 13% of respondents in a Pulse Asia survey chose him.  He has yet to speak out his choice as the next president.

I’d like to share with you an article I wrote on Sen. Chiz.  It was originally published in the December 2009  issue of Asian Dragon magazine, which is allowing me to put it up on my website.

♦♦

Senator Francis Escudero said he’s ready to be the President of the Republic of the Philippines next year.

“I’m ready,” the boyish-looking senator who recently turned 40 told Asian Dragon. With his short-cropped hair and slim build, Escudero could be mistaken for a yuppie fresh out of college.

But the Rolex watch on the wrist – a gift from the wife – the well-cut shirt and air of quiet confidence all say here is a young man who thrives in the halls of power.

Should he win, Escudero would be the youngest ever politician to assume the nation’s highest office.

The question of his age being brought up again and again as an issue against him is quite understandable. Filipinos had gotten so used to being ruled by by men and women past their prime, including an aging dictator.

Next year’s elections would be different. Most of the presidential candidates rating favorably in pre-election surveys are under 50, with Escudero as the youngest.

This would repeat a historical cycle that Ferdinand Marcos’ military rule had interrupted. Marcos was 48 when he became president, while Ramon Magsaysay was 46. Senator Benigno Aquino Jr., who was touted to win the 1973 presidential polls that Marcos scuttled, would have been 40 during the oath-taking.

Escudero believes many now would prefer to elect someone young since a little over half of all registered voters are his age or younger, he recently told Reuters news service.

Among all the candidates, Escudero is the only one who really uses the power of the internet. He personally uses the social networking tool Twitter to touch base with young Filipinos. His tweets are accompanied by a stylized drawing of him that makes him look like a Japanese mangga comic book hero. Escudero has 12,000 followers of his tweets, roughly the same as Senator Aquino. But Aquino’s tweets indicate that someone else is doing these for him.

Closely linked to the issue of whether he was too young to run for president, Asian Dragon asked Escudero whether he thought himself “capable of being president.”

“Ha? (What)” was his reply. The question had briefly caught him off guard but the lawmaker who is known for his sound bites quickly recovered. He said in his usual rapid monotone: “If at all, I won’t even be thinking about it if I thought I was not. Not capable, but ready. Not really capable. Hindi kailangan yon. (That’s not necessary.) I’m ready. I’m ready for it.”

He pointed out that he had spent 11 years as a lawmaker – nine years in the House of Representatives and two in the Senate. Or roughly the same amount of time that two of his closest and older presidential rivals – Senators Benigno Aquino III and Manuel Villar – have spent as legislators.

Unlike them, Escudero also has had legal training from the University of the Philippines, followed by a two-year postgraduate course in international and comparative law at Georgetown University.

He gave three other reasons why he was ready: “You must be willing to turn your back after your term ends. Your heart must be in the right place and you must have the will to do what needs to be done.”

Later, he revealed he had aspired for the post at the age of five, or roughly when Marcos was the president. “That’s what my mom told me. But of course I lost it along the way….But again, why do I even have to justify my age? I don’t diminish the capabilities of those older than I am.”

Of Marcos, whom his congressman-father, Salvador, once served as agriculture minister, he said he initially had a vision for the country but did not know when it was time to go. He said nothing about Marcos’ grand-scale corruption.
Surprisingly, Escudero did not cite his eloquence as that singular quality that would make him a good president. Instead, he said, “I listen. Like a sponge….One thing we sorely lack in the present president.”

“I can accommodate information and suggestion. Dahil din siguro bata pa ako. Pag luma na ang sponge hindi na makaabsorb ng tubig. (Maybe because I’m still young. When the sponge is old, it can’t absorb water.) I listen and I study.”

His Senate office is geared for listening. It has no imposing executive desk. It only has a long shiny wooden banquet table with over a dozen chairs and a wooden display cabinet filled mostly with his law books and biographies like the late US President Richard Nixon’s.

He hasn’t read Nixon nor the rest. “Forgive me if I’m honest enough to say people gave me those books. It will be a flat out lie to say I did (read them).”

“I don’t read for fun…but the budget I read completely from cover to cover (even if) it’s boring.” His focus on the national budget is understandable since it is one of the key documents of governance. It shows who gets how much of taxpayer money.

Escudero rose to prominence because of his way with words, which he effectively used to slam President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. He was at the forefront of two impeachment moves against Arroyo in Congress.

But when asked during the interview whether he would pursue Arroyo’s prosecution if elected president, he said: “I do not seek to persecute nor prosecute her.”

“It’s not the job of the president to file a case against the former president. It’s not the job of the prosecutor’s office which is under the Office of the President.”

“It’s the job of the Ombudsman,” he said and promised to run after the Ombudsman instead. “If the Ombudsman does not do her job politically, the next government can impeach her and replace her with someone, not with someone who will persecute (Arroyo), but as long as that someone who will also defend her (Arroyo); someone who will see to it that justice will be done.”

Escudero’s own record at making the Ombudsman accountable seems to be the exact opposite of his stance today. Years ago, Escudero helped block the impeachment by Congress of Ombudsman Aniano Desierto, who was accused of not doing his job.

Escudero clarified his role: “I simply voted against the impeachment because the evidence was not clear. How can I by my lonesome stop it? As you said yourself I was a first termer. I was 28 years old. Ganon ba ko kagaling? Biglang sinisisi sa ‘kin lahat yan? (Was I that good? All these are suddenly blamed on me.) Excuse me. I did not even have a chairmanship at that time.”

Escudero is prepared to run as the official candidate of the Nationalist People’s Coalition whose founder, businessman Eduardo Cojuangco, has a slew of pending court suits filed by the state against him. Escudero said “all of them (cases) are pending before the Supreme Court and in the courts. Whoever becomes the next president should not intervene because the president has no business interfering with cases pending before the courts.”

Likewise, he said, the next president should not intervene in the ill-gotten wealth cases against the Marcoses because “again, (they are) pending in the courts.”

Escudero displayed a similar thought process and hands-off stance on the proposed anti-dynasty law. The proposal is intended to flesh out a constitutional clause by banning relatives from running for office at the same time in the same province. The committee he chairs endorsed it for approval but he inhibited himself from the deliberations because “I might be accused of having conflict of interest.” In 2007, his father ran and won the same congressional seat he had just vacated.

Escudero said he hoped to bring about change in the way of doing things. In one of his speeches, he promised to deliver on six priority areas to entice investors. These are: good governance; enforcement of laws in speedy fashion; strengthening of finances; investing in the youth; self-sufficiency in rice, corn and fish; and fast-tracking of infrastructure.

During the interview, Escudero seemed loath to use the word “I” in the same breath as the presidency. Whenever he was asked what he would do if he became president, he would say, “let’s rephrase (to) whoever becomes president (because) to me, it’s not a question of personality. I haven’t even declared (my candidacy) yet. I cannot say if I become.”

Psssssst, Senator Chiz Escudero, is it true you’ve turned down ONE BILLION PESOS offered to you just to withdraw from the race?

Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero has reportedly turned down ONE BILLION PESOS offered to him in exchange for withdrawing from the presidential race, two sources have just now told me separately. Wow.
I tried phoning his cell but he’s not answering. I have no reason not to believe my two sources because both are highly reliable and IN THE LOOP.

I was told Senator Chiz will announce today at the earliest that he will push through with his candidacy but leave the Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC) of businessman Eduardo Cojuangco. He has nothing to lose. He will look good and even if he loses, he is still a senator with a mandate till 2013.

chiz-escudero-portrait

The sources both said the NPC founder had forged an agreement to pair off NPC official, Senator Loren Legarda, with Senator Manuel Villar, chair of the Nacionalista Party who is running for president.

Doesn’t this smack of an arranged marriage? They mentioned Senator Eduardo Angara as the marriage broker.

Anyway, Ms. Loren, who professes to be single right now, is the happy bride.


Wonder how much her dowry will cost Cojuangco who is still trying to wangle total control of San Miguel Corporation.