Even if Ding is a cousin of former President Corazon C. Aquino (on the Sumulong side), hes okay. He not only knows his law, but hes also both agreeable and accessible on the PR side, and you know how Comelec Chairmen tend to tangle with the media on the stiff-necked side.
We regret, of course, the retirement of outgoing Comelec Chairperson Harriet Demetriou. Harriet was both tough and fair and had the peoples trust. But thats the way the cookie crumbles. A week, as somebody said, is a long time in politics. I trust that the former Justice Demetriou will eventually get another important post in our justice system.
Titos problem, of course, is that even during his famous "I Accuse" diatribe against Estrada (borrowed in title from the renowned Dreyfus case JAccuse letter in France) he still sounds like a student orator declaiming in the Jaycee "Voice of Democracy" contest.
By the way, JAccuse (I Accuse) was coined by the writer Emile Zola to protest the French governments efforts to stifle the truth when it acquitted the real culprit Major Esterhazy of betraying France by giving military secrets to the Germans, and upheld the erroneous conviction of an innocent officer, Capt. Alfred Dreyfus because the authorities didnt want to admit a mistake had been made. Poor Dreyfus had been sentenced on March 15, 1895, to life imprisonment in the hell-hole of Devils Island, the cruel maximum security concentration camp off the coast of Guiana, in the Caribbean. Zola published his strongly-worded open letter to the French President in lAurore and it has become a classic philippic, quoted in textbooks all over the world. Finally, years of protest by Zola and such prominent men as Georges Clemenceau (later to lead France himself) and Francis H. Pressense, bore fruit. Dreyfus was unchained and brought back from Devils Island to vindication in Paris. Re-entering the Army, he was promoted to Lt. Colonel in 1918, and consequently awarded the Legion of Honor. Thanks to fighters like Zola and Clemenceau who stood up for him in his darkest hour and sought justice, he died with honor in retirement in 1935.
If Tito Guingona can bring to his new job the fire and zeal that characterized Emile Zola, he will do well. Hes now on the front line of our own hopefully "New" Republic. As for former Foreign Affairs Secretary Domingo "Jun" Siazon Jr., he has gone to the Stanford University Hospital (as far as we know) for treatment of a medical condition. Hes still a career ambassador and may, someday, serve again in another, less controversial capacity.
Like envoy to Japan?
During the Marcos martial-law hegemony, Sonny and his then-fiancee, my cousin Cecile Guidote (an outspoken Marcos critic herself), had to escape from the Philippines through a guerrilla network, and relocated to Brooklyn in New York City, where they conducted an untiring campaign in the US to expose the iniquities of the Great Dictator. They were harassed by Macoys agents even as they lived in poverty and fought a propaganda "war" against the posturings of the regime. They were sneered at by the Marcos gang, along with the late Raul S. Manglapus and their group, as "Steak Commandos." I remember Sonny telling me at the time, when I was finally permitted to travel after "country arrest" of seven years, that it was unfair of the Marcos press gauleiters to dub them "Steak Commandos" when, he groaned, "we can hardly afford hamburgers." (Sonnys brother had been arrested and tortured to death by the martial law military.)
Now the canard is being circulated that Alvarez is a "logger" (false) and a coddler of illegal loggers. Further, its being said by his enemies that he had already been a DENR Secretary and failed to "arrest" illicit loggers. This is nonsense. He has been fighting illegal loggers all his political life and even pushed for a total log ban. During his two terms in the Senate and in the House of Representatives, Sonny authored almost all the existing laws on the environment.
He has been battling to motivate action to curb and dispose of nuclear and toxic waste as well as warning of the threat of global warming. He was in the forefront of opposition to Estradas original plan (later withdrawn) to give burial honors to the late Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani (Burial Ground of Heroes). He was among the leaders of the Impeachment crusade from the very beginning. He is Vice President for Asia of the Advisory Committee on Protection of the Seas (ACOPS), chairman of Global Legislators Organizations for Balanced Environment (GLOBE) Philippine Committee and is a member of the Executive Board of Asia-Pacific Parliamentarians as well as Philippine Chairman of UNEP Clean Up the World.
Alvarez, perhaps, wont get that plum DENR posting. (Why are so many eager to get it? Thats a rhetorical question, folks.) But lets cut out that smear campaign. Hes clean and courageous.
Among the heavy-hitters gunning for the job, Im told by my insiders, are Nereus Acosta, Nicky Perlas, and even Dr. Angelina P. Galang of Miriam P.E.A.C.E. (whose connection is that shes a sister of Vicky P. Garchitorena). Even former DENR Secretary Victor Ramos, who did nothing when he was there, wants to be re-appointed to that juicy department. Is he being backed by his former boss, ex-President Fidel V. Ramos who seems to be getting his way in most things?
Why, even those architects of Urban Banks collapse, FVRs pets, Archit Bartolome and Ted Borlongan, may be "washed clean" and re-emerge as saints and "victims." (FVR was Urbans Chairman Emeritus). What about my friends who lost scores of millions in Urban Bank? Will they, by some magic, get their "lost" money back? This is a time of miracles. The trouble is that the New Guard looks too much like the Old Guard.
Oh, well. That may be the way of the world, but it still is the new Presidents duty to pick up the best and the brightest (not the slick pa-baliks) for each position.
One very important position that, up to now, has been unfilled is that of Solicitor General. A Solicitor General, as all members of Bench and Bar know only too well, is the governments "legal gladiator" who must handle the cases of the government in tribunals all the way down from the Supreme Court to the trial courts.
It is the SolGen, as the late Senator Ambrosio Padilla (who was Solicitor General from 1954 to 1957) describes it, who fights the legal battles of the government. In the past, that position was held by brilliant and outstanding lawyers like Lorenzo Tañada, Pompeyo Diaz, Juan Liwag, Antonio Barredo, Estelito Mendoza and Sedfrey Ordoñez.
President GMA must understand the importance of having a brilliant Solicitor General who is experienced in appellate advocacy and highly respected by Bench and Bar, especially by the Justices of the Supreme Court. Every administration is always challenged before the High Court. In fact, next week the Macapagal-Arroyo administration will face its first case before the High Court with its own legitimacy challenged.
Former President Ramos, a soldier, did not fully realize the importance of having a good Solicitor General, which is why, perhaps, he lost several cases before the High Court. When he was set to appoint his second Solicitor General, a cabinet member expressed the opinion that FVRs choice may not be equal to the task. Ramos replied: "Well, he will learn on the job." The performance of FVRs second SolGen, Silvestre "Bebot" Bello, shows that he did not learn his job.
In the United States, whenever the White House is poised to appoint a Solicitor General, the members of the Supreme Court are informally consulted by the White House legal staff and even by the President himself. In the U.S. the SolGen is considered an important administration official. In fact, unofficially the United States Solicitor General is considered the "10th member" of the nine-member High Court.
This time around, who will it be for GMA?