One year after, as rumors of yet another uprising swirl, the one group Im watching is the military. Sure, you need warm bodies in a revolt. But you have to admit that the military played a crucial role in the outcomes of EDSA 1, 2 and 3.
Members of the rightist Rebolusyonaryong Alyansang Makabansa and the Young Officers Union are no longer mischievous, adventurous spring chickens and have retired from coup plotting. These days theyre promising to help thwart any coup attempt.
So Im watching Defense Secretary Angie Reyes, who as far as I know has the solid backing of the AFP and its chief, Diomedio Villanueva. The question on many peoples minds is this: If Reyes could turn against Erap, his friend and kumpare, would he also turn against President GMA?
He emphasized that his loyalty is to the people. "I did not betray Estrada as a friend," he said. "The man is my friend. The man was very kind to me. (But) they deserted their mandate so I deserted them."
Reyes is clearly still happy with the way President GMA is doing her job. As the nation marks the first anniversary of EDSA Dos, he says he has "no regrets" about what he did.
Two things must be met before the military will step into a mass uprising, he said. One, there must be "genuine moral outrage" something that cant be manufactured or bought. Two, there must be the danger of the nation being torn apart, of the nations future being threatened if the situation deteriorates into chaos. In the case of EDSA Dos, he said, it was the culmination of months of discontent with the administration, and "the lid was about to blow off."
So was people power II in fact a coup?
"I dont care what they call it. What I care about is the righteousness of the cause," he said. "You cannot prop up an unpopular regime indefinitely."
I asked him if he thought were better off now than a year ago.
His reply: "The question should be, where would we be now if EDSA Dos did not happen?"
A year is too short a time, he said, to pass judgment on an administration, especially one that did not have the usual transition period and operated on a re-enacted budget. "Were talking about centuries-old problems poverty, corruption, unemployment," he pointed out.
Reyes acknowledged that there will always be people who will be unhappy with his actions on Jan. 19, 2001 and will be suspicious of his every move.
"History might not judge me kindly," he said. "But I think history will judge me fairly."
Another Cabinet member, Finance Secretary Jose Isidro Camacho, sighs, "People dont see how much weve done."
The problem, Camacho says, is that President GMAs achievements are reflected mainly in statistics that can be appreciated mostly by economists alone. He points out that despite the bigger absolute figures in the budget deficit, "we feel were actually in much better shape because we can control it we feel we have a sense of what wed like to be.
But I think things couldve been worse, given the global economic slump and the terrorist attacks last year, the new caper by the Abu Sayyaf, the kidnappings, the way this President ascended to power.
"Im optimistic things will turn out okay," Reyes said.
EDSA Dos booted out a corrupt, incompetent president. He remains out of power, detained and on trial. The economy managed to grow. If only for these things, Im making an effort to share Reyes optimism.