The Vice President I suppose hes retaining that tried to evade reporters the rest of the afternoon and evening. When "ambushed" by the DFA press corps in the corridor of the department, he made his escape after muttering that his relations with the President remain "cordial" and that he had "no regrets". Then he said Malacañang would make the necessary statements.
The fact is that he was requested to meet with GMA in Davao, flew over there Monday afternoon and had a closed-door session with the boss-lady that night in the Marco Polo Hotel. What was discussed during that meeting or was it a showdown or confrontation? Guingona wasnt saying. Yet.
In the meantime, having exploded his "bomb" (or been exploded?), it seems like business as usual. Guingona is going through with his scheduled lecture today, as guest speaker of a forum in the Carlos Romulo Auditorium, (named after the daddy of Bobby Romulo) in the RCBC in Makati, sponsored by former President Fidel V. Ramos RP Development Foundation. His topic: RP-China Relations. Not RP-US Relations? Not GMA-TG Relations? Abangan.
On July 10th, still in his role of DFA Secretary, the Veep will fly to Shanghai to formally inaugurate a new Consulate General in the Shanghai-Pudong area which is generally viewed as the up-and-coming rival to supplant Hong Kong. Beyond that, no one can, at this muddled moment, predict his plans.
Angrily reacting to a news report in another daily that he was leading a "Sikatuna group" intriguing against Guingona by bending the Presidents ear with bad stories about Tito G., former Foreign Affairs Secretary Roberto "Bobby" Romulo (who had earlier e-mailed me with a similar denial from his hotel, Le Meridien, in Brussels) indignantly asserted in a television interview that he wasnt fueling the GMA-Guingona row, and, although it wouldnt be offered to him (he said), had no intention of accepting a DFA Secretaryship.
The most persistent kuro-kuro remains, of course, that concerning as Ive mentioned previously the ancient Kulog ng Hagonoy, Ka Blas Ople, whos at present in Los Angeles but is expected to return on Friday.
Is it true that Presidential publicist and image-builder Dante Ang flew to the USA to "convince" Senator Ople? Another report is that Ka Blas kababayan and, indeed, former chief of staff, Bulacan Congressman Willie Villarama, took off post-haste to L.A. to also importune the Senator from Bulacan to take the DFA post.
What hat is our old friend Willie wearing these days? He was once Vice President GMAs virtual "chief of staff" when she was Veep, until a celebrated break was precipitated, the usual rumor-mongers alleged, by a row within the inner circles of then Vice President Macapagal-Arroyos staff. Then, Willie was chief of staff of businessman, now Manila Congressman Mark Jimenez (one of Americas "Most Wanted for Repatriation"). In the House of Representatives, he has been the champion of controversial Commission on Elections Commissioner Luzviminda Tancangco, moving vigorously to head off "impeachment proceedings" against her.
Will Congressman Willie if Senator Ople, after several protestations that he wouldnt, suddenly accepts the DFA portfolio come back with him in glory to stand behind him as he is "anointed" head of the Foreign Office?
Why is Senator Ople in L.A., the city of fallen angels in the USA? By coincidence, really. He had come from the International Labor Organization (ILO) conference in Geneva (Switzerland), then flown down to San Francisco for a medical check-up in the Stanford University Hospital in Palo Alto (usually described by transiting politicians and officials as "routine"), then gone on to Los Angeles.
In the meantime, some names are also being floated or being floated by themselves like former Ambassador Ernie Maceda, ASEAN Secretary-General and Ambassador Rod Severino, DFA Undersecretary Lauro Baja, etc.
No hurry, it seems, on the other hand. I just heard on the radio that President GMA is prepared to be concurrent "acting" Secretary of Foreign Affairs as long as needed. Why doesnt she just keep it? Then, there will no longer be any clash between her role as Chief Executive (and "chief architect" of foreign policy) and the DFA Secretary (as implementor of foreign policy).
She and she will be one big happy family.
There are those who see these phenomena as a bid to catch the attention of somebody "upstairs." Are those regular public pronouncements part of a campaign to enhance Desiertos aspiration for nomination to the Supreme Court by the Judicial and Bar Council, and "persuade" the President to appoint him to the High Tribunal? As former Senator Rene Saguisag, in a column he wrote in Today, remarked on Ani Desiertos ambitions to become an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, and I borrow the expression from Saguisag this time: "Susmariosep!"
There are 27 yes, twenty-seven aspirants for the two vacant seats in the High Court recently vacated by two men of brilliance and probity, just-retired Justices Jose Melo and Sabino de Leon. In fact, although there are only two vacancies, four candidates are already intimating to friends and other listeners that they have been promised a seat in the Court by no less than GMA herself.
I hope that the JBC will carefully screen the 27 aspirants before it pares the hopefuls down to a short list. In the past, nominees whose names were sent by the JBC to Malacañang could be described as a mix of qualified, undeserving (for lack of integrity, unfortunate moral character, and intellectual inferiority), and unknown nominees. This time around, the JBC must resolve to only pick the best and the brightest. Under what category, of the above-mentioned, does exiting Ombudsman Desierto fall?