There is something intoxicating about
the sight of hundreds of thousands of
civilians taking to the streets, protesting
corruption and demanding justice.
Those thousands of marching feet,
beating hearts and waving placards
become in our minds' eye the physical
manifestation of democracy's soul. How
can they be wrong? They are the people. And the people, after all, are democracy.
What transpired last week in Manila had all the makings of democracy on the
hoof: protesters, rousing speeches, People Power-just like the glorious
revolution that ousted dictator Ferdinand Marcos so dramatically, and virtually
bloodlessly, nearly 15 years ago. The emotion of the moment carried the day,
and one felt cynical questioning the motives of the people or the alleged
corruption of departed President Joseph Estrada. But what actually happened
behind the scenes to bring about People Power II? And could those very
powers-and people-that have brought about the downfall of yet another
Philippine President be the same forces that will make it difficult for anyone,
including freshly sworn in President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, to govern the
Philippines effectively?
For Estrada, who never really got the hang of governing the Philippines, effectively or ineffectively,
the end came suddenly as the week's initial good news dizzyingly turned to bad. When Armed
Forces Chief of Staff General Angelo Reyes and Defense Secretary Orlando Mercado telephoned
him Friday afternoon on a secure line from a secret safehouse, Estrada was just 48 hours removed
from celebrating what had seemed like a crucial victory in his impeachment trial. By a vote of 11
Senators to 10, he had managed to suppress the opening of an envelope containing the
potentially damaging evidence that Estrada controlled bank accounts containing 3.3 billion ill-gotten
pesos ($71 million). Briefly, it looked as if Estrada had, through pluck, political muscle and
presidential power, survived the impeachment ordeal and won the opportunity to serve out his term.
But by the time the military men called on him three days later, the 63-year-old ex-actor would learn
that he had lost the allies he most needed if he wanted to hold onto power. He could make it
without the Makati business élite and possibly even without the people. But without the army, he
was finished.
To make sure Estrada fully understood the implications of this
phone call, Reyes dispatched his deputy, General Jose
Calimlim, on a mission to personally brief the President on the
untenability of his situation. Calimlim, a trusted former
aide-de-camp to Estrada, was the appropriate designate to
offer the President the pakikisama (show of loyalty) owed to a
person whom Reyes would later say he considered a "friend,
not an enemy."
When Calimlim arrived at MalacaNang Palace, the President
was in his office with several advisers, speaking on the phone.
He had already had a few drinks and was slurring his words. In
a fit of anger following the call, he ordered everyone out of the
office so that he could talk privately with his former aide. "You
too, Calimlim?" asked the President, referring to his earlier
conversation with Reyes. "Everyone has forsaken me." The
President turned despondent, saying: "You know what I'll do?
I'll just wait for one soldier to come and kill me." Calimlim
remarked later that "it was as if the whole world had collapsed
without his knowing what hit him."
Estrada had badly miscalculated in his bid to beat the
impeachment trial. By winning the battle to suppress the
evidence on a technicality-his defenders argued the material
in the envelope was not relevant to the original impeachment
charges-Estrada would lose all. It was that small victory that
triggered the tumult that would topple the President. When it
became clear that a majority of the 21 Senators was prepared
to defend Estrada, Senate President Aquilino Pimentel cast his
vote against Estrada, and then resigned his post. The entire
prosecution team followed suit, throwing the fate of the
impeachment trial into limbo. Estrada had been hoping the trial
would continue without the admission of the incriminating
evidence, leading to an eventual acquittal that would restore
him enough legitimacy to serve out his term. What he got
instead, when the trial collapsed, was the onset of political rigor
mortis: the Senate vote became the symbolic catalyst sending
hundreds of thousands of Filipinos into the streets to rally at the
People Power shrine built along Epifania de los Santos (EDSA)
Ave., where praying nuns faced down tanks in 1986.
That's where Calimlim went when he left the drunken, distraught Estrada on Friday afternoon,
joining Reyes, civilian Defense Secretary Orlando Mercado and a roll call of generals and admirals
who had similarly shifted their support from Estrada to Arroyo, who had been his Vice President.
The Filipino brass who hold so much power in this troubled democracy were welcomed into the
opposition stronghold like conquering heroes by some 700,000 demonstrators. Reyes pledged his
support to Arroyo in front of the crowd. Clearly grateful for the military allegiance that now seemed
to ensure her ascension to the presidency, Arroyo declared: "Now our protectors have joined the
people."
Estrada was given a deadline by a panel of opposition negotiators: he had to resign by Saturday at
6 a.m. All through Friday night, demonstrators continued to gather. This has been called the pager
revolution for good reason: within minutes of the Senate vote, text messages had flashed through
the Manila ether telling anti-Estrada Filipinos to GO TO EDSA. Hundreds of thousands converged
on the capital, following directions to, as one message put it, WEAR BLACK TO MOURN THE
DEATH OF DEMOCRACY. Said another text message: EXPECT THERE TO BE RUMBLES.
Cultural, religious, student and labor groups were on hand, as were stragglers who had just come
to see what they hoped would be the latest installment of the People Power show. D.J. Pete
Cabaddu, 33, flew back right after high-school graduation in Houston to experience the original
People Power. He was thrilled to have a chance to relive history. "We've done it before, we can do
it again," he promised. "We don't like the President and we can kick him out. We're ready for a new
President, and if the next one is like him, you'll see more of this."
While the television cameras were focused on the rallies-and the commentators became lost in
reveries about People Power revisited-behind-the-scenes negotiations had been going on
nonstop between military factions loyal to Estrada and those who advocated a quick coup to
depose the President. Chief of Staff Reyes and Defense Secretary Mercado had made their fateful
call to Estrada after a luncheon attended by all the top commanders. The officers agreed that
renouncing Estrada was the best course, in part because some commanders were urging more
drastic resolution. If the military did not come to a consensus, there loomed the possibility of
factional fighting or, worse, civil war. The group was worried, said Mercado, that "the AFP [Armed
Forces of the Philippines] would be divided if no action was taken."
Former President Fidel Ramos had already warned during a visit to Hong Kong earlier in the week
of the danger of a "palace coup" by forces allied with Estrada. And other retired officers were
already trying to condition the public and the military rank and file to accept the notion that military
intervention of one kind or another was a viable option. An ad in the Philippine Daily Inquirer
sponsored by the Philippine Military Academy's Class of 1962, whose president is retired General
Lisandro Abadia, promised, "The AFP and the PNP will have a crucial role to play in the coming
days. The officers, men and women of the AFP and the PNP know what to do during the critical
days ahead."
Meanwhile, at least one Estrada ally was believed to be plotting to incite violence that would help
the President justify use of his emergency powers to strengthen his grip on the military. According
to a retired military officer, Estrada had planned to replace Chief of Staff Reyes with Calimlim. That
plan collapsed when General Calimlim joined with Reyes in turning his back on Estrada.
By Friday evening, Estrada was running out of options. His hold on power, tentative since the
impeachment trial had commenced, had now been virtually sundered as military and political
operatives deserted him one after another. At one point, even former lovers were stepping forward
to denounce the famous womanizer. Actress Nora Aunor, formerly a loyal campaigner for Estrada,
publicly dumped the President, claiming he used to beat her "black and blue."
Estrada, known popularly as Erap, had never been popular among the gentrified élite, those
wealthy descendants of Spanish colonialists who comprised the well-heeled Makati and Forbes
Park power brokers. They viewed Estrada, who boasted about his middle-class origins and was
proud of his capacious appetites, as something of a parvenu, an uncouth impostor in the palace.
His clique of shady Chinese business cronies and provincial politicians was regarded as proof that
Estrada was a second-rater, unfit to rule and certainly not one to act in the best interests of the
Philippines. And they had their reasons to doubt his policies: Estrada's term in office had been an
economic disaster. The Manila Stock Exchange had plummeted 6%, and the peso was trading at
an all-time low of 55.75 to the dollar. The business élite had wanted him gone almost from his
landslide 1998 election victory; the allegations of corruption and the impeachment trial merely
provided the galvanizing issues. Indeed, among the protesters at EDSA last week were students,
professionals, doctors, teachers and lawyers-but very few of the lower-class masses who had
voted for Estrada and still supported their beloved Erap. "He was the only President who visited us,
the urban poor," says Edwin Nacpil, who makes his home in the crumbling squatter area called
North Triangle. "We appreciated Erap for what he thought of us and tried to give us."
The principal parties in People Power II were by Saturday morning comfortably ensconced at EDSA
and preparing to march on the palace if Estrada did not honor the deadline to resign. The
President's proposal: a call for snap elections in May that he promised not to contest. It met with
immediate dismissal from Arroyo and her supporters, who were quick to point out that the
constitution was clear on the terms of the Vice President's succession. By holding elections, he
hoped to prove that he and his coalition were still popular among the country's poor. Military and
civilian negotiators managed, with the help of some of the same special effects that had worked on
Marcos-persuasion flights over the palace by the Philippines' antiquated F-5 fighter jets and the
positioning of combat troops and armored personnel carriers outside its perimeter-to force a
recalcitrant Estrada out of MalacaNang just five minutes before a second deadline of Saturday
noon. Although Estrada did not actually resign, he agreed with the decision of the Supreme Court,
which had met secretly early Saturday morning. The court resolved that "the people have spoken"
and that they could not be ignored. Estrada and his wife Loi boarded a Coast Guard barge moored
near the palace for the short trip to their family home in the Greenhills section of Manila, where they
will be allowed to stay for five days. On Wednesday, under an agreement negotiators have
reportedly reached, they will fly to Australia aboard the executive jet of prominent Erap crony
Eduardo Cojuangco. They will live, for a while at least, at one of Cojuangco's properties in Australia.
Meanwhile, Arroyo delivered an inaugural address that captured well the spirit of EDSA II by
invoking the need to "improve moral standards in government and society, change the character of
politics in order to create fertile ground for true reforms" and practice "leadership by example."
It will be a tough challenge for Arroyo, who must now contend with the possibility that any
unpopular legislation, controversial executive decision or economic reversal could mean another
mass protest and the possibility of yet more People Power. Remember, Estrada-however
cynically-was acting within the framework of the law and under the terms called for by the
impeachment proceedings. Had he been declared guilty, he would have had to go. The troubling
point remains that he had not been convicted. To be sure, the evidence had been going against
him-until the court ruled that the envelope could not be opened. And the Filipino people certainly
deserved a better President.
But they had mechanisms to legally change their head of state. The option they chose, popular
uprising, while rousing and probably justified, could portend a troubling future for democracy. If 10
million text messages go out and 1 million protesters take to the streets at every crisis-when the
élite become dissatisfied with the direction of the country, or the military feels that the President has
lost his or her mandate or the Catholic church views the head of state as immoral-the result is a
perfectly healthy, if rambunctious, version of democracy. But if those protests lead to
constitutionally questionable successions, it becomes a subversion of democracy. Even now, we
don't know what percentage of Filipinos wanted Erap to go.
In a parting letter, Estrada wished his successor well. However, in a haunting postscript he signaled
that, like reruns of his old films, Filipinos may not have seen the last of him. "I continue to have
strong and serious doubts about the legality of the swearing in of the Vice President," he wrote.
Estrada, for all the wrong reasons, had said what really matters: a democracy that doesn't respect
the law will always be vulnerable.
With reporting by Wendy Kan and Nelly Sindayen/Manila