PerryScope
By Perry Diaz
By Perry Diaz

Four days later, P-Noy took his cue from the saying, “If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.” He then flew to Zamboanga, far from the madding crowd that has been pestering him for not giving up his presidential pork barrel.
War

It’s interesting to note that during P-Noy’s extended stay in Zamboanga, reporters asked Presidential Spokesman Edwin Lacierda during a press briefing in Malacañangwhy P-Noy had not made any statement on other national issues, Lacierda said that the President had no access to Manila newspapers. “You know, the problem in Zamboanga is that no planes are flying there. They’re not getting news there. No newspapers are being flown there,” he told the reporters. Whoa! Since when did the President not able to access the news when he was away? He has access to the Internet, has he not? And can’t Lacierda or his deputy Abigail Valte or the two other Cabinet-level “communications” secretaries – Ricky Carandang and Sonny Coloma — update P-Noy with what’s happening in Manila? They’re just a phone call away, aren’t they? And, oh! how about the online news? They’re accessible at the tip of P-Noy’s fingers, aren’t they? And if there is no electricity in the city, P-Noy should be able to get a generator. Simply put, there is no excuse for failure to communicate.
Plunder
Foremost among the national issues is P-Noy’s stand on the filing of plunder and malversation charges against 38 individuals, which include Senators Juan Ponce Enrile, Jinggoy Estrada, and Ramon “Bong” Revilla Jr. And then there are the pressing issues of the postponement of theSangguniang Kabataan (SK) elections and the prioritizing of the Freedom of Information (FOI) bill as “urgent.” With these issues lingering in limbo, it makes one feel that the whole country is at a standstill.
But granted that Lacierda was telling the truth that nobody outside Zamboanga City could reach P-Noy; then it would be the same the other way around: P-Noy wouldn’t be able to reach anybody in Manila, particularly his boys in Malacañang. P-Noy’s return to Manila provided a sigh of relief to his boys in Malacañang.
Meanwhile, it was reported that six of the 35 individuals charged with plunder on the Bureau of Immigration’s “lookout list” have left the country! And, listen to this: Secretary of Justice Leila de Lima said that the government has practically “no recourse” against the six.
With more and more lawmakers being investigated for plunder and malversation, the list could grow. And what would happen then? Could it be that the country is heading towards an anarchic order? Heaven forbid! Or, is another “people power” revolution in the offing? Indeed, the specter of another “people power” revolution sends shivers down the spine of every lawmaker… and the President, too.
For the love of pork
This brings to mind P-Noy’s controversial P1.3-trillion presidential pork barrel. Yes, we’re talking trillions here! That’s 1,300 billion! Compare that to the P25 billion allocated to all the lawmakers in 2013, that’s like comparing a mouse to an elephant! And what is really sad is that P-Noy may have planted, wittingly or unwittingly, the seeds of corruption by substantially increasing the Priority Development Assistance Fund (PDAF) allocations or pork barrel of the lawmakers beginning in 2011.

Reforms
But due to the heat created by the pork barrel scandal, lawmakers from both chambers of Congress decided to forego their PDAF allocations in favor of earmarking these allocations directly to government departments needing them. In other words, they couldn’t dip their dirty hands into the cookie jar anymore. It remains to be seen, though, if this “reform” would work. The greedy always find ways to beat the system.
But how about P-Noy’s P1.3-trillion pork? That’s a lot ofmoolah under his absolute control. In essence, he can move or redirect all or part of these lump sum allocations to projects of his choice and Congress couldn’t do anything about it. In other words, Congress no longer has the “power of the purse.” P-Noy usurped it.
It comes as no surprise then that the national uproar over the humongous presidential pork barrel is growing fast and could reach critical mass any time soon. But so far, P-Noy is resisting calls for him to let go of his pork. But how long can he hold on?
Ultimately, P-Noy has to deal with the scourge of our times: war in Mindanao and plunder in the government. That’s the price of leadership. It’s called command responsibility.
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