Dynasties, duh!
NO TO Mag-INDA-Now.
Punning perfection from
Pampanga’s moral minority provided the high definition, indeed, impacted the
meanest meaning, to political dynasty in the province. Alas, it failed to catch
the imagination, much less inflame the conviction of the electorate. Most
miserably, at that.
Did I say minority?
Minimality, more aptly, as suggested by their actual number, scoffed the
suddenly semantically sensitive Ashley Manabat. But that makes yet another story.
Anyways…
The Pineda juggernaut an
irresistible force. Panlilio’s spirited stand…well, all spirits, amounting to nothing
but token resistance.
Not just mag-inda – mother Gov. Lilia G. Pineda
and son vice governor-elect Dennis aka Delta winning by the widest margins, but
really mi-inda-inda – daughter Mylyn
and daughter-in-law Yolly also getting re-elected as mayors, unopposed –
veritably for the former, virtually for the latter.
Mag-INDA-Now! A dynasty
well-entrenched there. Appended insinuations of the Ampatuans notwithstanding,
indeed, lost in the triumphant shouting. Across Central Luzon, reverberating.
Realpolitik now: Matriarchal
in Pampanga becomes patriarchal in Bataan, conjugal in Bulacan and Nueva Ecija,
and fraternal in Tarlac.
All four Garcias won in
Bataan: the father, incumbent Gov. Tet Garcia traded places with son, 2nd
District Rep. Albert Garcia; son Jose Enrique Garcia was re-elected Balanga
City mayor, and daughter Gila Garcia won the Dinalupihan mayorship.
Laid by the wayside of the
Garcia blitz are the Payumos – ex-SBMA chair Tong Payumo losing anew in the
first district congressional run; his Harvard-educated son Tonito failing in
his bid for the provincial board; his nephew, incumbent Dinalupihan Mayor Joel
Payumo, losing in his gubernatorial quest; Joel’s brother, ex-Mayor Jose
Payumo III knocked out in his return
bout for the mayorship.
In Bulacan, both husband
Gov. Wilhelmino Alvarado and wife 1st District Rep. Marivic Alvarado
ran – and won, but of course – unopposed.
Though opposed, Nueva
Ecija Gov. Aurelio Umali and wife 3rd District Rep. Cherry D. Umali
managed to bury their rivals in landslides.
The once powerful Josons
shut out in the races for governor, vice-governor and the first congressional
district, managing wins only in their bailiwick of Quezon town and in the
provincial board and Cabanatuan City council.
No sibling rivalry but
mutuality in competency leading to victory was the case in Tarlac. Gov. Victor
Yap lived up to his name anew, in avalanche win over Cojuangco kin Isa Suntay and incumbent Vice
Gov. Pearl Pacada.
A walk in the park for
incumbent 2nd District Rep. Susan Yap with 120,822 votes to
erstwhile Public Works director Pepe Rigor’s 34,696.
No
contest too for San Jose Mayor Jose Yap, Jr. over the substitute candidate for
his murdered rival, Rudy Abella.
All is not lost though for
the anti-dynasts, taking heart in the fall – and how! – of the House of Gordon
and the Clan of Magsaysay in Olongapo City and Zambales.
Incumbent Olongapo Mayor
James Gordon, Jr., lost in his bid for the first congressional district seat.
His wife, former Vice Gov. Anne Mary Gordon failed to succeed him in an
internecine battle with their nephew Bugsy de los Reyes – both losing to Rolen Paulino. Brian Gordon, son of
Dick, also lost in the vice mayoral contest.
Kin JC de los Reyes failed
in his Senate bid. And with Dick himself finally excluded from the Magic 12,
thorough becomes the Gordon debacle.
Shut out of the Senate too
were Ramon Magsaysay Jr. and niece-in-law Mitos Magsaysay.
Mitos’ children Jobo and
Vic-Vic shared her loss, failing in their respective bid for the first
congressional district seat and the vice mayoralty post of Olongapo.
Back to
Pampanga, all is not lost too for the moral minimality, with aspiring dynasties
nipped in the bud this Monday past.
Come to
think of it, voters in two towns took heed to calls of “No to Mag-INDA Now,”
literally. In Bacolor, Mayor Jomar Hizon got his re-election but his mother Atching Lolet was frustrated in her vice
mayoral aspiration. In Magalang, Koko Gonzales won a council seat even as his
mother, LP official bet Elizabeth, came in third and last in the mayoral
contest.
No to mag-igpa too, apparently with the father, Candaba Mayor Jerry Pelayo failing to capitalize on his John Lloyd stock against comebacking Cong. Rimpy Bondoc for the fourth district congressional seat, and the son, Patrick losing in his own run to succeed him.
No to mag-igpa too, apparently with the father, Candaba Mayor Jerry Pelayo failing to capitalize on his John Lloyd stock against comebacking Cong. Rimpy Bondoc for the fourth district congressional seat, and the son, Patrick losing in his own run to succeed him.
No conjugal rule in Sto.
Tomas: the husband-and-wife tandem of former Mayor Romy “Ninong” Ronquillo and incumbent Vice
Mayor Gloria “Ninang” Ronquillo losing to history-making re-elected Mayor Lito
Naguit – first three-termer ever, and running mate Mark Arceo.
It’s vote-one,
take-out-one in Angeles City in the case of Carmelo “Pogi” Lazatin, Jr. winning
a council seat while his senior, Cong Tarzan losing his mayoralty bid. Ditto
Atty. Brian Matthew Nepomuceno landing Number 2 in the council while uncle
Blueboy losing to Vice Gov. Yeng Guiao in his congressional comeback run.
Though both Pamintuan father
– Mayor EdPam, and son – councilor Edu made a successful return. Same thing in
Mabalacat City with Mayor Boking Morales re-elected for the umpteenth time, and
his son Dwight, now neophyte alderman. Minus, daughter Marjorie Morales-Sambo
who got beaten in the vice mayoralty race.
Now, what does this add up
to?
Utterly lacking in the
requisite socio-economic, political, even anthropological and psychological background for an exegeses
of the issue at hand, I can only guess: It is not that voters love some
families less, but that they are mesmerized by others more. Duh?
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