Transitional Democracy
Transitional Democracy
Transitional Democracy
Perhaps, we can also point to the reality that we do not have a strong
sense of nationhood. This has translated into voting based on wrong
ideologies. Yet, given our situation, the desire for change can be used
to inspire transformation in terms of mainstreaming the role of political
parties, the hallmark of most modern states, in transitory democracies
like the Philippines.
We have now seen the election to the Senate of a new breed of young
leaders, Bam Aquino, Joel Villanueva and Sherwin Gatchalian. Whether
they will be successful in helping dismantle artificial hells on earth,
to use Victor Hugos word, will not depend on the number of laws they
will be able to pass, but on the collective and discursive rationality of
our age. Our good senators should always remember what their
mandate truly means: Forget not, never forget that you have
promised to use this silver to become an honest man.
The sustainability of democratic reforms will need a strong
motivational basis. This can be anchored only in the idea of good
citizenship. Beyond ones right of suffrage, nation-building will require
the meaningful involvement of every citizen in the state. Good
citizenship, rooted in the pursuit of the common good, should be
instrumental in making every Filipino politically informed. Unless the
electorate realizes this vital element, all those social media wars will
be pointless. Without the unity of a people, lasting social and political
transformation will simply remain a farfetched proposition.
The success of democracy in any modern state will depend on the
quality of knowledge and information possessed by its electorate.
There cannot be real empowerment in a society that is ignorant of the
basic role of civil society and its important function in holding all those
in positions of power accountable. Political reform in the country can be
realized only if active citizen participation is sustained. The key
element is people empowerment. The presence of our democratic
institutions must be felt in the margins of our society and by the most
disadvantaged sectors.
Thus, to be able to truly gain ground, political parties must have a
social impact, both in theory and in practice. For as long as millions of
Filipinos wallow under the gutter and live in misery, dissent in
whatever form will not be useless.