Another former actor-turned-politician has stolen the show and injected the spark of change into Philippines politics
In Manila’s most densely-populated and poorest district of Tondo the fight for the mayor of the city is a loud one. For 10 hours, voters line the halls of Manuel L. Quezon Elementary School in the middle of the district. Hundreds of voters will have their say in the Philippines’ midterm elections, electing senators, congressional members and local representatives. But in this schoolyard, it’s all about the Mayor of Manila.
Francisco Domagoso, a 44-year-old better known as Isko Moreno, passed through the gates bright and early to cast his vote. Into the blindingly sunny afternoon, children accompanying their parents and living nearby will shout his name and wave fan-shaped hand-outs emblazoned with his face. By evening he will have beaten out two former bosses to become the 27th mayor of the City of Manila.
One is a huge scalp. Incumbent mayor Joseph Estrada, 82, was infamously the target of “EDSA 2”, a four-day protest in 2001 which eventually saw him forced from the country’s presidency over allegations of massive corruption. That seemingly did not matter to the voters of Manila who in 2013 and again in 2016 elected him mayor. Polling had him as the favourite for a third term. Electoral regulations say this would be his final consecutive term if he were re-elected.
Moreno’s win in a season of Philippines midterm elections otherwise dominated by talk of a pro-Duterte senate and what that means for the future of the country is a rare moment of exciting change. While he’s clearly part of the establishment, Isko Moreno stands apart from the men he defeated.
He made a career in the 1990s as an actor in “bomba” films, an unsubtle genre of softcore and sexed up cinema. His childhood, however, is more relatable for the punters of Tondo who have turned out en masse at primary schools across the district to show their support.
Raised in the district, Isko Moreno made money for his family as a child collecting trash to be resold and food scraps to be reheated. He’s leaned heavily on his rags-to-riches story throughout the campaign. Calling himself a real Manileño, he made repeated digs at Estrada who he says lived most of his life outside of the city despite being also born in Tondo.
Reflecting frequently on the past failures of city administrations – broken promises of fixing failing infrastructure and resolving rampant poverty and crime particularly – his own complicity has been explained away. He had no opportunity for a formal education in Manila and has spent his two decades working for the city educating himself in the ways of governance, he says. Now, he is ready to tackle the big problems no other leader has addressed. It’s a message that clearly resonates.
While the incoming senate will be made up of Duterte allies keen to support his agenda, the City of Manila could be readying for a fight. Manila, and especially Tondo, has been home to the bulk of the thousands of deaths in the president’s war on drugs. Moreno stops short of saying the deaths would end under his watch, relying on a familiar trope of police self-defence. Still, “only God has the right to take a life,” he told Rappler just prior to the election.
Elsewhere for the city, he’s aiming big. His policy agenda looks nine years ahead with the assumption he would be returned for an additional two terms. This entails a two-pronged approach. First, massive infrastructure expenditure. Crucially, this would include low-cost housing for the city’s infamous slums as well as revitalisation of areas around the Manila Bay. He looks south for social policy inspiration and plans to bring Makati City’s education and healthcare standards to his own patch.
Achieving this would be against the odds. The city’s budget has been infamously troubled, although Estrada assures that it is now in the black after settling massive debts. It’s a risk the voters of Manila are overwhelmingly happy to take. (The Interpreter/Lowy Institute)
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