Editorial: Media and Bongbong Marcos
Will independent media practitioners get a good treatment under the presidency of Ferdinand âBongbongâ Marcos Jr.?
Labor leader and presidential candidate Leody de Guzman has warned journalists not to expect any preferential treatment from Bongbongâs administration. Carlos Conde, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, has written that the incoming presidentâs âcontempt for the media could pose serious risks for democracy in the Philippines,â adding that âignoring critical publications is bad enough, but Marcos Jr. will have tools at his disposal to muzzle the media in a manner that the elder Marcos, no supporter of press freedom, could only dream of.â
Their comments came after the questions from Rapplerâs Lian Buan were ignored by Bongbongâs spokesperson, lawyer Vic Rodriguez. The queries were about a pending contempt order against Marcos Jr. at a United States court and what will happen to President Rodrigo Duterteâs 2017 declaration that sets September 21 (the date of Martial Lawâs proclamation) as the national day of protest. Rodriguez did not respond, instead said âNext question.â
De Guzmanâs running mate and left-leaning politician Walden Bello has said Buanâs inquiries were valid. He further said there are many questions that the incoming Marcos administration must answer. Will there be a name change of the countryâs foremost international airport? Duterte Youth Partylist has filed a bill to revert Ninoy Aquino International Airport back to its original name, Manila International Airport (MIA). Benigno âNinoyâ Aquino Jr., the arch-political nemesis of Marcos Sr., was assassinated on MIAâs tarmac on Aug. 21, 1983. Ninoyâs death is commemorated annually as a national non-working day after Republic Act 2956 was signed into law in 2004 by then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. The same party-list also filed a bill to replace the faces on the P500 billâthe faces of Ninoy and his wife, the late President Corazon Aquino.
The other question that must be answered by Marcos Jr.âs camp is what will happen to the annual commemoration of the 1986 Edsa Revolution, which ousted Bongbongâs dictator father and exiled his family.
These are legitimate questions that the second Marcos administration must answer. Independent journalists need not seek preferential treatment from the incoming presidencyâall they must do is seek answers in this highly polarized society and know, not bend, the truth; then tell them, write them.