MANILA - Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jr., who was sworn in as the country’s 17th president thanked the Filipino people and called his victory the “biggest electoral mandate in the history of Philippine democracy.”
“This is a historic moment for us all. I
feel it deep within me. You, the people have spoken and it is resounding. When
my call for unity started to resonate with you, it did so because it echoed
your yearning, mirrored your sentiments, and expressed your hopes for family,
for country and for a better future. That is why it reverberated and amplified
as it did, to deliver the biggest electoral mandate in the history of
Philippine democracy.
By your vote, you rejected the politics of
division. I offended none of my rivals in this campaign. I listened instead to
what they were saying and I saw little incompatibility with my own ideas about
jobs, fair wages, personal safety and national strength and ending want in a
land of plenty.
I believe that if we focus on the work at
hand, and the work that will come to hand, we will go very far under my watch.
You believe that too. And I listened to your voices who are calling for unity,
unity and unity. We will go further together than against each other, pushing
forward not pulling each other back out of fear, out of a misplaced sense of
weakness. But we are the furthest from weak. The Filipino diaspora flourishes
even in the most inhospitable climes, where they are valued for their quality.
The changes we shape will benefit all and will shortchange no one. I was not
the instrument of change, you were that. You made it happen. I am now.
You picked me to be your servant to enable
changes to benefit all. I fully understand the gravity of the responsibility
that you’ve put on my shoulders. I do not take it lightly but I’m ready for the
task. I will need your help. I want to rely on it but rest assured I do not
predicate success on the wide cooperation that’s needed. I will get it done.
I once knew a man who saw what little had
been achieved since independence in a land filled with people with the greatest
potential for achievement, and yet they were poor. But he got it done.
Sometimes, with the needed support. Sometimes, without. So, will it be with his
son. You will get no excuses from me.
I am here not to talk about the past. I am
here to tell you about our future. A future of sufficiency, even plenty of
readily available ways and means to get done what needs doing - by you, by me.
We do not look back, but ahead. Up the road that we must take to a place better
than the one we lost in the pandemic. Gains made and lost. Opportunities
missed. Well-laid plans superseded by the pandemic. Indeed, ours was the
fastest growing economy in the ASEAN byways now outdated. We shall be again, by
radical change in the way the world must now work to recover what we lost in
that fire, and move on from there.
We face prospects of the war abroad of
which we are totally blameless. We seek friendship with all. But countries like
ours will bear the brunt of it. And if the great powers draw the wrong lessons
from the ongoing tragedy in Ukraine, the same dark prospect of conflict will
spread to our part of the world.
Yet there is more out there. Like going
forward by new ways of doing, that the pandemic forces to adopt, a stronger
resilience, quicker adaptability. They are our best prevention, they are our
best protection. Quiet reflection in a rough and tumbled campaign of a breadth
and intensity never experienced reveal some of them. Such as the willingness to
listen despite the noise, the hesitation to quarrel over differences and to
never ever give up hope of reconciliation.
These gave me the piece to ponder deeper.
There are hints of a road not taken that could get us out of here quicker, to
something better, something less fragile. There is also what you the people did
to cope but this time empowered by new techniques and more resources. You got
by, getting some of what you needed with a massive government help. And for
this I thank my predecessor for the courage of his hard decisions. But there is
a way to put more means and choices in your hands. I trust the Filipino.
Imagine how much more you’d achieve, if the
government backstops instead of dictating your decisions. Always there to pick
you up when you fall. Giving what you need to get past a problem. Imagine if it
invested in your self empowerment to bring it closer to taking on whatever
challenges come. Imagine, a country that in almost every sense is you. Now
imagine what you and the government can achieve together. We did it in the
pandemic and we will do it again.
But again, I will not predicate my promise
to you on your cooperation. You have your own lives to live. Your work to do
and there too I will help. Government will get as much done alone without
requiring more from you. That is what government and public officials are for.
No excuses. Just deliver. It was like that, once upon a time.
I did not talk much in this campaign. I did
not bother to think of rebutting my rivals. Instead, I searched for promising
approaches better than the usual solutions. I listened to you. I did not
lecture you who has the biggest stake in our success and the forthcoming State
of the Nation will tell you exactly how we shall get this done.
In this fresh chapter of our history, I
extend my hand to all Filipinos. Come, let us put our shoulders to the wheel
and give that wheel a faster turn to repair and to rebuild and to address
challenges in new ways to provide what all Filipinos need to be all that we
can. We are here to repair a house divided, to make it whole and to stand
strong again in the bayanihan way, expressive of our nature as Filipinos. We
shall seek, not scorn dialogue, listen respectfully to contrary views, be open
to suggestions coming from hard thinking and unsparing judgment but always from
us, Filipinos. We can trust no one else when it comes to what is best for us.
Past history has often proven that.
Solutions from outside divided us, none
deepened our understanding. They were always at our expense. Never forget, we
are Filipinos, one nation, one republic indivisible. We resisted and never
failed to defeat foreign attempts to break our country in my father’s watch.
His strongest critics have conceded that. So let us all be part of the solution
that we choose. In that lies the power to get it done, always be open to differing
views but ever united in our chosen goal. Never hesitating to change it should
it prove one thing. That is how agile and resilient republics are made. Our
future we decide today, yesterday cannot make that decision anymore, nor can
tomorrow delay it. The sooner we start, the surer and quicker the prospect of
achieving our future.
These are troubling times, what’s happening
to others can happen to us but it will not. We see what is happening. We are
witness to how it is being stopped and we have seen the glory that crowns
struggle against all odds. Giving up is not an option. We’ve been through times
of bitter division but united. We came through to this when it shall begin
again but better.
The campaigns have run, and have taken me
here where I stand today. I listened to you and this is what I have heard. We
all want peace in our land. You and your children want a good chance of a
better life, in a safer, more prosperous country. All that is within reach of a
hard working, warm and giving race. Your dreams are mine. Your hopes are my
hopes. How can we make them come true? How can we do it together? But I will
take it as far as anyone with the same faith and commitment can as if it
depended entirely on himself. In our hope to make our country peaceful, your
hope is my hope. In your hope of making our country successful, your hope is my
hope. And in our hope for our brighter future and the futures of our children,
your hope is my hope.
We are presently drawing up a comprehensive
all-inclusive plan for economic transformation. We will build back better by
doing things in the light of the experiences that we have had. Both good and
bad. It doesn’t matter. No looking back in anger or nostalgia. In the road
ahead, the immediate months will be rough but I will walk that road with you.
The pandemic ravaged bigger economies than ours. The virus is not the only
thing to blame. What had been well-built was torn down. We will build it back
better.
The role of agriculture cries for urgent
attention that its neglect and misdirection now demands. Food self-sufficiency
is the key promise of every administration. None but one delivered. There were
inherent defects in the old ways and in recent ways too. The trade policy of
competitive advantage made the case that when it comes to food sufficiency a
country should not produce, but import what other countries make more of and
sell cheapest.
Then came Ukraine, the most vulnerable when
it comes to food are the countries farthest away from the conflict. Those
bearing no blame for provoking. Yet they face the biggest risk of starvation.
If financial aid is poured into them, though it never is, there is nothing to
buy. Food is not just a trade commodity. Without it, people weaken and die,
societies come apart. It is more than a livelihood, it is an existential
imperative, and a moral one.
An agriculture damage diminished by unfair
competition will have a harder time or will have no prospects at all of
recovering. Food sufficiency must get the preferential treatment. The richest free
trade countries always gave their agricultural sectors. Their policy boils down
to don’t do as we do. Do what we tell you to. I am giving that policy the most
serious thought if that doesn’t change or make more allowances for emergencies
with long-term effects.
There is a parallel problem in our energy
supply. Sufficient fossil fuel-free technology for whole economies has yet to
be invented and it is not seriously tried by rich countries. Again, consider
the response of the richest countries to the war in Ukraine. But surely, a free
world awashed with oil can assure supplies or we will find a way. We are not
far from oil and gas reserves that have already been developed.
What we teach in our schools, the materials
used, must be retaught. I am not talking about history, I am talking about the
basics, the sciences, sharpening theoretical aptitude and imparting vocational
skills such as in the German example. Alongside, the national language, with
equal emphasis and facility in a global language, which we had and lost.
Let us give OFWs all the advantages we can
to survive and to thrive. Our teachers, from elementary, are heroes fighting
ignorance with poor paper weapons. We are condemning the future of our race to
menial occupations abroad. Then, they are exploited by traffickers. Once, we
had an education system that prepared coming generations for more and better
jobs. There is hope for a comeback. Vice President and soon Secretary of
Education Sara Duterte-Carpio will fit that mission to a tee.
We won’t be caught unprepared,
underequipped, and understaffed to fight the next pandemic. To start with, we
never got over the pandemic of poor, if any, free public health. The last major
upgrade of a public health system exemplified by the resources poured into the
Philippine General Hospital predates the current shambles by three generations.
Our nurses are the best in the world. They
acquitted themselves with the highest distinction abroad, having suffered even
the highest casualties. With the same exemplary dedication at home, they just
got by. They are out there because we cannot pay them for the same risk and
workload that we have back here. There will be changes starting tomorrow. I am
confident because I have an Ople in my cabinet.
There were shortcomings in the Covid
response. We will fix them. Out in the open, no more secrets in public health.
Remember, I speak from experience. I was among the first to get COVID. It was
not a walk in the park.
My father built more and better roads.
Produced more rice than all administrations before his. President Rodrigo Roa
Duterte built more and better than all the succeeding administrations
succeeding my father’s. Much has been built and so well that the economic dogma
of dispersing industry to develop the least likely places has been upturned.
Development was brought to them. Investors are now setting up industries along
the promising routes built. And yet, the potential of this country is not
exhausted.
Following these giants’ steps, we will
continue to build, I will complete on schedule the projects that have been
started. I am not interested in taking credit. I want to build on the success
that’s already happening. We will be presenting the public with a comprehensive
infrastructure plan, six years could be just about enough time. No part of our
country will be neglected. Progress will be made wherever there are Filipinos
so, no investment is wasted.
The recovery of Philippine tourism with its
emphasis on accessing nature’s beauty, I am sure it will exceed expectations.
And bigger is not always better but there’s
something to be said for economies of scale. And yet the country invites
investments in fast rising industries with quick returns and inflicts
irreparable damage for future generations. We have yet to see large scale
practical solutions to pollution. Though some are beginning to emerge, there
are tried and proven new ways of mitigation. Blades have been turning over the
sand dunes of Ilocos Norte. Harnessing a power all around but unseen long
before this day. I built them.
The rich world talks a great deal but does
a lot less about it than those with much less but who suffer more death and
destruction from climate change and lack of adaptation. We will look to our
partners and friends to help the Philippines who despite having a very small
carbon footprint is at the highest risk. First spare victims and help them
recover, and move on to lessen the harmful impact of climate change. We too
have our part to play. We are the third biggest plastics polluter in the world,
but we won’t shirk from that responsibility. We will clean up. You will not be
disappointed. So do not be afraid.
With every difficult decision that I must
make, I will keep foremost in my heart and in my mind the debt of gratitude I
owe you for the honor and responsibility that you have conferred on me.
Whatever is in a person to make changes for the better of others, I lay before
you now in my commitment, I will try to spare you. You have other
responsibilities to carry but I will not spare myself from shedding the last
bead of sweat or giving the last ounce of courage and sacrifice.
And if you ask me why I am so confident of
the future, I will answer you simply that I have 110 million reasons to start
with. Such is my faith in the Filipino. Believe, have hope. The sun also rises
like it did today and as it will tomorrow. And as surely as that, we will
achieve the country, all Filipinos deserve.” (Mindanao Examiner)
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