Sunday, 14 June 2026

A Sovereign Republic or a Platform? The Philippines in the Shadow of U.S.–China Rivalry

A Sovereign Republic or a Platform? 
The Philippines in the Shadow of U.S.–China Rivalry

Or: "The Philippines, Cold War Hysteria, 
and the Poverty of Borrowed Sovereignty"


It is not surprising that, amid the sharpening tensions between the United States and China, the Philippines has again found comfort in the vocabulary of a previous age. The Cold War has ended in chronology, but not in the Filipino political imagination. The Soviet Union has vanished. Mao’s China has long since been replaced by a China of industrial parks, container ports, corporate giants, investment banks, export surpluses, surveillance systems, party-supervised billionaires, and state-directed capital. Yet in Manila’s public speech, China is still made to appear as the old red specter: a communist menace marching across the map, not merely a rival claimant in the West Philippine Sea, not merely an expansionist maritime power, not merely a party-state capitalist empire, but the revived devil of the ideological catechism. 

This is convenient. It simplifies what should be a difficult national question. It allows the Philippine elite to avoid the labor of thinking. If China is merely “communist,” then the solution appears easy: summon the “free world,” embrace the Stars and Stripes, wave the treaty, reopen the gates, call every access point a partnership, and present military dependency as patriotism. But if China is understood more accurately as a party-state capitalist power—authoritarian, expansionist, mercantile, technologically ambitious, and deeply integrated into global capitalism—then the problem becomes more complex. It is no longer a morality play between capitalism and communism. It becomes a question of sovereignty, capacity, industry, diplomacy, maritime power, and the Filipino state’s long failure to build the material foundations of independence. 

China today is not the China of the Little Red Book. It is not the guerrilla romance once feared by landlords and generals. Since 1978, China’s reform and opening-up period has produced decades of market-led growth, export industrialization, private accumulation, and global integration. The World Bank notes that since reform began, China’s GDP growth averaged over 9 percent annually and nearly 800 million people were lifted out of extreme poverty (World Bank, 2022). Scholars increasingly describe China not as classical socialism, but as “party-state capitalism,” a political economy in which market competition and private capital operate under the commanding authority of the Chinese Communist Party (Pearson, Rithmire, & Tsai, 2022). The party remains Leninist. The economy, however, speaks the language of accumulation, export, technology, property, finance, logistics, and strategic capital. 

This is precisely why the old Cold War description is inadequate. It is not that China has become harmless. On the contrary, it may be more formidable because it no longer advances under the old banners of world revolution. It advances through ships, reefs, ports, credit lines, coast guard patrols, supply chains, artificial islands, industrial subsidies, maritime gray-zone pressure, and the brute confidence of a continental power that has found wealth and discipline at the same time. The Philippines must oppose Chinese encroachment where Philippine rights are violated. It must insist on its maritime entitlements. It must defend its fishermen, its coast guard, its continental shelf, and its sovereign rights under international law. But this cannot be done intelligently if the country mistakes propaganda for strategy. 

The 2016 South China Sea arbitral award gave the Philippines a legal weapon of great importance. The tribunal concluded that there was “no legal basis” for China to claim historic rights within the nine-dash line beyond what UNCLOS allows (Permanent Court of Arbitration, 2016). This was not an American gift. It was not a Japanese favor. It was a Philippine legal victory. It should have become the foundation of a sober, sustained, independent maritime policy: coast guard modernization, naval construction, fisheries protection, regional diplomacy, national industrial planning, and the education of citizens in the law of the sea. Instead, too often, it has been converted into a stage prop for alliance theater. 

The tragedy is not that Manila invokes international law. It should. The tragedy is that Manila often invokes international law while behaving as if its enforcement must come from foreign guns. The Filipino is asked to believe that sovereignty is defended by inviting another power to secure the archipelago’s strategic geography. He is told that dependence is deterrence, that access sites are not bases, that interoperability is modernization, that foreign troops rotating through Philippine facilities are signs of maturity, and that a nation unable to build enough ships, factories, fuel reserves, steel capacity, and disciplined institutions can nevertheless be safe because a treaty exists. 

But a treaty is not a substitute for state capacity. The 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty is important, but it is not magic. Article IV does not say that the United States automatically goes to war at Manila’s command. It says that each party would “act to meet the common dangers in accordance with its constitutional processes” (United States & Republic of the Philippines, 1951). That phrase matters. It means Congress, the President, calculations of interest, domestic politics, military readiness, and the changing mood of Washington. It means that alliance commitments are always filtered through the interests of the stronger party. 

This is the sentence that many Filipino Atlanticists prefer not to read aloud. They prefer the emotional version of the treaty, not the legal one. They prefer the mythology of rescue, not the grammar of obligation. They prefer to imagine the United States as an eternal liberator, rather than as a great power that acts when its own interests are served. The old colonial schoolroom still speaks: America as freedom, America as democracy, America as benevolent protector. Renato Constantino warned long ago that education must become “a vital weapon” for political independence and cultural renewal (Constantino, 1970). Yet the old miseducation persists in foreign policy. The flag changed, but the reflex remained. 

One sees this in the renewed celebration of the so-called “free world.” The phrase has returned, polished and modernized, under the language of a “free and open Indo-Pacific.” The United States’ Indo-Pacific Strategy speaks of a region that is “free and open, connected, prosperous, secure, and resilient” (White House, 2022). On paper, the words are pleasant. Who can oppose freedom? Who can oppose openness? But in the language of great powers, “free” often means free for their ships, their capital, their military architecture, their preferred rules, and their strategic corridors. “Open” often means open to access, open to positioning, open to logistics, open to surveillance, open to forward deployment. 

For the Philippines, the phrase must therefore be interrogated. Free for whom? Open to what? Secure for whose supply chain? Resilient for whose war plan? 

The Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement, or EDCA, shows the transformation of language. The United States and the Philippines announced four additional EDCA sites in 2023: Naval Base Camilo Osias and Lal-lo Airport in Cagayan, Camp Melchor Dela Cruz in Isabela, and Balabac Island in Palawan (U.S. Department of Defense, 2023). Official statements describe EDCA as supporting humanitarian assistance, disaster response, training, interoperability, and modernization. These phrases are not false, but they are incomplete. Cagayan faces Taiwan. Balabac faces the maritime approaches of the South China Sea. Palawan is not merely a province; it is a strategic platform. Northern Luzon is not merely a disaster-response zone; it is geography in the shadow of a Taiwan contingency. 

The old bases have not returned in the old form. There is no need for the old form. Empire has learned better grammar. Where once there was a base with a fence and a neon city beside it, now there is access, rotation, interoperability, prepositioning, joint use, capability enhancement, and disaster response. The flag may remain Philippine. The land may remain Philippine. The constitutional language may remain intact. Yet the strategic function is unmistakable: the archipelago is being inserted more deeply into the U.S. Indo-Pacific military framework. 

Japan’s role also deserves a sober eye. The Japan–Philippines Reciprocal Access Agreement, signed in 2024, establishes procedures for cooperative activities between Japanese and Philippine forces when one country’s forces visit the other (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, 2024). Japan has every reason to worry about China. It has its own East China Sea disputes, its own Taiwan anxieties, its own energy vulnerabilities, its own constitutional debates, and its own alliance dependence on Washington. But Filipino policymakers should not confuse Japan’s strategic interest with Filipino salvation. Tokyo is not returning to Southeast Asia as a charity. It is returning as a state that has read the map and understood that the first island chain is no longer an abstraction. 

Thus the Philippines now finds itself praised, courted, armed, visited, photographed, and congratulated. It is told that it is strategically important. It is told that it stands at the front line of democracy. It is told that the world admires its courage. But poor countries should beware the compliments of great powers. A frontier is rarely prosperous. A tripwire is rarely sovereign. A strategic hub is often a polite name for a place whose geography is more valuable than its people. 

The defenders of this policy will ask: what is the alternative? Should the Philippines simply surrender to China? Should it abandon the West Philippine Sea? Should it trust Beijing? These questions are meant to end the discussion by reducing all choices to two: Washington or Beijing, the eagle or the dragon, the old patron or the new bully. But this is the poverty of dependent thinking. To reject Chinese expansion is not to embrace American militarism. To criticize U.S. strategic use of the Philippines is not to excuse Chinese coercion. The Filipino nationalist position is not pro-China. It is pro-Philippines. 

The problem is that by clinging to the Cold War narrative, the idea of defending the country becomes less about defending sovereignty and more about consolidating interests. The rhetoric of anti-communism becomes useful to those who want foreign military access without calling it dependency, alignment without calling it subordination, and strategic obedience without calling it obedience. The red bogeyman becomes a convenient figure. Under its shadow, every question is silenced: Who benefits? Who decides? Who pays? Who becomes the target? Who receives the contracts? Who is photographed beside the visiting admiral? Who gets the illusion of importance while the country remains poor, exposed, and structurally weak? 

Here, too, the Cold War narrative reveals its own poverty. Filipinos speak of China as if the matter were simple: there is China, there is Taiwan, and there is the United States standing nobly in between. But the matter is not simple. It is made simple only by those who prefer slogans to history. 

For if one wishes to speak in the language of the old Cold War, then one must at least remember the old Cold War’s own confusion: there were, in fact, two Chinas claiming legitimacy. There was the People’s Republic of China in Beijing, born of the communist victory of 1949. There was also the Republic of China, which withdrew to Taiwan and continued to exist there—not as a ghost, not as a mere province with a flag, but as a government with institutions, elections, courts, armed forces, currency, passports, and a constitutional name. The Republic of China did not disappear simply because Filipino textbooks forgot it. It did not cease to exist simply because Manila transferred diplomatic recognition to Beijing. It did not vanish merely because popular speech now says “Taiwan” as if Taiwan were born outside the Chinese civil war. 

This is the irony. Filipinos who accuse others of misunderstanding China often misunderstand the China question themselves. They speak of Taiwan as if it were naturally and permanently separate from China, while also accepting a Philippine One China Policy that officially recognizes the People’s Republic of China as the sole legal government of China. They condemn Beijing’s claim over Taiwan, yet do not ask what the Republic of China itself means. They say “Taiwan” when the legal and historical residue still says “Republic of China.” They say “China” when they mean only the People’s Republic. They say “One China” without asking the most dangerous question: whose China? 

This is not an academic quibble. It goes to the heart of policy. In 1975, the Philippines recognized the Government of the People’s Republic of China as “the sole legal government of China,” and at the same time stated that it “fully understands and respects” Beijing’s position that there is but one China and that Taiwan is an integral part of Chinese territory (Government of the Republic of the Philippines & Government of the People’s Republic of China, 1975). That was not merely a diplomatic courtesy. It was a strategic repositioning. Manila accepted Beijing, removed official representations from Taiwan, and adjusted itself to the geopolitical reality that the United Nations and most of the world had already accepted. 

Yet the older China did not die. The Republic of China remained in Taipei. Its constitution still speaks in the name of the Republic of China. Its president is still President of the Republic of China. Its state still functions, whatever the limits of recognition may be. The everyday world calls it Taiwan because that is its political reality; its formal name remains Republic of China because history did not close neatly in 1949. This contradiction is precisely why the Taiwan question cannot be reduced to a childish slogan of democracy versus communism. 

Beijing says there is one China, and that Taiwan is part of it. Taipei, depending on who governs and which political tradition speaks, has moved between inherited Chinese legitimacy, Taiwanese identity, and the practical defense of its existing democratic state. Washington says it has a One China policy, but that policy is not identical to Beijing’s One China principle. Manila says it follows the One China Policy, but keeps unofficial economic and cultural relations with Taiwan through the Manila Economic and Cultural Office. Thus everyone says “One China,” but not everyone means the same China. 

This is where Filipino discourse becomes embarrassingly shallow. It wants Taiwan to be treated as a democratic outpost against communist China, yet the same discourse often ignores that Taiwan’s state is the Republic of China—the very anti-communist China of the old Cold War. If the Filipino right wishes to revive Cold War language, then it should at least face its own contradiction. Which China is it defending? The China seated in Beijing, which Manila officially recognizes? The China in Taipei, whose formal name many Filipinos no longer even remember? Or the American version of the Taiwan question, where Taiwan becomes less a China and more an unsinkable strategic asset in the first island chain? 

The ordinary Filipino is then pushed into a dangerous confusion. He is told that Taiwan is separate from China, yet his government does not recognize Taiwan as a sovereign state. He is told that Beijing is communist, yet Beijing trades, invests, lends, manufactures, exports, and accumulates like a ruthless capitalist power. He is told that Washington defends democracy, yet Washington itself maintains ambiguity because certainty might require war. He is told that the Philippines must prepare for a Taiwan contingency, yet the Filipino worker in Taipei, Taichung, Kaohsiung, and Hsinchu becomes a footnote in someone else’s strategic map. 

This is why the question must be asked plainly: if both Beijing and Taipei are trapped in the long shadow of the China question, why must the Philippines behave as if its role is already assigned? Why must Northern Luzon become a waiting room for a war over Taiwan? Why must the Bashi Channel become the geography through which Filipino sovereignty is again militarized by other states? Why must the Filipino be educated to panic before he is educated to think? 

None of this excuses Beijing. The People’s Republic has no right to impose its will by force, intimidation, blockade, missile threat, or coercion. No people should be absorbed by decree. No society should be handed over because an empire has a historical theory. But neither should the Philippines allow the Taiwan question to be narrated entirely by Washington. The danger is not only that China may act aggressively. The danger is also that the United States may define the crisis in such a way that Philippine territory, Philippine workers, Philippine ports, Philippine airfields, and Philippine lives are treated as natural accessories of American strategy. 

Nor can the Filipino Cold Warrior explain Vietnam. For if China is to be treated as the eternal enemy because it is “communist,” then what shall be done with Vietnam? Shall Hanoi also be dismissed as an enemy of the Filipino people? Shall the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, led by the Communist Party of Vietnam, be placed in the same ideological basket as Beijing simply because both states carry red flags, party congresses, Marxist vocabulary, and socialist constitutions? If this is the logic, then the Philippines should not cooperate with Vietnam at all. It should not speak of common maritime interests. It should not praise Vietnam’s firmness in the South China Sea. It should not see in Vietnam a useful regional partner. It should simply shout “communist” and close the door. 

But reality refuses such childishness. Vietnam is communist in party form, nationalist in instinct, market-oriented in economic practice, and fiercely sovereign in foreign policy. It does not fit neatly into the Filipino anti-communist imagination. It is not the China of Beijing, though it shares an ideological language with Beijing. It is not the old South Vietnam of Saigon, though some Filipinos may still imagine Vietnam through the vanished yellow flag of the Republic of Vietnam. It is not an American outpost, though it now cooperates with Washington. It is not a Chinese satellite, though it trades heavily with China. It is a state that learned, through suffering, invasion, poverty, siege, reform, and war, that ideology is not a substitute for independence. 

This is what Filipino Cold War nostalgia cannot understand. The Saigon-based government is gone. The Republic of Vietnam fell in 1975. The reunified Socialist Republic of Vietnam was proclaimed in 1976. One may remember the old flag, one may sympathize with refugees, one may study the tragedy of South Vietnam, but no serious state policy can be built on pretending that Hanoi is illegitimate because Saigon once stood. That is exile politics, not foreign policy. It is memory without power. It is nostalgia elevated into strategy. 

Vietnam, unlike the Philippines, has not allowed anti-communist sentiment to dictate its national interest. Indeed, Vietnam’s most dramatic modern lesson came not from surrendering to China, but from resisting it. In 1979, China invaded Vietnam in what Beijing called a punitive war. The Chinese forces withdrew after heavy fighting, and the war exposed the depth of Sino-Vietnamese hostility despite shared communist labels. Here was the great contradiction: one communist state attacked another communist state; one socialist neighbor punished another socialist neighbor; one revolutionary regime bled another revolutionary regime. The Cold War slogan collapsed at the border. 

If communism alone determines friendship or enmity, then Vietnam and China should have been natural brothers. They were not. If anti-communism alone determines patriotism, then Vietnam should have been dismissed forever by Filipinos as hostile. It should not be. The real question was never ideology alone. The real question was power, territory, memory, sovereignty, geography, and national will. 

This is why Vietnam can speak with China, trade with China, sign agreements with China, receive Chinese leaders, discuss railways, supply chains, artificial intelligence, green development, and border cooperation—and still remain wary of China. Hanoi can accept economic agreements without surrendering its maritime claims. It can allow diplomacy without forgetting history. It can talk of socialist friendship while preparing for strategic mistrust. It can sign documents in the morning and protest Chinese actions at sea in the afternoon. Such is the discipline of a state that knows how to separate ceremony from survival. 

There lies the lesson Manila refuses to learn. The Philippines keeps reaching for an ideological grammar because it has failed to build a sovereign one. It calls China communist because “communist” is easier to say than “a party-state capitalist power with maritime ambitions, industrial capacity, military reach, and coercive gray-zone instruments.” It calls America the free world because “free world” is easier to say than “a treaty ally with its own constitutional processes, commercial interests, military priorities, and great-power calculations.” It calls Taiwan democratic because “democratic Taiwan” is easier to say than “the Republic of China on Taiwan, historically tied to the unfinished Chinese civil war, unofficially engaged by Manila under a One China Policy.” It forgets Vietnam because Vietnam ruins the sermon. 

For Vietnam proves that a communist-led state can oppose China. Vietnam proves that national interest can override ideological kinship. Vietnam proves that one can trade with Beijing without kneeling to Beijing. Vietnam proves that one can cooperate with Washington without becoming Washington’s barracks. Vietnam proves that history can be remembered without being turned into colonial nostalgia. Vietnam proves that sovereignty is not a speech; it is a habit of statecraft. 

The Filipino, however, too often remains trapped between two ghosts: the ghost of American liberation and the ghost of anti-communist panic. He sees the old flag of Saigon and imagines that Vietnam’s legitimacy ended with it. He sees the red flag of Hanoi and imagines that Vietnam must be the same as China. He sees the red flag of Beijing and imagines Mao still marching, even as Chinese capital buys, lends, builds, exports, speculates, and accumulates in the language of global capitalism. He sees the Stars and Stripes and still imagines democracy descending from an aircraft carrier. 

So much for Cold War hysteria revived in the name of sovereignty. It cannot even explain the neighborhood. 

A serious Filipino foreign policy would learn from Vietnam without romanticizing it. Vietnam is not a liberal model. It is not a democratic paradise. It is not a country whose political system Filipinos should copy. But it is a country whose geopolitical discipline deserves study. It knows that China can be both trading partner and threat. It knows that America can be both useful and dangerous. It knows that ideology may decorate diplomacy, but geography governs survival. It knows that a country must talk to many powers while belonging to none. 

The regional data itself should caution Manila against hysteria. The State of Southeast Asia 2026 Survey Report found that, if ASEAN respondents were forced to choose between China and the United States, 52.0 percent selected China and 48.0 percent selected the United States; the Philippines, however, remained strongly aligned with Washington, with 76.8 percent preferring the United States in that forced-choice scenario (Lin et al., 2026). This is revealing. Much of Southeast Asia hedges. The Philippines sentimentalizes. Others calculate economic proximity, geographic reality, and strategic uncertainty. Filipinos, conditioned by history, still reach instinctively for America. 

Even distrust of the United States in the region is changing. The same survey found that among respondents who distrust the United States, the largest share believed that U.S. economic and military power could be used to threaten their countries’ interests and sovereignty (Lin et al., 2026). This is not communist propaganda. It is regional memory speaking. Southeast Asia knows that great powers do not arrive innocent. It knows that military power, once welcomed, develops habits. It knows that promises of protection can become forms of discipline. It knows that one can be saved into subordination. 

The Philippines seems determined to learn this lesson repeatedly and forget it repeatedly. It remembers Balangiga as tragedy but forgets it in diplomacy. It remembers Subic and Clark as sovereignty issues but returns to their logic by another route. It remembers the Senate vote of 1991 as a nationalist moment but treats it today as an inconvenience from a less “realistic” age. It remembers American colonial education as benevolent modernization and forgets that colonial benevolence always has a military budget. 

The Cold War rhetoric is therefore useful because it suppresses memory. Once China is reduced to “Red China,” America becomes “the free world” by default. The moral account is settled before the policy begins. The Philippine public is then asked to accept the strategic conversion of the country as a patriotic duty. Northern Luzon becomes a shield. Palawan becomes a hinge. The seas become corridors. The republic becomes terrain. 

Yet one must ask: what kind of independence survives if the national imagination cannot distinguish alliance from dependence? What kind of sovereignty exists if every crisis requires foreign reassurance? What kind of republic celebrates itself each June only to outsource its security by July? 

The Philippine problem is not that it has allies. Small and middle powers often need partners. The problem is the absence of an autonomous national strategy beneath the partnership. Alliances can supplement strength; they cannot replace it. Diplomacy can widen options; it cannot compensate for industrial weakness. International law can clarify rights; it cannot patrol waters. Public outrage can dramatize violations; it cannot build ships. The flag can be raised over reefs in rhetoric, but without capacity, it is the coast guard crew and the fisherman who bear the insult. 

A serious Philippine policy would begin by abandoning childish binaries. It would say plainly: China is an expansionist party-state capitalist power whose maritime claims threaten Philippine rights. It would also say: the United States is a treaty ally whose commitments are shaped by its own constitutional processes and strategic interests. It would say: Japan is a valuable partner, but not a redeemer. It would say: Taiwan is not merely a democratic island but the Republic of China on Taiwan, caught in the unresolved legacy of the Chinese civil war. It would say: Vietnam is communist but not therefore an enemy. It would say: ASEAN is weak, but regional diplomacy remains necessary. It would say: the 2016 award is law, not a talisman. It would say: the Filipino people must not be asked to choose between humiliation by Beijing and dependency on Washington. 

Such a policy would require discipline. It would require long-term investment in shipbuilding, coastal radar, drones, maritime law enforcement, cyber defense, fuel storage, merchant marine capacity, fisheries protection, and domestic industry. It would require a real reserve system, civil defense, ports that serve national logistics, and railways that serve national integration rather than merely real estate speculation. It would require schools that teach geopolitics without colonial romance. It would require leaders who do not confuse a photo in Washington or Tokyo with a national strategy. 

It would also require economic nationalism. The West Philippine Sea cannot be defended by press releases while the domestic economy remains import-dependent, deindustrialized, and oligarchic. Sovereignty is not only a flag at sea. It is steel, food, energy, ships, cables, satellites, engineers, disciplined institutions, and a population that knows why the country must stand on its own feet. A nation that cannot produce enough of what it needs will eventually be forced to accept the terms of those who can. 

This is where the “free world” slogan becomes especially hollow. The Philippines is told that it belongs to the democratic camp. But democracy without economic sovereignty becomes a ceremony. Elections occur, speeches are delivered, flags are waved, and yet policy is constrained by creditors, patrons, military donors, import dependence, and elite families whose idea of nationalism ends at the port gate. The people are invited to cheer for freedom while the structure of dependency remains untouched. 

The proper answer to China, then, is not hysteria. It is construction. The proper answer to coercion is capacity. The proper answer to the red bogeyman is not the whitewashing of another power’s agenda, but the recovery of Filipino seriousness. The country must oppose China where China violates Philippine rights; it must cooperate with China where cooperation serves Philippine interests; it must work with the United States, Japan, Australia, Vietnam, Indonesia, and others where such cooperation strengthens Philippine capacity; and it must refuse any arrangement that converts the archipelago into a convenient forward operating geography for wars Filipinos did not choose. 

The old Cold War taught many Filipinos to think of sovereignty as alignment. The new century demands that sovereignty be understood as capability. In the old script, the Philippines stands with the “free world.” In a mature script, the Philippines stands first with itself. 

This is not anti-Americanism. It is adulthood. This is not pro-China sentiment. It is memory. This is not neutrality in the face of aggression. It is the insistence that resistance to one power must not become submission to another. 

For too long, the Filipino elite has mistaken proximity to great powers for greatness. It has mistaken access for respect, aid for friendship, and strategic usefulness for national strength. Now, as U.S.–China rivalry hardens and the Philippines is once again praised for its location, the old question returns with a sharper edge: will the republic be a nation, or will it be a platform? 

The answer cannot be supplied by Washington. It cannot be supplied by Tokyo. It certainly cannot be supplied by Beijing. It must be supplied by Filipinos willing to think beyond the hysteria of borrowed wars and the nostalgia of borrowed flags. The Philippines need not kneel before China. But neither should it stand at attention every time America calls the formation. 

A sovereign people does not merely choose a protector. It builds a state. 

*** 

References 

Constantino, R. (1970). The mis-education of the Filipino. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 1(1), 20–36. 

Government of the Republic of the Philippines & Government of the People’s Republic of China. (1975, June 9). Joint Communiqué of the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines. 

Lin, J., Martinus, M., Fong, K., Pham Thi Phuong Thao, Aridati, I. Z., & Gauri, S. (2026). The State of Southeast Asia: 2026 survey report. ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute. 

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. (2024, July 8). Signing of the Japan–Philippines Reciprocal Access Agreement. Government of Japan. 

Pearson, M. M., Rithmire, M., & Tsai, K. S. (2022). China’s party-state capitalism and international backlash: From interdependence to insecurity. International Security, 47(2), 135–176. 

Permanent Court of Arbitration. (2016, July 12). The South China Sea Arbitration: The Republic of the Philippines v. The People’s Republic of China. Press release. 

Socialist Republic of Viet Nam. (2013). Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam. 

United States & Republic of the Philippines. (1951). Mutual Defense Treaty between the United States of America and the Republic of the Philippines. 

U.S. Department of Defense. (2023, April 3). Philippines, U.S. announce locations of four new EDCA sites. 

White House. (2022). Indo-Pacific Strategy of the United States. 

World Bank. (2022, April 1). Lifting 800 million people out of poverty: New report looks at lessons from China’s experience. 

Friday, 12 June 2026

Love Your Nation, Hate Your System: Independence Day in a still-Continuing Past

Love Your Nation, Hate Your System: 
Independence Day in a still-Continuing Past


Every June 12th, the Philippines undertakes one of its most solemn civic rituals. The flag is raised, the anthem is sung, wreaths are offered, and the nation is once again invited to remember Kawit, 1898, and the men and women who struggled to bring a people into political self-consciousness. The language of the occasion is familiar: freedom, sovereignty, sacrifice, nationhood, duty, and hope. No republic can live without such words. No nation can endure without memory. Yet memory, when separated from social reality, risks becoming not a source of renewal but an instrument of political consolation. 

This is the recurring difficulty of Philippine Independence Day. It is celebrated by the state as an achievement, yet received by many citizens as an unfinished question. The Philippines possesses the outward symbols of independence: flag, constitution, armed forces, diplomatic recognition, elected officials, and national territory. Yet the practical substance of independence remains contested by poverty, corruption, weak institutions, political dynasties, foreign dependency, social inequality, and the continued power of entrenched interests. The result is an annual ceremony in which the Republic praises freedom while many Filipinos continue to live under conditions that make freedom appear partial, fragile, or merely formal. 

The 128th anniversary of Philippine independence made this contradiction especially visible. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Vice President Sara Duterte both issued messages that invoked truth, accountability, sovereignty, freedom, and national duty. Their words, taken individually, were proper to the occasion. They were solemn, patriotic, and morally defensible. Yet their political force was weakened by the historical and institutional burdens carried by the very figures who delivered them. 

President Marcos reminded Filipinos that June 12 marked the assertion of the Filipino people’s right to govern themselves. He stated: “It was the moment we formally asserted our right to govern ourselves and determine our own destiny. The years that followed tested our resolve as we built institutions, strengthened national unity, and sustained a truly independent Republic.” 

The statement corresponds to the official narrative of Philippine history. The declaration at Kawit was indeed an assertion of political will. It represented the emergence of a people prepared to claim the dignity of nationhood before the world. Yet the President’s emphasis on institutions and national unity invites examination rather than mere applause. If the Republic has built institutions, the public is entitled to ask what kind of institutions they have become. If national unity has been strengthened, citizens are entitled to ask why the political order remains marked by patronage, dynastic rivalry, regional inequality, elite bargaining, and distrust. 

The President further observed: “Yet through wars, crises, and uncertainty, the Filipino spirit endured, and the determination to build a better Philippines prevailed.” 

This sentiment is familiar in Philippine political rhetoric. It speaks to the endurance of the people, and in that sense it is true. Filipinos have endured colonialism, war, occupation, dictatorship, debt crises, natural disasters, migration, inflation, and political instability. Yet endurance should not be mistaken for deliverance. A people may survive despite a system, not because of it. The repeated celebration of Filipino resilience can become a convenient substitute for asking why the nation has required so much resilience from its ordinary citizens. 

The President’s most direct appeal concerned truth and public trust: “We must protect truth from distortion, harness technology wisely, and restore trust in a time increasingly marked by division and distrust.” 

Again, the statement is sound in principle. No democracy can function without truth, and no state can govern well without trust. But trust cannot be commanded by proclamation. It must be earned by conduct. In the Philippine setting, distrust is not merely the product of distorted information or reckless technology. It is also the product of lived experience: corruption scandals, failed public works, selective accountability, slow justice, political impunity, and the perception that the state frequently serves the powerful more efficiently than it serves the poor. 

The difficulty is sharpened by the President’s own political inheritance. His surname remains inseparable from martial law, authoritarian rule, crony capitalism, debt, human rights violations, and the long struggle over historical memory. When he calls upon the nation to protect truth from distortion, the statement inevitably returns to the unresolved question of the Marcos legacy. Truth cannot be defended selectively. It cannot be invoked against present division while softened in relation to past abuse. An Independence Day message that calls for truth must also be prepared to confront the ghosts that still walk within the Republic. 

Vice President Sara Duterte, speaking separately, placed emphasis on accountability and corruption. She declared: “Let us choose truth. Let us choose accountability. And above all, let us choose hope.” 

Her formulation was direct and morally forceful. It recognized that citizenship requires more than commemoration; it requires judgment. Yet the Vice President’s own political situation complicates the authority of her statement. She has faced serious controversies and charges involving the alleged misuse of confidential funds, including the notorious names associated with the “Mary Grace Piattos” issue. Whether these matters result in final legal liability is for the constitutional and judicial processes to determine. But politically, they already raise the central question: how can accountability be credibly preached by those who themselves stand under the shadow of accountability? 

The Vice President also warned that sovereignty is not threatened only by foreign invasion. She said: “We fought for our sovereignty against foreign invaders. But sovereignty is not lost only to those who come from foreign shores.” 

This is perhaps the most useful insight in her message. It acknowledges that sovereignty can be hollowed out from within. A state may retain its flag and anthem while allowing its public resources, security apparatus, economic policy, and diplomatic posture to be shaped by private interests, foreign pressures, or factional advantage. Yet the same statement also exposes the burden of the Duterte name: Oplan Tokhang, Double Barrel, allegations of extrajudicial killings, the politics of fear, questions involving illegal gambling networks, and a foreign policy often criticized as an appendage to Chinese interests. When sovereignty is discussed by those associated with such legacies, the question becomes not only whether foreign powers threaten independence, but whether domestic power itself has often weakened the meaning of independence. 

The Vice President’s strongest passage concerned corruption: “Every peso stolen from the people's treasury steals a child's freedom from hunger. It steals a student's freedom from illiteracy or substandard education. It steals a patient's freedom to obtain quality healthcare.” 

The statement deserves attention because it defines corruption not simply as theft but as the destruction of social opportunity. It recognizes that corruption is not an abstract offense against clean government but a concrete injury against the poor. A stolen peso is a delayed classroom, an absent medicine, an unfinished road, an unfunded scholarship, a hungry household, or a community denied development. In this sense, corruption is not merely illegal enrichment. It is the privatization of the future. 

Yet the same passage also illustrates the moral tragedy of Philippine politics. Leaders often speak most accurately about the evils from which they themselves are not entirely free. The denunciation is correct, but the speaker is compromised. The result is a politics in which truth is expressed through tainted vessels and accountability is demanded by officials whose own records invite scrutiny. 

This contradiction is not limited to two personalities. It belongs to the Philippine system itself. The President speaks of truth while bearing the unresolved history of martial law. The Vice President speaks of accountability while facing controversies over public funds. Both speak of sovereignty while the Philippine state remains pulled among American strategic dependence, Chinese pressure, foreign capital, domestic oligarchy, bureaucratic patronage, and dynastic power. Both commemorate independence while presiding over a social order in which wealth, justice, and political influence remain unevenly distributed. 

This is why Independence Day rhetoric often sounds noble yet insufficient. The Republic repeatedly declares its love of freedom while tolerating structures that limit the freedom of ordinary Filipinos. It praises sovereignty while permitting dependency. It invokes the heroes while preserving many of the inequalities and injustices against which the nationalist imagination originally arose. 

The phrase “love your nation, hate your system” captures this distinction. It does not express contempt for the Philippines. It expresses fidelity to the nation against the failures of its political order. The country is not identical with the administration. The people are not identical with the state. The flag is not the property of those who temporarily govern beneath it. A citizen may honor the nation while condemning the institutions that deform its promise. 

Indeed, the revolutionary tradition itself supports such a distinction. The heroes of the nineteenth century did not become patriots by flattering the existing order. They became patriots by judging it. Rizal exposed social hypocrisy and colonial abuse. Bonifacio organized against submission. Mabini warned against opportunism and compromised independence. Luna condemned incompetence and indiscipline. Their patriotism was not passive reverence but active dissatisfaction. 

To remember them merely as statues, therefore, is to diminish them. They were not ornaments of the state. They were critics of an unjust order. Their legacy cannot be honestly invoked by a Republic unwilling to subject itself to criticism. 

It is therefore not surprising that Independence Day in the Philippines has long been associated with protest. For many citizens, June 12 is not merely a holiday of state ceremony. It is a day of anti-imperialist commitment, labor mobilization, student dissent, peasant assertion, and civic criticism. This tradition is often dismissed as disorderly or unpatriotic, but it may be closer to the spirit of independence than official pageantry itself. 

The nation was supposedly born into freedom on the day when a people, molded into a nation by cultural evolution and by a sense of oneness born of common struggle and suffering, announced to the world that it asserted its natural right to liberty and stood ready to defend that right with blood, life, and honor. A people formed in that manner cannot be expected to remain silent, mum, and contented when independence is reduced to ritual while injustice continues. 

The protester on Independence Day may therefore be less a contradiction of the celebration than its continuation. He insists that independence must be more than sovereignty in law. It must become sovereignty in life. It must mean food, work, education, healthcare, justice, land, dignity, public accountability, and freedom from both foreign domination and domestic exploitation. 

This is where the business of nation-building meets the morality of independence. A country cannot build lasting prosperity on a foundation of distrust. It cannot sustain investment, productivity, innovation, or social peace where corruption is treated as normal. It cannot claim democratic maturity where political families monopolize power. It cannot speak convincingly of sovereignty while its economic and strategic decisions are shaped excessively by external patrons. It cannot expect citizens to believe in institutions that appear strong against the weak and negotiable before the powerful. 

From a business and society perspective, corruption is not only a moral failure. It is an economic cost. It raises the price of public works, distorts procurement, discourages honest enterprise, rewards connections over competence, and weakens the developmental capacity of the state. It turns government into a market for influence rather than an instrument of national purpose. 

From a political perspective, corruption is not only a legal offense. It is an assault on citizenship. It teaches the poor that government is inaccessible unless mediated by patrons. It teaches the middle class that taxes disappear into networks of privilege. It teaches the young that merit matters less than proximity to power. It teaches communities that public service is episodic, selective, and transactional. 

From a nationalist perspective, corruption is a form of internal colonialism. It extracts wealth from the people while leaving them with ceremonies of belonging. It replaces foreign domination with domestic predation. It allows the Republic to speak the language of freedom while reproducing conditions of dependency and exclusion. 

This is why the statements of President Marcos and Vice President Duterte must be read against their opposites. When the President speaks of truth, the public remembers historical distortion. When he speaks of trust, the public remembers institutions that have repeatedly failed to earn it. When he speaks of a “Bagong Pilipinas,” the public asks whether the old arrangements of power have truly changed. 

When the Vice President speaks of accountability, the public remembers confidential funds. When she speaks of corruption stealing from children, students, and patients, the public asks how public money under her own authority was used. When she speaks of sovereignty, the public remembers a political era associated with violent policing and foreign policy concessions. 

Such scrutiny is not unfair. It is the proper burden of public office. Leaders who invoke the heroes must expect to be measured by the moral vocabulary they themselves employ. 

The tragedy is that the Filipino people are often asked to choose between rival factions that speak the language of reform while representing different versions of the same political structure. One camp denounces corruption when out of power and rationalizes discretion when in power. Another invokes sovereignty against one foreign patron while accommodating another. One side invokes law against its enemies and mercy for its allies. The rhetoric changes, but the social order frequently remains intact. 

This is why the old Independence Day question persists: independent for whom, and independent toward what end? 

Independence cannot merely mean the existence of a Filipino ruling class. It cannot merely mean the replacement of foreign administrators by local dynasties. It cannot merely mean that laws are passed by Filipinos, contracts awarded by Filipinos, and abuses committed by Filipinos. Nationality alone does not sanctify injustice. 

The purpose of independence was not to create a native version of domination. It was to open the possibility of a more dignified national life. 

The business community, the professionals, workers, peasants, students, and overseas Filipinos all have a stake in that question. A country with weak institutions cannot build a durable economy. A society with deep inequality cannot sustain political legitimacy. A government that consumes public trust cannot expect national unity in times of crisis. A Republic that confuses ceremonial nationalism with developmental seriousness will continue to produce patriotic speeches over unfinished roads. 

The country does not lack talent. It does not lack labor. It does not lack memory. It does not lack sacrifice. What it has lacked too often is a governing system capable of converting these national assets into broad-based human development. 

Thus, the Independence Day speech has become an annual mirror. It reflects what the Republic says about itself and what the people know from experience. The distance between the two is the measure of the unfinished revolution. 

To love the country, therefore, is not to suspend judgment. It is to sharpen judgment. It is to insist that patriotism must not be monopolized by those in office. It is to reject the convenient fiction that criticism weakens the nation. On the contrary, criticism may be the only means by which the nation prevents the state from betraying it. 

A mature patriotism does not ask citizens to be silent before abuse. It does not ask them to confuse stability with justice or order with legitimacy. It does not ask them to accept poverty as destiny, corruption as culture, or dependency as realism. It asks them to remember that the nation was born through dissent before it was celebrated through ceremony. 

This, finally, is the meaning of the phrase “love your nation, hate your system.” It is not a slogan of despair. It is an argument for national seriousness. It recognizes that the Philippines remains worthy of loyalty precisely because its people deserve better than the arrangements that have too often governed them. 

The Nation may continue to celebrate Independence Day with speeches, flags, and commemorations. It should do so. But it should also understand that every June 12 carries a verdict. The people are not merely remembering the past. They are judging the present against the promises of the past. 

Until truth is defended without selectivity, accountability applied without factional convenience, sovereignty practiced without foreign dependence, and development pursued without corruption, Independence Day will remain both celebration and indictment. 

The nation is free in law. But the people still await freedom in fact.  

Sovereignty, Nation-Building, and the Limits of Practicality: On the contributions of Philippines's Quezon, Puerto Rico's Muñoz Marín, and the Politics of Limits

Sovereignty, Nation-Building, and the Limits of Practicality: 
On the contributions of Philippines's Quezon, Puerto Rico's Muñoz Marín, 
and the Politics of Limits


The history of the twentieth century was not merely a history of decolonization. It was also a history of arguments about what freedom itself meant. As empires retreated and old colonial orders weakened, peoples across Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific confronted a question that proved more difficult than independence alone: what should be done with freedom once it became possible? 

For some, the answer was straightforward. A people conscious of itself as a nation should seek political expression through a sovereign state. Culture, language, memory, and historical experience were not ends in themselves but foundations upon which institutions, citizenship, and self-government could be built. Nation-building therefore became inseparable from sovereignty. A nation that understood itself as a nation was expected to govern itself. 

For others, however, the question appeared less certain. The twentieth century was also an age of economic interdependence, geopolitical asymmetry, military alliances, migration, and unequal development. Many communities discovered that sovereignty could be costly, fragile, and difficult to sustain. Independence promised dignity, but it did not automatically provide prosperity. Self-government offered political fulfillment, but it did not guarantee security. As a result, some political leaders began to ask whether the traditional nation-state remained the only acceptable destination of national consciousness. 

This tension produced one of the central dilemmas of modern political life: the relationship between practicality and aspiration. Should a people pursue sovereignty despite the constraints imposed by geography, economics, and international power? Or should those constraints define the limits of political ambition? At what point does realism cease to guide national aspiration and begin to replace it? 

The question was not merely theoretical. It confronted leaders throughout the colonial and postcolonial world. Some regarded practical limitations as obstacles to be overcome through preparation, institution-building, and political struggle. Others regarded those same limitations as permanent realities requiring accommodation. The disagreement was not simply about policy. It was about the meaning of self-determination itself. 

Historically, self-determination referred to the collective right of a people to determine its own political future. It emerged from revolutions, anti-colonial movements, and nationalist struggles. It assumed that a people was more than a population and that a nation was more than a culture. Self-determination was therefore not merely the right to preserve identity. It was the right to exercise political agency. 

Yet throughout the twentieth century another interpretation gradually emerged. Self-determination increasingly came to be understood not as the collective capacity of a nation to govern itself but as the ability of individuals and communities to preserve their identity while pursuing welfare, security, mobility, and prosperity under whatever arrangement proved most advantageous. The focus shifted from sovereignty to management, from nation-building to administration, and from political destiny to practical outcomes. 

This essay examines that tension through the contrasting examples of Manuel L. Quezon of the Philippines and Luis Muñoz Marín of Puerto Rico. Both operated within the orbit of American power. Both understood the realities of dependency. Both rejected empty romanticism. Yet they arrived at fundamentally different conclusions regarding the relationship between nationhood and sovereignty. 

Quezon treated practicality as a means toward nation-building. Muñoz Marín increasingly treated practicality as an alternative to it. Quezon regarded limits as conditions to be negotiated, renegotiated, and eventually overcome. Muñoz Marín increasingly accepted those limits as the framework within which national aspirations should remain. For Quezon, culture pointed toward sovereignty. For Muñoz Marín, culture increasingly became sufficient unto itself. 

Between these two approaches lies a larger question that continues to confront nations today: whether realism should discipline aspiration or diminish it, and whether a people can truly be said to possess self-determination when it preserves its identity but leaves the final exercise of political authority elsewhere. 

The comparison between Quezon and Muñoz Marín is therefore more than a study of two historical figures. It is an examination of two competing visions of nationhood itself. One understands the nation as a political project seeking sovereign completion. The other understands the nation as a cultural community capable of fulfillment without a state. One sees practicality as a road. The other increasingly treats practicality as the destination. 

The debate between them remains unfinished because the question they confronted remains unresolved: Is sovereignty the culmination of nationhood, or is nationhood complete even without it? 

Quezon, Muñoz Marín, and the Politics of Limits: Strategy, 
Practicalism, and the Meaning of Self-Determination 

If one seeks a revealing comparison for Luis Muñoz Marín, it may be Manuel L. Quezon. The comparison is tempting because both men emerged from territories under American sovereignty. Both operated within political systems shaped by Washington. Both understood the realities of power, law, administration, economic dependence, and modern constitutional politics. Both knew that a people under the authority of the United States could not simply shout freedom into existence and expect empire to disappear. Yet their conclusions regarding nationhood could not have been more different. 

The difference did not lie in whether one was realistic and the other idealistic. Both understood reality. Both knew the language of compromise. Both knew that the modern world rewarded preparation, institutions, discipline, and political calculation. The difference lay in what realism was meant to accomplish. For Quezon, realism was a means of approaching sovereignty. For Muñoz Marín, realism increasingly became a justification for remaining within the limits imposed by dependency. 

Quezon and the Politics of Negotiated Limits
 
It would be inaccurate to describe Quezon as a practicalist in the same sense as Muñoz Marín. Certainly, Quezon spoke the language of practicality. His life itself embodied political transition: a former officer of the revolutionary struggle and servant of the First Republic who became a provincial fiscal, legislator, resident commissioner, Senate president, and eventually president of the Philippine Commonwealth. He moved through institutions created by American colonial power, negotiated with American politicians, mastered legislative procedure, and presented Filipino aspirations in terms American policymakers could understand. Yet his use of practical language should not be mistaken for practicalism as a political philosophy. 

For Quezon, pragmatism was never the destination. It was a method, and more precisely, a discipline. The language of realism existed to serve a nationalist conclusion. The objective remained the construction of an independent Filipino state. He understood that a colonized people could not obtain independence by sentiment alone. It had to argue, organize, legislate, administer, and prepare. It had to show capacity not because capacity replaced sovereignty, but because capacity strengthened the claim to sovereignty. 

Quezon understood limits. He understood that the Philippines could not merely declare itself independent and expect the world to obey. He understood military weakness, economic dependence, constitutional realities, factional politics, and the immense power of the United States. Yet he did not regard these limits as permanent boundaries defining the horizon of Filipino aspiration. Limits were real, but they were not final. They were conditions to be negotiated, renegotiated, delayed, paid for, overcome, or converted into stages toward independence. 

This is the essential point. For Quezon, limits were not a settlement. They were a problem. If a price had to be paid, then it had to be paid. If a period of preparation was required, then preparation would be undertaken. If institutions had to be built, they would be built. If compromises had to be made, they would be made. If American opinion had to be persuaded, then it would be persuaded. The point was always movement. Practicality mattered because it led somewhere. 

This is what distinguished Quezon’s realism from practicalism. His realism was guided. It was rooted in an end that transcended immediate circumstance. The practical step was valuable only because it moved the nation closer to self-government. The Commonwealth itself was not the fulfillment of Filipino nationhood but a stage toward it. It was a bridge, not a destination. The Tydings–McDuffie Act of 1934 created the Commonwealth as a ten-year transition toward independence, and Quezon’s leadership must be understood within that structure of eventual sovereignty rather than permanent accommodation. (Wikipedia) 

In this sense, Quezon employed the language of the contemporary West against the political conclusions of empire. He had been formed partly by the classical examples of Europe and the Hispanic world, but he also understood that the twentieth-century argument for statehood had to be made in the language of constitutionalism, institutional maturity, and national capacity. If Americans argued that self-government required preparation, Filipinos would prepare. If constitutional government required administrative competence, Filipinos would demonstrate competence. If statehood required institutions, Filipinos would build institutions. The standards of modern nationhood would not be rejected; they would be mastered and then used to justify independence itself. 

This was not submission to Western logic but its reversal. Quezon understood that empire often justified itself by declaring the colonized unready. His answer was not to abandon the idea of readiness, but to appropriate it. If readiness was the imperial condition, then readiness would become the nationalist weapon. If America claimed to teach democracy, then Filipinos would demand the democratic consequence of that teaching. If America proclaimed self-government as a principle, then Filipinos would insist that the principle apply to them. 

This is why Quezon’s politics cannot be reduced to mere expediency. He endured criticism from those who viewed independence as impractical and preferred autonomy, permanent association, or eventual statehood within the American system. Yet he did not accept the premise that comfort under empire was superior to the burdens of independence. The question was not whether American rule could offer advantages. It could. The question was whether a people that understood itself as a nation should remain politically subordinate because subordination was convenient. 

For Quezon, therefore, the nation was not merely cultural. It was what might be called a perso-communal reality. He may be said to have understood, even without needing Bauer’s categories, that the Filipino was a collection of persons conscious of their Filipino-ness. Yet he also knew that the Filipino, regardless of ethnicity, region, language, or local ancestry, was not simply a bearer of memory, religion, custom, or cultural personality. He was a member of a political community capable of collective self-government. Culture was not the end of the process but its beginning. The nation became complete only when it found institutional expression in a state of its own. 

This distinguishes Quezon from a purely cultural nationalist. He did not imagine Filipino identity as something satisfied by festivals, songs, dress, cuisine, or sentimental memory. These things mattered, but they were not enough. The Filipino was not to be merely preserved as Malay, Christian, Hispanicized, American-educated, regional, or diasporic. The Filipino was to become a citizen of a state. The political task was to transform a people conscious of itself into a nation capable of governing itself. 

Muñoz Marín and the Politics of Settlement

Luis Muñoz Marín followed a different path. Like Quezon, he understood power. Like Quezon, he recognized the constraints imposed by geography, economics, and American dominance. Like Quezon, he knew that political dreams unsupported by capacity could easily become illusions. Yet where Quezon treated limits as obstacles to be managed in pursuit of sovereignty, Muñoz Marín increasingly treated those limits as the framework within which Puerto Rican aspirations should remain. His early political life contained pro-independence and nationalist currents, but his mature project moved toward Commonwealth status, industrial modernization, cultural preservation, and durable association with the United States. 

This is the crucial distinction: Quezon accepted limits without accepting them as final, while Muñoz Marín increasingly accepted limits as the settlement itself. 

What had been an obstacle became an arrangement. What might have been a stage became a destination. Puerto Rico’s relationship with the United States ceased to be a condition to be overcome and became the practical answer to the national question. To his defenders, this represented wisdom. To his nationalist critics, it represented a contraction of political imagination. 

This transformation reveals the deeper character of Muñoz Marín’s politics. He did not deny Puerto Rican identity. He defended it. He preserved Puerto Rican language, culture, literature, memory, and local institutions. He did not seek to make Puerto Ricans culturally indistinguishable from Americans. On the contrary, he understood the importance of Puerto Rican personality. Yet he increasingly ceased to regard sovereign statehood as the necessary conclusion of that identity. Puerto Rico would remain Puerto Rican without becoming fully independent. 

To his defenders, this represented practicality. It acknowledged geopolitical realities while preserving cultural distinctiveness. It allowed Puerto Ricans to retain their language, identity, and institutions while benefiting from citizenship, mobility, economic integration, and political stability. Muñoz Marín could be presented, therefore, as a statesman who protected Puerto Rico from both assimilation and impractical separatism. Under this interpretation, Commonwealth status was not betrayal but balance. 

Yet nationalist critics see the matter differently. To them, the apparent balance concealed a profound reduction of self-determination. The Puerto Rican could speak Spanish, sing La Borinqueña, celebrate local culture, preserve artistic life, and maintain a distinct public personality. Yet the harder task of sovereign nation-building—the possession of final political authority—remained attached to another state. In that arrangement, culture was preserved, but sovereignty was deferred. 

The contradiction became sharper with the Ley de la Mordaza, or Gag Law, of 1948. Passed by the Puerto Rican legislature and signed by the U.S.-appointed governor Jesús T. Piñero, the law criminalized pro-independence expression and was widely understood as a measure to suppress the independence movement. It made certain nationalist expressions, associations, and advocacy subject to punishment at precisely the moment when Muñoz Marín and the Popular Democratic Party- whose original orientation was Nationalism, were moving toward the Commonwealth formula. 

This matters because it complicates the practicalist defense. The Commonwealth settlement did not simply coexist peacefully with nationalism. It emerged in an atmosphere where pro-independence politics could be treated not merely as dissent but as a danger to be contained. While Muñoz Marín advanced industrialization and Commonwealth status, the political order around him restricted the very forces that insisted Puerto Rico was more than a culture. Practicality did not merely answer nationalism; it helped discipline it. 

The problem, then, was not that Muñoz Marín abandoned Puerto Rico in any simple emotional sense. The problem was that he transformed the meaning of Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico could increasingly be understood literally as a “rich port,” a place of investment, development, and managed cultural distinction, even as the more difficult work of sovereign nation-building was shortened, postponed, or declared unnecessary. The nation was no longer understood primarily as a political community seeking sovereign expression. It became a cultural personality capable of fulfillment without statehood. 

This is where the charge of reductionism becomes strongest. Muñoz Marín recognized self-determination, but he cut it short. It became less the right of a people to determine its collective future and more the right of a people to preserve identity within a practical arrangement. Puerto Rico could remain a matter of language, dress, art, memory, literature, music, local culture, and Hispanic inheritance, while final authority remained elsewhere. His cultural policy makes this tension clearer. Operation Bootstrap emphasized industrialization, while Operation Serenity attempted to balance modernization by promoting culture, the arts, and a defined Puerto Rican personality. Scholars have noted that Operation Serenity centered on cultural and humanistic values in response to the strains of industrialization and modernization. To defenders, this was cultural protection. To critics, it was cultural compensation. It soothed the anxieties created by dependency and modernization without resolving the political question of sovereignty. 

Here one sees the practicalist temptation in its most sophisticated form. The nation is not erased; it is curated. Its language is defended. Its songs are permitted, though often emptied of their original political force. Its dress, art, literature, and local personality are celebrated. The people are encouraged to remain themselves. Yet they are not necessarily encouraged to become sovereign. Culture becomes a substitute for political completion. 

In this sense, Muñoz Marín’s project bears a striking resemblance to the logic of Otto Bauer. Bauer understood the nation as a community of character formed through a community of destiny. In his famous formulation, a nation was “a totality of men united through community of fate into a community of character.” Such a conception need not require sovereign statehood. The nation may be carried by persons through language, memory, historical consciousness, and cultural inheritance. 

Puerto Rico under Muñoz Marín could therefore be imagined less as a republic waiting to be born than as a community of persons already complete in themselves. The Puerto Rican remained Puerto Rican wherever he resided. His identity survived through language, memory, culture, music, religion, family, and historical consciousness. The nation followed the person rather than being embodied in a sovereign state. 

When Self-Determination Sometimes Becomes Advertising: 
Otto Bauer, Culture, Sovereignty, and Aspiration

It is not surprising that the postcolonial/or Neocolonial setup in Developing and Underdeveloped countries comes a debate between nationalism and practicalism. Looking at the examples of the Philippines and Puerto Rico, these countries borne out of Spanish and American colonialism brought questions on nation building and self-determination: that Quezob has to realize the aspirations of his fellow nationalist even it meant using the language of the colonizer, while Muñoz Marín chose to reduce an aspiration into a matter to satisfy with even it meant at the expense of a belief. 

The practicalist regards this as maturity. The nationalist sees something else: a lowering of aspiration. 

The nationalist sees a people persuaded that preservation is enough. He sees a nation encouraged to remain culturally alive while politically unfinished. He sees self-determination transformed from the collective capacity of a people to govern itself into the individual capacity of persons to choose the arrangement most beneficial to their welfare. He sees a people taught to ask not “How shall we govern ourselves?” but “How shall I live best?” 

This shift in language is decisive. Historically, self-determination referred to a people’s right to determine its collective future. It emerged from revolutions, anti-colonial struggles, and demands for political recognition. It assumed that a people was not merely a population but a historical actor. Under practicalist reasoning, however, the emphasis shifts from the people to the individual. The question changes from “How shall we govern ourselves?” to “How shall I live best?” Worse, the question of identity shifts from “How shall I fulfill my obligation as a Filipino, Puerto Rican, or member of a people?” to “Am I required to be Filipino or Puerto Rican at all?” 

Thus, what was once a national aspiration becomes a personal calculation. This is how self-determination becomes advertising. It is no longer the stern political claim of a people seeking to shape its destiny. It becomes a display of cultural options. Filipino-ness or Puerto Rican-ness can be expressed through costume, music, food, skin, tourism, festivals, beaches, tattoos, dress, nostalgia, and marketable warmth. The citizen becomes a brand ambassador of heritage rather than a participant in sovereignty. National identity becomes an aesthetic. The people remain visible, colorful, and emotionally resonant, but their political aspiration is softened. 

This is not because culture is unimportant. Culture matters profoundly. Language, dress, music, literature, and memory are not trivial. They are the living tissue of a people. But when they become substitutes for self-government, they can also become instruments of containment. A people can be encouraged to celebrate its identity while lowering its political demands. It can be told that being recognizable is enough, that preservation is enough, that personality is enough. 

This is the point at which practicalism becomes reductionist. It does not destroy the nation directly. It stunts the aspiration by redefining the terms. It reduces the nation into culture, self-determination into individual choice, sovereignty into inconvenience, and political destiny into lifestyle. It does not command a people to forget itself. It tells them that remembering is sufficient. 

Quezon’s realism moved in the opposite direction. He did not use practical language to reduce the Filipino to a cultural person. He used practical language to produce the Filipino as a political citizen. The Filipino had to understand the ways of the West not in order to surrender to them, but in order to counter them using their own logic. If law was the language of power, Filipinos would speak law. If institutions were the measure of readiness, Filipinos would build institutions. If democratic consent was the moral claim of the age, Filipinos would demand that consent be honored. Thus, this is why Quezon’s nationalism was not simply emotional. It was strategic. It saw that the national aspiration had to be disciplined. It had to pass through institutions, budgets, statutes, schools, negotiations, and constitutional conventions. It had to convert revolutionary will into governmental capacity. But the discipline did not replace the aspiration. It served it. 

Muñoz Marín, by contrast, increasingly left the limit as it was. He did not simply recognize constraints; he made peace with them. He did not merely postpone sovereignty as a matter of timing; he helped redefine Puerto Rican nationhood so that sovereignty no longer appeared necessary to its fulfillment. The limit became the arrangement- and if necessary, be undergone referendums yet the situation remained the same: Either you accept Statehood or remain as an Associated State since the idea of Independence, although noisy, is becoming insignificant to an already practicalist populace- unless a situation makes Independence breaks the cycle of enforced practicality. For now, the courts, the departments, the leadership, and local governments already been acting "on behalf of a benevolent state who just left them speaking Spanish." This arrangement became the identity- and the identity became sufficient. 

This is why the contrast between Quezon and Muñoz Marín remains so revealing. Both men understood reality. Both rejected empty romanticism. Both operated within the shadow of American power. Yet Quezon used the language and idea of realism to move beyond dependency, while Muñoz Marín increasingly used realism to justify a durable accommodation with it and to make people contented in it.  One saw practicality as a means toward sovereignty. The other increasingly treated practicality as a substitute for sovereignty. One believed that limits could be negotiated, renegotiated, and eventually overcome. The other increasingly accepted those limits as the permanent horizon of political possibility. 

The difference may be expressed simply: Quezon learned the language of empire in order to defeat empire’s conclusion. Muñoz Marín learned the language of modern politics in order to make dependency culturally acceptable and politically durable. 

Conclusion: Two Answers to a National Question?

This distinction remains relevant far beyond the histories of the Philippines and Puerto Rico. Every nation faces the question of whether realism should guide aspiration or replace it. The danger of practicalism is not that it destroys a people. It is that it persuades a people to lower the horizon of what it believes is possible. 

A nation can survive as culture. A nation can survive as memory. A nation can survive as language. A nation can survive as personality. A nation can survive in songs, festivals, homes, diaspora associations, and the gestures of care by which people recognize one another. 

The nationalist asks whether survival alone is enough.  For Quezon, the answer was a blunt no. A people had to govern itself. Culture had to become citizenship. Memory had to become institutions. Identity had to become sovereignty. Every action becomes a calculated part of nation building and its lessons be a part of its continuation- that sometimes the Philippines has to understood evenly especially the bluntiest messages ever left and usually taken confusing. For Muñoz Marín, the answer increasingly became yes. A people could remain itself without final statehood. Culture could compensate for dependency. Personality- or in a contemporary sense, the individual could substitute for sovereignty. The Puerto Rican could remain Puerto Rican even if Puerto Rico remained politically unfinished. 

Between these two answers lies one of the central dilemmas of modern nationhood: whether a people should use realism to build the state, or use realism to explain why the state need not be built at all. 

***

References

Bauer, O. (2000). The question of nationalities and social democracy (J. O’Donnell, Trans.). University of Minnesota Press. Original work published 1907.

Britannica. (n.d.). Tydings-McDuffie Act. Encyclopaedia Britannica.

EBSCO. (n.d.). Luis Muñoz Marín. EBSCO Research Starters.

Sotomayor, A. (2015). “Operation Sport”: Puerto Rico’s recreational and political modernization project. Journal of Sport History, 42(1), 55–72.

U.S. National Archives. (2023). Manuel Quezon and the push for Philippine independence.  

Monday, 8 June 2026

"Do Not Bend Jurisprudence to Political Convenience"

"Do Not Bend Jurisprudence to Political Convenience"

Or: on Constitutional Supremacy, Legal Continuity, 
and the Proper Use of Precedent 


Old constitutional decisions are not museum artifacts. They are part of the institutional memory of the country- much so a Republic that's to take pride with. They may be reexamined, limited, distinguished, or overruled, but they cannot be dismissed merely because they belong to an earlier constitutional period. 

A recurring argument in contemporary political and legal debate is that decisions rendered under the 1935 Constitution may be cited only as historical references and cannot prevail over the 1987 Constitution. In its most basic form, the proposition is unobjectionable. The 1987 Constitution is the present fundamental law. No judicial decision, whether decided under the 1935 Constitution, the 1973 Constitution, or any prior legal regime, may override the operative constitutional text. A precedent decided under a former charter must necessarily be examined in light of the language, structure, history, and jurisprudence of the present Constitution. 

Yet that proposition is often extended beyond its legitimate meaning. It is one thing to insist that old jurisprudence must be tested against the present Constitution. It is another thing entirely to suggest that such jurisprudence becomes irrelevant, obsolete, or legally meaningless simply because it predates 1987. The former position reflects constitutional supremacy. The latter reflects historical amnesia. 

The distinction is crucial. A legal system does not restart from zero every time a new Constitution is ratified. Constitutional change may alter institutions, powers, rights, and modes of review, but it does not automatically erase the accumulated reasoning of courts. The Supreme Court did not begin to exist in 1987. Philippine constitutional law did not emerge fully formed after EDSA. The judiciary’s prior doctrines, interpretive habits, institutional precedents, and legal principles remain part of the legal order unless they are expressly abandoned, superseded by incompatible constitutional text, or overturned by subsequent jurisprudence. 

This is not a matter of nostalgia. It is a matter of legal method. Article 8 of the Civil Code provides that judicial decisions applying or interpreting the laws or the Constitution form part of the legal system of the Philippines. The provision does not state that only decisions under the latest Constitution have legal significance. It does not impose an expiration date on jurisprudence whenever a new charter is ratified. Rather, it recognizes that judicial decisions participate in the formation, stabilization, and transmission of law. They are not merely records of disputes already resolved; they are part of the structure through which legal meaning is preserved and applied. 

Thus, the phrase “that was under the 1935 Constitution” is not, by itself, a legal argument. It may be the beginning of an argument, but it cannot be its conclusion. A proper inquiry must ask several questions. What doctrine did the decision establish? What constitutional language did it interpret? Was that language materially altered by the 1987 Constitution? Did later decisions reaffirm, distinguish, modify, or abandon the doctrine? Are the facts substantially comparable? Does the principle remain compatible with the present constitutional framework? 

Without that inquiry, the objection is not constitutional analysis. It is chronological prejudice. 

I. Constitutional Change Does Not Require Judicial Amnesia 

The 1987 Constitution introduced significant changes to the Philippine constitutional order. Among the most important was the expanded definition of judicial power. Courts were not merely authorized to settle actual controversies involving legally demandable and enforceable rights; they were also given the duty to determine whether any branch or instrumentality of government had committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. 

This expansion is central to the post-EDSA constitutional settlement. It was meant to prevent the excessive use of the political question doctrine as a shield for governmental abuse. Under the 1987 Constitution, actions of political departments may be reviewed when grave abuse of discretion is alleged. This is a major development in Philippine constitutional law. 

However, expanded judicial power is not equivalent to judicial amnesia. The 1987 Constitution changed the scope of judicial review; it did not nullify every prior doctrine concerning separation of powers, legislative procedure, internal parliamentary affairs, quorum, political questions, or institutional necessity. Constitutional transformation does not require jurisprudential vandalism. 

This point is especially relevant to debates involving Avelino v. Cuenco. Decided in 1949 under the 1935 Constitution, Avelino arose from a Senate leadership dispute and addressed, among other issues, the existence of a quorum when one senator was absent abroad and beyond the practical reach of the chamber. In later controversies, the case has been invoked for the proposition that a legislative body should not be immobilized by members who cannot realistically be compelled to attend. 

One may agree or disagree with applying Avelino to present disputes. The facts of 1949 are not identical to contemporary scenarios involving detention, disappearance, boycott, vacancy, disputed leadership, remote participation, or institutional paralysis. The 1987 Constitution’s expanded judicial power clause also requires consideration. The applicable Senate Rules may materially affect the analysis. 

But the objection cannot simply be: Avelino was decided under the 1935 Constitution. That is not enough. 

A serious critic must do more. If Avelino is distinguishable, the distinction must be explained. If the constitutional text has changed in a legally significant way, the change must be identified. If subsequent jurisprudence has modified or displaced the doctrine, those cases must be cited. If the modern facts are materially different, the legal consequences of those differences must be shown. If the doctrine cannot survive the 1987 Constitution, the incompatibility must be demonstrated.  Otherwise, the argument is not legal reasoning. It is avoidance. 

II. Constitutional Supremacy and Jurisprudential Continuity 

The supremacy of the 1987 Constitution is beyond dispute. No precedent can prevail against the present constitutional text. But constitutional supremacy should not be confused with the wholesale destruction of pre-1987 jurisprudence. 

Older decisions may continue to matter in several ways. 

First, they may interpret language that was retained, substantially reproduced, or functionally carried over into later charters. Where constitutional language remains similar, earlier interpretations may retain persuasive or even controlling significance unless displaced by later authority.

Second, they may articulate institutional principles that are not confined to one textual formulation. Doctrines on separation of powers, due process, legislative autonomy, electoral integrity, judicial restraint, and the limits of official discretion often develop across constitutional periods. Their application may change, but their relevance does not automatically disappear.

Third, they may provide historical context. Constitutional interpretation often requires attention to the evolution of legal phrases, institutional practices, and judicial understandings over time. Earlier cases may illuminate the meaning of later constitutional provisions, even when they do not conclusively determine that meaning.

Fourth, they may remain part of positive law unless they have been overruled, superseded, or rendered incompatible with the current constitutional order.

This continuity is essential to the rule of law. Law depends not only on enacted text but also on stable interpretation. Citizens, courts, public officers, businesses, and institutions rely on a continuing legal order. If every precedent may be dismissed whenever it becomes politically inconvenient, law ceases to function as a framework of governance and becomes a mere instrument of faction. 

This is not an abstract concern. Business and institutional life depend on legal predictability. Contract enforcement, taxation, banking, corporate regulation, public procurement, administrative due process, property rights, infrastructure, and local governance all depend on jurisprudential continuity. If political actors normalize the treatment of old decisions as disposable, that habit will not remain confined to constitutional disputes. It will eventually affect commercial law, regulatory law, administrative law, and public governance. 

Rule of law is not merely a lawyer’s slogan. It is economic infrastructure. 

III. Selective Reverence Is Not Constitutionalism 

One of the most corrosive tendencies in constitutional politics is selective reverence for law. Political camps invoke precedent when it favors them and dismiss it when it does not. They praise the Supreme Court when it restrains their opponents and denounce it when it restrains their allies. They speak solemnly of constitutional text when convenient, then belittle jurisprudence as “old cases” when doctrine becomes politically inconvenient. 

This is not constitutionalism. It is legal opportunism. The danger is not only hypocrisy. The deeper danger is institutional decay. Once citizens observe that legal principles are respected only when politically useful, they lose confidence in legal reasoning itself. They begin to assume that every constitutional argument is merely a disguised political interest. Courts are then dragged into factional struggle, and legal debate degenerates into rhetoric. 

A mature legal culture must avoid both extremes. It must not treat old decisions as sacred merely because they are old. But neither should it treat them as dead merely because they are old. The proper attitude toward precedent is neither blind obedience nor casual contempt. It is disciplined analysis. 

Old cases are not authoritative because of age alone. But age alone does not deprive them of authority. 

IV. The Broader Problem: Legal Genealogy and Borrowed Doctrine 

The careless dismissal of old jurisprudence would endanger much of Philippine constitutional law. If Avelino v. Cuenco may be discarded simply because it was decided under the 1935 Constitution, what prevents another faction from dismissing Gonzales v. COMELEC because it arose in a different constitutional era? What prevents still another from dismissing doctrines rooted in American constitutional law, Spanish civil law, or early Philippine statutory interpretation? 

Philippine law has always been layered. It contains Spanish civil-law foundations, American constitutional influence, Philippine statutory development, common-law reasoning, civil-law codification, postwar jurisprudence, martial-law-era cases, post-EDSA constitutional revision, and contemporary rights-based adjudication. The legal system is not pure in origin. It is historical, composite, and adaptive. 

That is not a defect. It is the nature of legal development. Courts borrow, adapt, distinguish, and transform doctrines. They do not pretend that legal thought begins with the latest constitutional text. The relevant question is not whether a doctrine is old, foreign-influenced, pre-EDSA, or inherited from a previous constitutional order. The relevant question is whether the doctrine has been received into Philippine law and whether it remains compatible with the present Constitution. 

A doctrine is not invalid because it has a genealogy. In law, genealogy often explains authority. 

V. Stare Decisis as Institutional Memory 

The doctrine of stare decisis reflects the legal system’s need for continuity. It is not an absolute command that every precedent must remain forever unchanged. Courts may overrule past decisions when there is sufficient reason. But they do so through legal justification, not political impatience. 

Stare decisis serves several institutional functions. It protects reliance. It promotes equality by treating similar cases similarly. It restrains arbitrary judicial change. It gives public officials guidance. It gives citizens and businesses a reasonable basis for planning their conduct. It affirms that courts are institutions of law, not merely instruments of changing political majorities. 

Without stare decisis, every controversy becomes an invitation to restart the law. Every administration may reargue settled foundations. Every faction may ask the Court to forget inconvenient decisions. Every dispute becomes a first impression. 

That is not constitutional vitality. It is instability. The Philippines already suffers from sufficient legal uncertainty. It does not need a political culture that treats precedent as disposable commentary. If precedent survives only when it produces politically agreeable outcomes, then precedent is no longer law. It is decoration. 

VI. Avelino Should Be Analyzed, Not Dismissed 

The debate over Avelino requires careful treatment. Those who invoke it should not exaggerate its reach. Avelino does not mean that any group of senators may automatically claim authority to act merely because they have gathered a number sufficient for their preferred result. It does not erase the constitutional text. It does not override the Senate Rules. It does not answer every contemporary issue involving absences, detention, hiding, boycott, disputed leadership, or remote participation. 

But those who reject it should not trivialize it either. The case presents a doctrine concerned with institutional functionality: whether a legislative chamber may be rendered incapable of acting because certain members are beyond its practical reach. That principle may require qualification under the 1987 Constitution. It may be distinguishable on the facts. It may be limited by later doctrine or by the Senate’s internal rules. But it remains a legal proposition that must be addressed on legal terms. 

It is not enough to say that Avelino is old. It is not enough to say that it was decided under the 1935 Constitution. It is not enough to reduce it to a political slogan. 

If Avelino is inapplicable, explain why. If it has been superseded, identify the superseding authority. If its facts are materially different, demonstrate the legal significance of those differences. If the 1987 Constitution requires a different result, show the textual and doctrinal basis for that conclusion. 

That is how precedent is handled in a serious legal order. 

VII. The Senate Rules and the Limits of Internal Autonomy 

A complete analysis must also consider the Senate Rules. Constitutional text and judicial precedent do not operate in isolation. Each legislative chamber has authority to determine its own rules of proceedings. That authority is itself constitutional in character and reflects the autonomy of a coequal branch. 

However, legislative rules are not immune from constitutional limits. Internal autonomy does not authorize a chamber to violate the Constitution. At the same time, courts traditionally exercise caution in reviewing internal legislative proceedings, especially when the dispute concerns matters committed primarily to legislative judgment. 

The 1987 Constitution complicates this balance by expanding judicial power to include review of grave abuse of discretion. Thus, a controversy that may once have been characterized as a political question may now be subject to judicial review if a constitutional violation or grave abuse is properly alleged. 

Still, expanded judicial review does not automatically resolve the substantive question. It merely clarifies that courts may intervene in proper cases. The merits still require examination of constitutional text, Senate Rules, precedent, facts, institutional practice, and the consequences of either allowing or invalidating the disputed action. 

This is precisely why simplistic arguments are inadequate. It is insufficient to say either that Avelino automatically controls or that Avelino is automatically irrelevant. The proper task is harmonization: to determine how constitutional text, legislative rules, and jurisprudence interact under the facts presented. 

VIII. The Anglo-Portuguese Analogy: Continuity Is Not Obsolescence 

A useful analogy may be drawn from diplomatic history. 

The Anglo-Portuguese alliance traces its roots to medieval treaties, including the Treaty of Windsor of 1386, and is commonly described as one of the oldest continuing alliances in diplomatic history. By the twentieth century, Portugal was no longer a medieval kingdom. Under António de Oliveira Salazar, it was a modern authoritarian republic governed by the Estado Novo. Its political institutions, strategic interests, and international environment were radically different from those of the fourteenth century. 

Yet during the Second World War, Portugal did not treat the Anglo-Portuguese alliance as dead parchment. The alliance was not applied mechanically as though nothing had changed. Rather, it was interpreted within a new context involving neutrality, Atlantic logistics, British strategic needs, German power, Spanish uncertainty, and the military value of the Azores. 

A shallow view might have dismissed the alliance as irrelevant: an agreement of kings, not republics; a medieval arrangement, not a modern strategic instrument; a relic from a world before aircraft, submarines, wireless communication, and international organizations. But serious states do not reason that way. They distinguish between obsolete forms and continuing commitments. They reinterpret inherited obligations rather than nullify them by age alone. 

The analogy is not exact, but it is instructive. Institutions endure partly because they preserve continuity across change. A state, court, or legislature that treats inherited obligations and doctrines as disposable cannot develop seriousness. Continuity does not mean rigidity. It means that change must be reasoned, not impulsive. 

The same principle applies to jurisprudence. A judicial decision is not a one-time transaction between litigants. It is a public act of legal interpretation. It contributes to the legal system. It carries reasons that may survive the factual dispute that produced them. 

A particular controversy may become moot. The parties may disappear. The political context may pass. But the doctrine announced in a case does not become moot merely because time has elapsed. 

A case is not a newspaper clipping. It is part of legal memory. 

IX. The Business Cost of Precedential Opportunism 

The practical consequences of this issue extend beyond constitutional theory. Business communities, investors, and institutions rely on legal continuity. They do not evaluate a legal system merely by reading constitutional provisions in isolation. They examine how courts interpret those provisions, how agencies apply them, and how consistently legal rules are enforced. 

Precedent is therefore part of the risk environment. A country that treats precedent as politically disposable increases uncertainty. If old decisions can be disregarded because they are inconvenient, parties will have less confidence in settled doctrines. Today the dispute may concern legislative quorum. Tomorrow it may involve taxation, public bidding, property regulation, corporate rehabilitation, utilities, franchises, or administrative due process. 

The erosion is cumulative. Once legal predictability weakens, institutional trust declines. Once institutional trust declines, capital becomes cautious, governance becomes theatrical, and courts become arenas for political settlement rather than neutral adjudication. 

For this reason, the business sector should care about how constitutional precedent is treated. The immediate controversy may appear political, but the underlying principle is systemic. The question is whether law can maintain continuity amid political instability. 

X. The Proper Method: Harmonize, Distinguish, or Overrule 

There is a proper way to deal with older precedent. 

First, the analysis must begin with the controlling text of the 1987 Constitution. The present Constitution is supreme.

Second, the relevant provisions of the old and present charters must be compared. If the text is identical or substantially similar, earlier interpretations may retain force. If the text has materially changed, the consequences of that change must be identified.

Third, later jurisprudence must be examined. Has the doctrine been reaffirmed, cited, limited, distinguished, ignored, or overruled? Has a new line of cases displaced it?

Fourth, the facts must be compared. The factual setting of an older case cannot be assumed to match a contemporary controversy. Legal principles may endure, but their application depends on circumstances.

Fifth, institutional consequences must be considered. Would applying the doctrine preserve constitutional functionality, or would it enable manipulation? Would rejecting it prevent abuse, or would it allow a constitutional body to be paralyzed?

Sixth, if the doctrine is incompatible with the present Constitution, that incompatibility must be stated clearly and defended through legal reasoning.

This is the proper discipline of constitutional law. The improper method is to say: old case, old Constitution, therefore irrelevant. That is not analysis. It is dismissal. 

XI. The Supreme Court’s Role 

Ultimately, the Supreme Court has the authority to determine whether an older doctrine remains controlling, persuasive, modified, or obsolete. Political actors may argue. Lawyers may debate. Commentators may criticize. Legislative officers may rely on their own interpretations. But the authoritative settlement of constitutional meaning belongs to the Court. 

Until such settlement occurs, older decisions remain part of the legal field. They may not prevail over the 1987 Constitution, but neither may they be erased by political ridicule. Their authority may be contested, but it must be contested through law. 

This balance is essential. It affirms constitutional supremacy while preserving jurisprudential continuity. It recognizes that the present Constitution governs, but it refuses to pretend that the legal past is automatically void. 

A constitutional republic needs both commitments. It needs a supreme charter, but it also needs institutional memory. It needs the ability to correct old errors, but also the discipline not to discard old reasoning merely because it has become inconvenient. 

Conclusion 

The Philippines does not need more constitutional slogans. It needs constitutional discipline. 

To say that old jurisprudence cannot prevail over the 1987 Constitution is correct. But to say that old jurisprudence is irrelevant merely because it is old is wrong. The former position respects constitutional supremacy. The latter mutilates legal continuity. 

Decisions under the 1935 Constitution may be superseded, distinguished, limited, or overruled. But they do not die by age alone. They remain part of the legal system unless displaced by present constitutional text, later jurisprudence, or reasoned doctrinal revision. 

The proper attitude toward precedent is neither blind obedience nor casual contempt. It is disciplined engagement. 

That is what separates law from politics. That is what separates constitutional government from factional convenience. That is what separates a serious republic from one that treats every inherited doctrine as museum parchment whenever it becomes inconvenient. 

The date of a decision is not an argument. It is only the beginning of one.