*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
I watched the video on social media invoking the 1949 Senator Vicente Yap Sotto Sr. contempt case, and instead of fear, what I felt was sadness. Not outrage. Do not panic. Just a heavy, familiar sadness that comes when the law is no longer being explained to enlighten but being performed to impress. You could feel it in the tone, in the certainty, and in the eagerness to end the conversation rather than deepen it. History was not being remembered—it was being used. And not carefully.
The message was clear: “May precedent na. Tapos na ang usapan.” As if law were a spell you chant, not a discipline you understand. As if the Constitution were a hammer you swing, not a covenant you protect. And quietly, beneath it all, there was another message—notice me. Notice that I filed something. Notice that I defended someone powerful. Notice that I am on the “right side.” Preferably noticed by the political frontrunner in the 2028 Presidential Election which is now in the impeachment hot seat.
That, more than anything, is what broke my hopeless romantic heart.
Because the 1949 case was never meant to be a weapon for attention. It was a warning. It was history saying, "Do not use power to bully the judiciary." It was about intimidation, about hovering threats, about a legislator hinting that the Court could be reorganized if it did not behave. It was not about disagreement. It was not about asking hard questions. It was not about constitutional grief.
What Senate President Vicente Sotto III did could not be more different. He did not insult the justices. He did not accuse them of bad faith. He did not threaten them with Congress. He asked a question that many Filipinos have been quietly asking since the ruling came out: Has impeachment been closed before it even had a chance to breathe? That question did not come from malice. It came from concern. From care. From a belief that accountability should not be quietly buried under technical finality.
But concern does not trend. Drama does.
So suddenly, there is a contempt petition. Suddenly, 1949 is back from the grave, dressed up as relevance. Suddenly, history is dragged into 2026, not to teach, but to scare. Not to clarify, but to silence. And watching it, I could not help but feel that this was less about defending the Supreme Court of the Philippines and more about being seen defending someone powerful.
And here is the fact that is often skipped, softened, or deliberately blurred: in the 1949 Vicente Sotto case, there were absolutely no private complainants. No lawyers filed a petition. No citizens asked for relief. No political allies rushed to the court. The contempt case was initiated by the Supreme Court itself, motu proprio, after it took offense at Sotto’s published criticism. The Court was, at the same time, the offended party, the initiator of the charge, and the tribunal that decided it. That historical detail matters. It shows that the 1949 case was born out of institutional sensitivity, not public agitation.
Today, the situation is fundamentally different. In 2026, the Supreme Court is not acting on its own. It is being urged to act by private and political complainants—individuals who voluntarily step forward to file petitions, to put their names on record, to be seen, to be heard, and to be noticed. One was a Court reacting to criticism. The other is a Court being invited into a political performance. Conflating the two is not just sloppy history; it is misleading.
It feels like an audition masquerading as jurisprudence.
What hurts even more is how this cheapens the Court itself. The Supreme Court does not need flattery. It does not need overzealous defenders filing petitions to prove loyalty. It needs trust. And trust is built when institutions are strong enough to endure questions, not when questions are punished.
Even the irony is painful. The very 1949 decision being cited so loudly also said—clearly—that criticism of judicial acts is punishable only when it poses a clear and present danger to the administration of justice. Not when it is uncomfortable. Not when it embarrasses. Not when it challenges interpretation. Yet that part is conveniently forgotten, like an inconvenient paragraph skipped because it ruins the narrative.
And look at how Senate President Sotto responded. No threats. No counterattacks. No chest-thumping. He said he would wait for the official copy. He said he would respond when asked. That is not contempt. That is restraint. That is someone still treating institutions with respect even when those institutions are being stretched.
Meanwhile, respected voices—retired justices, law deans, professors, and historians—have raised the same questions. Are they all guilty too? Or is the sin really just speaking out loud what many are thinking quietly?
What frightens me is not the petition itself. It will pass. What frightens me is the lesson being taught: be careful when you ask questions. Choose silence if you want peace. That lesson does not stop with senators. It reaches classrooms, newsrooms, and dinner tables. It teaches citizens that democracy is safest when whispered.
And that is how democracies don’t collapse. They fade.
I do not believe everyone who filed that petition is acting in bad faith. But I do believe that ambition has a way of disguising itself as principle. And I believe the law deserves better than to be used as a calling card.
History should humble us, not embolden our ego. The 1949 case warned against intimidation. It did not authorize the policing of doubt. Turning it into a tool for relevance does not protect the Court. It erodes the very dignity it claims to defend.
Questioning the Court is not contempt. But using the Court to be noticed—especially at the expense of constitutional courage—that is a different kind of tragedy.
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