Dr. John's Wishful Thinking

Dr. John’s Wishful is a blog where stories, struggles, and hopes for a better nation come alive. It blends personal reflections with social commentary, turning everyday experiences into insights on democracy, unity, and integrity. More than critique, it is a voice of hope—reminding readers that words can inspire change, truth can challenge power, and dreams can guide Filipinos toward a future of justice and nationhood.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

When the Impeachment Process Was Impeached Before It Even Began

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM

There are certain memories in life that remain strangely vivid, not because they were dramatic but because they quietly planted something permanent in our souls. I still remember being a young boy in Grade 4, not yet fully aware of how cruel, complicated, and politically theatrical the world could become. Life then was simpler. Problems were about unfinished homework, school projects, and childish fears that disappeared after a good night’s sleep. In the quiet corner of our home stood the study table of my Ate Minda, and resting there was a simple ceramic figurine. Nothing extravagant. Nothing historic. Just an ordinary decorative object carrying an extraordinary line that I did not fully understand at the time: “The best way out of a difficulty is through it.” As children, we do not interrogate wisdom. We simply absorb it. We do not yet know that one day life will hand us storms that no umbrella can protect us from. We do not know that someday we will witness betrayals, institutional games, disappointments, and moments when truth itself seems negotiable. But somehow that line stayed with me. It became one of those silent doctrines that life slowly explains through experience. Because as the years pass, you begin to understand that some pains do not leave because you pretend they are not there. Some wounds do not heal because you cover them. Some accusations do not disappear because you evade them. Some storms grow stronger precisely because you refused to walk through them when you had the chance.


And perhaps that is why this old childhood memory returns to me with painful force as I watch what is happening in our country today. As I observe the political turbulence surrounding Vice President Sara Duterte, I cannot help but return to that simple lesson from my childhood. Her camp continues to insist that there was no wrongdoing. They say there was no impeachable offense. They say there was no malversation. They say there was no misuse of confidential funds. They say there was no unauthorized use of public money deserving constitutional accountability. And if that is truly the case, if all of this is nothing more than political noise, then I ask not as an enemy, not as a partisan, but as an ordinary Filipino who still believes institutions should mean something, what is there to fear? Because if your conscience is truly clear, scrutiny should not terrify you.


I understand that life teaches us there are accusations not worth dignifying. I have lived long enough to know that not every insult deserves a response. Some attacks are malicious. Some are cheap. Some are engineered merely to provoke emotional reactions. Sometimes silence is strength. Sometimes ignoring nonsense is wisdom. But this is different. This is not gossip exchanged over coffee between neighbors. This is not the toxicity of social media. This is not a rumor whispered in dark corners. This involves the Vice President of the Republic of the Philippines, a public official elected by millions, entrusted with the people’s money, carrying constitutional responsibility before the nation. And public office changes everything. Because when you hold public trust, scrutiny is not persecution. Accountability is not oppression. Constitutional processes are not personal insults.


And this is why my heart grows heavy when I see what many now perceive to be happening. Because let us be honest with ourselves. Even before the recent political developments in the Senate, Vice President Sara Duterte was not exactly standing defenseless in a hostile arena. Anyone with even a modest understanding of political arithmetic knows impeachment is not merely about evidence. It is about numbers. It is about alliances. It is about loyalties. It is about political calculations dressed in constitutional language. And if we are brutally honest, even under the previous Senate leadership, the Vice President already appeared politically secure. Even if Senate President Tito Sotto remained. Even if the impeachment trial unfolded naturally. Even if every allegation were heard. Even if witnesses testified. Even if prosecutors passionately laid out every accusation. The political numbers suggested she would likely survive.


That is why the question now haunting many ordinary Filipinos is painfully simple. If acquittal were already within reach, why move the furniture? Hindi naman tanga ang taong-bayan. O sadyang, may script sila na nais sundan na mangyari. Like a catapult scenario? The Filipino people may not all be constitutional scholars, but they understand timing. They understand optics. They understand political odors. They saw the House impeachment developments. They saw the leadership changes in the Senate. They saw the shifting alignments. And fair or unfair, they connected the dots. That is the dangerous part. Because politics is not only about what is technically true. Politics is also about what people sincerely believe happened. And once people begin believing that the process has been adjusted not to discover truth, but to avoid discomfort, institutional trust starts to bleed.


That is what breaks my heart. Because what is being damaged here may not simply be one impeachment process. It may be public faith itself. And when a nation begins losing faith in its institutions, like the Senate, democracy becomes fragile. I have heard the voices of ordinary Filipinos. Not in formal forums. Not in polished television interviews. But in the places where the true pulse of this country beats. In barber shops. In karinderyas. In palengkes. In jeepney terminals. In tired family conversations where people discuss politics between counting bills and stretching tomorrow’s budget. And the painful refrain is almost always the same: “Wala namang mangyayari diyan.” That sentence hurts. Because when ordinary citizens begin to believe that accountability is merely theater, democracy begins to decay from within.


And perhaps what makes this even sadder is that this entire situation may have unfolded differently. Imagine if the process simply proceeded. Imagine if the Vice President faced the accusations directly. Imagine if her allies defended her openly and fearlessly. Imagine if every allegation was tested in the full light of public scrutiny. Imagine if acquittal came not through perceived maneuvering, but through visible confrontation with evidence. She may still have survived politically. In fact, she probably would have. But the difference would have been legitimacy. The people would have seen the process. The nation would have heard both sides. Even critics would have had fewer reasons to doubt. Instead, what many now perceive is avoidance. Not going through the storm. Going around it.


And that is why that childhood quote keeps echoing in me. The best way out of a difficulty is through it. Not around it. Not beneath it. Not behind political rearrangements. Not through strategic detours. Through it. Because if you are innocent, scrutiny becomes your witness. If you are truthful, the process becomes your vindication. If accusations are politically motivated, let lawful proceedings expose that reality. But when leaders appear to avoid confrontation, suspicion naturally grows, whether fair or unfair. And suspicion is a dangerous fuel.


What makes this more emotionally exhausting is that our people are already carrying too much. Inflation continues to punish households. Parents silently pretend things are manageable while mentally calculating how to stretch every peso. Workers wake before dawn carrying economic anxieties that politicians will never fully understand. Families are tired. The nation is tired. And in the middle of that exhaustion, people watch another political spectacle that seems less about truth and more about positioning for 2028. Because let us not deceive ourselves. Politics is always planting seeds for tomorrow. Some align because they believe Sara will remain powerful. Some draw near hoping for protection. Some calculate future appointments. Some seek access. Some businessmen quietly hedge their interests. That is political reality. But institutions must rise above naked political ambition. Otherwise, they become hollow.


And perhaps that is my deepest sadness here. Because I do not write this as someone declaring guilt. I write this as someone grieving what appears to be the erosion of trust. Because even if the Vice President is acquitted, the people may still convict the process itself. And that is a tragedy. As I think again of that small ceramic figurine on Ate Minda’s study table, I realize its lesson was never merely personal. It was national. A person cannot heal by running away from wounds. A family cannot heal by refusing difficult conversations. And a nation cannot heal by appearing to evade truth. The best way out of a difficulty is through it. Always through it.

#DJOT

_____

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, management, economics, doctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Can the Absolute Pardon of Robin Padilla Be Recalled? A Constitutional Balancing on Mercy, Power, Political Vulnerability, and Finality

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM

I remember once listening to an elderly man in a quiet provincial gathering speak about forgiveness in a way no law textbook ever could. He was not a constitutional scholar, not a senator, not even a lawyer. He was simply a man weathered by life, family struggles, disappointments, and the wisdom that only time can teach. He said something that stayed with me for years: “Kapag nagpatawad ka na nang buo, hindi mo na puwedeng bawiin araw-araw dahil lang nagbago ang damdamin mo.” If you have truly forgiven, you cannot keep taking that forgiveness back every time emotions shift. Of course, constitutional governance is far more complex than family morality. Mercy in law is not the same as mercy in personal relationships. Yet strangely, the philosophical essence of that old man’s words quietly enters our constitutional debates whenever the issue of presidential pardon arises.


The question before us is politically provocative yet constitutionally serious. Can the absolute pardon granted to Senator Robinhood Ferdinand Padilla be recalled?


Before anything else, I must make one thing absolutely clear, not merely for academic honesty, but for constitutional responsibility. I did not write this paper as a call to review, reopen, invalidate, or politically weaponize the absolute pardon granted to Senator Robin Padilla. That is not my purpose. I write this not as a partisan actor seeking anyone’s downfall, but as a researcher, governance analyst, and student of institutional behavior who examines how constitutional mechanisms interact with political realities. My duty in inquiry is not to manufacture attacks against individuals, but to identify possible constitutional fault lines that may emerge in contemporary political environments.


The truth is, every major political actor carries vulnerabilities. Every senator, especially those who cast their votes in consequential leadership realignments such as the ascent of Alan Peter Cayetano to Senate leadership, carries one form of vulnerability or another. That is not an accusation; that is simply political realism. Some carry unresolved controversies. Others carry perception liabilities, institutional baggage, ideological contradictions, political debts, business entanglements, family exposures, or legal questions that adversaries may someday exploit. Politics is not merely a contest of votes; it is often a contest of pressure points. In that analytical framework, Senator Robin Padilla’s historical absolute pardon presents one possible constitutional vulnerability—not because I declare it defective, and certainly not because I seek its invalidation, but because modern political conflict has repeatedly shown that anything capable of legal reinterpretation can become strategic terrain.


This write-up is therefore not advocacy for action against Senator Padilla. It is an academic exploration of whether such a constitutional pathway theoretically exists.


The Philippine Constitution, under Article VII, Section 19, grants the President the authority to issue reprieves, commutations, pardons, and remissions after conviction by final judgment, except in cases of impeachment. This is one of the oldest sovereign attributes of executive power. The philosophy behind it is profoundly human. Courts punish based on law. The executive may temper punishment with mercy. It recognizes that justice and rehabilitation are not always identical.

Robin Padilla became one such beneficiary of constitutional mercy. After serving imprisonment in connection with his conviction involving illegal possession of firearms, he was granted executive clemency by then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in 2008. Publicly and legally, that clemency has long been understood as an absolute pardon.


And that single word—absolute—changes everything.


An absolute pardon is fundamentally different from a conditional pardon. A conditional pardon carries obligations. The recipient remains bound by stated conditions, and violation of those conditions may create grounds for revocation. But an absolute pardon is intended to be unconditional, complete, and final. It is not executive mercy on installment terms.


Thus, if the question is whether the present President can simply wake up one morning and decide to cancel Robin Padilla’s pardon because political winds changed, the constitutional answer is generally no.


The President’s constitutional authority is the power to grant pardon, not an express perpetual power to arbitrarily revoke completed pardon whenever convenient.


To permit otherwise would create dangerous instability.


Imagine a democracy where every pardon recipient remains permanently vulnerable to political mood swings. One President grants clemency. Another President later dislikes the recipient and cancels it. A future administration restores it. Constitutional mercy would become a revolving political weapon rather than a final act of executive grace.


That would be institutionally reckless.

But constitutional inquiry does not end there.

The more intellectually honest question is whether a pardon that appears absolute may still be vulnerable if its very foundation were defective.

This is where legal doctrine becomes truly fascinating.


Law has long recognized the principle fraus omnia corrumpit—fraud corrupts everything. This doctrine reflects a universal legal truth that no legal act should be protected if it was born through deliberate deception. If, hypothetically, an executive pardon was procured through falsified records, forged endorsements, bribery, material concealment, or deliberate misrepresentation, then the constitutional question changes dramatically.


The issue is no longer whether a valid pardon may be recalled.

The issue becomes whether the pardon was valid at all.

And that distinction matters profoundly.

This is where the Trillanes controversy enters the discussion.


When President Rodrigo Duterte attempted to nullify Senator Antonio Trillanes IV’s amnesty through Proclamation No. 572 in 2018, the legal theory was not framed as mere presidential whim. The government’s argument was that Trillanes’ amnesty was void ab initio, invalid from the very beginning, because he allegedly failed to comply with documentary and procedural conditions required by the grant.


That controversy shook assumptions.


For many Filipinos, executive clemency had always seemed untouchable once granted. Trillanes changed that perception.


However, constitutional precision is necessary.

Trillanes involved amnesty, not pardon.


Amnesty and pardon are related but distinct constitutional mechanisms. Amnesty generally requires congressional concurrence and carries broader political character. Pardon is narrower, individualized, and typically granted after conviction.


Thus, Trillanes is not exact precedent for Robin Padilla.

But it does offer conceptual analogy.


It demonstrates that executive clemency may become vulnerable if its foundational validity is challenged.


Can that theory migrate to Robin Padilla?

Theoretically, yes—but only under extraordinary circumstances.


If compelling evidence ever emerged that his pardon was procured through fraud or constitutional defect, then the legal debate would not be about recalling a valid pardon. It would be about whether a valid pardon ever truly existed.


That is a very different constitutional argument.


Now comes another provocative question. Suppose later allegations emerge involving obstruction of justice, harboring, concealment, or interference with law enforcement involving Senator Padilla. Would such later conduct justify recalling the old pardon?


Generally, no.

Why?

Because later misconduct does not retroactively invalidate prior clemency.


A pardon addresses a past conviction. It does not place the recipient under lifetime behavioral probation unless expressly conditional. If a pardon recipient later commits another offense, the proper constitutional remedy is prosecution for that new offense—not reopening the old pardon.


Otherwise, absurdity follows.


A person pardoned decades ago could lose constitutional clemency because of unrelated future conduct. That would secretly transform every absolute pardon into a disguised conditional pardon.


That would be doctrinal chaos.


As for the Ombudsman, yes, the Office may theoretically investigate allegations of corruption, fraud, or misconduct involving public officials connected to the clemency process if credible grounds exist. But the Ombudsman is not a constitutional appellate authority over presidential pardon discretion. Investigating surrounding irregularities is one thing. Unilaterally nullifying executive clemency is another.


Ultimately, such a constitutional challenge would likely require judicial scrutiny.


And this is where governance caution becomes necessary.


Democracies must be extremely careful about creating doctrines that feel emotionally satisfying in the short term. Today, aggressive reopening of clemency may be applauded because the target is politically controversial. Tomorrow, the same doctrine may be weaponized against reformers, dissidents, or ideological opponents.


Constitutional erosion rarely begins with dramatic declarations. It often begins with exceptions people temporarily find convenient.


So let us answer the question clearly.

Can the absolute pardon of Robin Padilla be recalled?

If it was validly granted, properly accepted, absolute in nature, and constitutionally sound, then generally no.


If, however, extraordinary evidence proves that the pardon itself was fraudulently procured or constitutionally defective from the very beginning, then the debate changes—not because politics changed, but because constitutional validity itself would be in question.


And perhaps that is the most honest academic conclusion.

The issue is not anger.

The issue is not politics.

The issue is not personalities.

The issue is constitutional validity.


#DJOT

_____

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, management, economics, doctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

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