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.

Friday, May 22, 2026

The Senate as a Political Checkpoint: How the Cayetano Majority Can Deter Malacañang Without Controlling the Presidency

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

I have been a book nerd for as long as I can remember. It started in kindergarten at St. Ignatius School inside Camp Aguinaldo, where I learned to read, and I spent an unhealthy amount of time buried in social studies, history, political science, governance, and economics. The newspapers were actually my first fascination. As a child I was drawn to the vivid imagery of the editorial cartoons, which then drew me to actually read the editorial columns. A lifetime of chasing these threads has taught me that power is one of the most misunderstood concepts in public life.


History has a cruel way of bringing down those who believe power belongs only to him on the throne. These kings have learned. Presidents have learned. Empires have known this. The man in the palace often thought he ran the kingdom. But others quietly ran the treasury, the gates, the military pathways, the political whispers, and the institutional machinery that actually determined movement.


That is why when I look at the emergence of the new 13-member Senate majority under Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano, I do not see an ordinary legislative reshuffling. I see something that could be far more significant.


I can see the institutional checkpoint coming.

 

At this moment, institutionally speaking, one can reasonably argue that those gates are now being guarded by the new Senate majority under Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano. Not because they control Malacañang, and certainly not because they exercise executive authority, but because they presently hold several of the Republic’s most critical chokepoints. The gates to public investigations are controlled by Senate leadership through committee powers and oversight mechanisms. The gates to confirmation of presidential appointees pass through the Commission on Appointments, where Senate influence remains powerful. The gates to treaty concurrence and international strategic commitments are constitutionally guarded by the Senate. The gates to budgetary pressure, though shared with the House, remain heavily influenced by Senate negotiation and bicameral maneuvering. In politics, one does not always need to command the fortress itself to influence those inside it. One only needs to control the doors through which power must pass.

 

When I first began reflecting on this evolving Senate realignment, I resisted the temptation to reduce it to routine political theater. Philippine politics is fluid by nature. Alliances shift with astonishing speed. Political friendships sometimes have the shelf life of fresh bread. Yesterday’s sworn rival becomes tomorrow’s tactical ally, and ideological declarations often quietly surrender to political arithmetic. But this particular development feels structurally different. What has emerged is not merely a Senate leadership transition. What appears to be forming is a politically cohesive bloc with enough numerical strength, enough shared motivation, and enough institutional tools to function as a credible deterrent force against the executive department.

 

Let me be clear. I am not suggesting that this Senate bloc can overthrow the President, nor am I claiming that governance will suddenly collapse into institutional paralysis. That would be intellectually irresponsible. But can this bloc make executive governance politically difficult? Absolutely. Can it force Malacañang into continuous negotiation? Very likely. Can it alter executive behavior even before formal institutional action occurs? Without question.

 

I have always loved chess, perhaps because history itself often behaves like one giant chessboard. In chess, one does not need to immediately capture the king to dominate the match. One simply needs to control the critical squares, restrict movement, dictate tempo, and force the opponent into defensive reactions. That is how I see this 13-member Senate majority. They do not need to occupy Malacañang. They do not need to directly command executive agencies. They simply need to control enough institutional chokepoints to make executive action politically expensive.

 

Many casual observers tend to look only at constitutional text and assume governance operates mechanically. It does not. Constitutions provide architecture, yes, but politics determines how that architecture is inhabited. A President may command the executive bureaucracy, appoint Cabinet officials, direct departments, and symbolize state authority, but formal power alone does not guarantee frictionless governance. Political numbers matter. Coalitions matter. Timing matters. Institutional psychology matters.

 

One of the most potent weapons available to this Senate majority is the power of legislative inquiry in aid of legislation. On paper, this power exists to improve policymaking and legislative oversight. In reality, anyone who has watched Philippine politics long enough knows Senate hearings are rarely sterile academic exercises. They can become public tribunals, media spectacles, prosecutorial theaters, narrative battlegrounds, and political pressure campaigns rolled into one.

 

A Cabinet secretary summoned into a hostile Senate hearing may survive legally but emerge politically damaged. A bureaucrat publicly grilled under primetime scrutiny may lose institutional credibility even without any formal finding of wrongdoing. In our political culture, perception often outruns procedure. Sometimes the hearing itself becomes the punishment.

 

This matters because deterrence does not require conviction. It requires anticipation. If executive agencies begin believing that politically sensitive actions may trigger aggressive Senate scrutiny, institutional behavior changes. Bureaucrats become cautious. Secretaries become more politically sensitive. Agencies begin calculating consequences beyond technical legality. That is deterrence at work.

 

Then comes the budget, which in governance is what blood is to the human body. No administration survives on speeches, slogans, or optimistic press conferences. Governance requires appropriations. Projects require funding. Departments require operational continuity. While the House traditionally originates the General Appropriations Bill, it would be naïve to underestimate Senate influence in budgetary politics.

 

A cohesive Senate bloc can delay approvals, intensify scrutiny, propose restrictive conditions, negotiate reductions, or strategically target politically sensitive agencies. They do not even need to fully block appropriations to create pressure. Delay itself is pressure. Scrutiny is pressure. Conditional funding is pressure. Budgetary uncertainty is pressure.

 

But here is where the political conversation becomes morally uncomfortable. When governments weaponize institutional chokepoints against each other, the first casualties are rarely politicians. The real victims are the people. It is the ordinary Filipino waiting for a hospital program to be funded, the farmer hoping for agricultural assistance, the commuter waiting for infrastructure improvements, the student needing educational support, the family depending on social services, and the citizen expecting government to function with competence rather than political vengeance. Political elites may survive prolonged institutional cold wars because they have networks, resources, and fallback positions. The nation does not enjoy that same luxury. When governance slows because power centers are busy testing each other’s strength, it is the people who absorb the delay, the uncertainty, and the consequences.

 

Then comes one of the quieter but equally dangerous mechanisms of leverage: appointments. The public often underestimates the Commission on Appointments because confirmation politics lacks dramatic television visuals. But practitioners understand how consequential this mechanism is. Cabinet secretaries, ambassadors, senior military officers, and major executive appointees depend on institutional confirmation.

 

A politically hostile or strategically coordinated Senate-aligned bloc can delay confirmations, complicate approvals, or quietly force negotiation behind closed doors. Suddenly executive appointment power becomes conditional rather than absolute. A President may appoint the most competent technocrat in the Republic, but if Senate political machinery turns hostile, survival becomes uncertain.

 

Then there is foreign policy. Many assume foreign affairs belong entirely to the executive branch, and in many respects they do. The President negotiates, represents the Republic internationally, and directs diplomacy. But treaties require Senate concurrence.

 

Sixteen votes! That constitutional arithmetic matters profoundly. Thirteen votes do not create approval power. But thirteen votes absolutely create blocking power. And in politics, blocking power is often more strategically useful than approval power.

 

Defense agreements, strategic alliances, economic treaties, international legal commitments, and geopolitical realignments can be delayed or killed outright if a disciplined Senate bloc chooses resistance. If Malacañang seeks major strategic moves inconsistent with this coalition’s preferences, the Senate becomes a constitutional firewall. And then we arrive at the politically sensitive subject many would rather discuss only in whispers: institutional shielding.

 

History teaches us that political actors do not behave like detached constitutional philosophers. Coalitions defend themselves. Alliances preserve mutual interests. Political blocs react when existential threats emerge.

 

If members of this Senate coalition perceive executive cooperation with politically dangerous domestic or international processes as threatening their collective interests, institutional resistance could intensify dramatically. That is not a conspiracy theory. That is political realism. But fairness demands balance.

 

The Senate is powerful, yes.

But it is not supreme.

 

Malacañang retains substantial counterweights. The President possesses veto power. Executive departments remain under presidential control. Bureaucratic implementation remains executive territory. Agencies answer administratively to the Palace. Fund release mechanisms remain heavily executive in character.

 

And timing itself is power. A Senate can investigate, embarrass, delay, scrutinize, and obstruct. But it cannot directly govern executive departments. This is why I do not see this moment as institutional warfare. I see something colder. More strategic. More Philippine in character.

 

A governmental cold war.

Neither side fully dominates.

Neither side fully surrenders.

Instead, governance becomes continuous negotiation.

And if there is one thing Philippine politics has mastered better than ideological consistency, it is negotiation.

Today’s critic becomes tomorrow’s ally.

Today’s adversary becomes tomorrow’s coalition partner.

Today’s impossible political divorce becomes tomorrow’s remarriage.

That is our political culture.

But what makes this moment especially important is not simply the number thirteen.

It is what thirteen creates psychologically.

Numbers create confidence.

Confidence creates discipline.

Discipline creates coordination.

Coordination creates deterrence.

And deterrence changes behavior long before institutions formally move.

A President dealing with a fragmented Senate behaves differently from one facing a cohesive bloc.

Cabinet officials become more cautious.

Bureaucrats become more politically aware.

Policy initiatives become more negotiated.

Public messaging becomes more measured.

Institutional posture subtly changes.

That is real power.

 

So when I look at this Senate majority, I do not merely see a leadership story. I see a constitutional stress test unfolding in real time. Will this Senate bloc function as a legitimate constitutional check? Or will deterrence evolve into political coercion disguised as oversight?

 

And if this cold war deepens, the most painful truth is this: the politicians involved may eventually strike compromises, forge new alliances, or reinvent their loyalties, but the Filipino people will have already paid the price. Nations do not bleed in dramatic cinematic fashion. They bleed through delayed reforms, stalled programs, investor uncertainty, weakened institutions, public distrust, and opportunities lost in the quiet spaces between political battles.

 

That is the deeper question.

Because the history books that shaped how I see governance teach one final lesson.

The ruler seated in the palace does not always control the pace of history.

Sometimes, it is those guarding the gates.


And tragically, when those guarding the gates and those inside the palace choose confrontation over statesmanship, it is not the politicians who suffer first.


It is the nation waiting outside those gates.


#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.

The General I Came to Know: A Friend, A Father Figure, and a Living Blueprint of Filipino Greatness

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

There are people who enter our lives not merely by accident, but in ways that feel almost providential, as though destiny had quietly arranged the meeting long before the actual handshake ever happened. Some friendships begin through formal introductions, some through shared causes, and some through that quiet and deeply human recognition that the person standing before you somehow feels familiar, as though a part of your own life story had already been preparing you for that encounter. In my life, one such man is PMaj General Thompson Catabian Lantion, fondly and respectfully known by many simply as GT. To many, he is a decorated retired police general, an accomplished administrator, a federalist, a sportsman, a disciplinarian, a crime fighter, an anti-corruption advocate, a civic leader, and a nation builder. But to me, he became something far more personal. He became a friend, a mentor, and in many quiet emotional ways, a reminder of the kind of fatherly strength, principled leadership, and old-school patriotism that shaped my earliest understanding of service.


Perhaps this is why my friendship with GT carries emotional depth beyond ordinary association. I come from a family where public service was never merely discussed but deeply lived. My late father was Retired Brigadier General Mauro Herrera Teope of the defunct Philippine Constabulary, belonging to a generation of officers forged in a different time, where discipline was uncompromising, patriotism was instinctive, and service to nation was not performance but sacred duty. Before the enactment of Republic Act No. 6975, officers who honorably retired during the 1970s and 1980s were customarily elevated to the next higher rank in recognition of distinguished service rendered to the Republic. Thus, my father rightfully carried the rank of Brigadier General, not merely through compensation equivalence but through actual rank dignity, unlike the present system where retirement advancement often reflects only salary grade adjustments without the symbolic permanence of formal rank title progression. To some, this may appear to be a mere technical detail. But to families of men in uniform, rank is never merely a title. It represents danger, sacrifice, sleepless nights, institutional loyalty, separation from loved ones, and decades of quiet devotion to country.


As though life intended to deepen that connection even further, my own brother, Retired Police Chief Superintendent Romeo Ortiz Teope, also served in the Philippine National Police and, in one meaningful chapter of his professional journey, served under the command of General Thompson Lantion himself. Long before I personally came to know GT, our family’s professional history had already intersected with his through public service. Looking back, I cannot help but believe that some meetings in life are written long before we understand them.


When I eventually came to know GT personally, it did not feel like meeting a stranger.


It felt familiar.


I had the privilege of becoming Deputy Secretary of the Partido Federal ng Pilipinas, a political movement where GT was among its founders, advocating the vision of federalism and governance transformation for the Philippines. Later, when he founded Timpuyog Pilipinas, a civic organization rooted in unity, patriotism, community service, and empowerment, he was elected National Chairman, while I was entrusted with the responsibility of serving as National Secretary-General. Those positions may sound formal on paper, but for me, they became priceless windows through which I witnessed leadership not from afar, not through stories, but through direct interaction and shared work.


And what I witnessed was extraordinary.


GT’s story almost sounds cinematic. Born in January 1946, in the fragile aftermath of World War II, family lore says he entered this world with his umbilical cord wrapped across his body like crisscross ammunition belts, prompting relatives to jokingly predict that he was destined to become a warrior. Inspired by the famed Thompson firearm, his name was chosen accordingly. It sounds almost mythical, but when one studies the life he eventually built, the symbolism feels strangely prophetic.


Because GT indeed became a warrior.


Not a ceremonial warrior.


A real one.


He came from the proud tradition of the Philippine Constabulary, following in the footsteps of his own father, Colonel Daniel C. Lantion Sr., former Task Force Lawin Commander based in Camp Olivas. Early in his professional life, he distinguished himself through excellence, earning his Airborne Badge, along with Pistol Expert and Rifle Proficiency Awards, clear indicators that operational discipline and professional excellence were already deeply embedded in his character.


Because of his intelligence background, trustworthiness, discipline, and competence, he was selected in 1975 as Escort and Close-In Security Officer to then President Ferdinand E. Marcos Sr. Such an assignment is never casually entrusted. It demands vigilance, intelligence awareness, extraordinary trust, discretion, and unwavering professionalism.


Even before that, GT had already participated in one of the most remarkable protective security episodes in Philippine history. He was among those credited in helping prevent an assassination attempt against Pope Paul VI during the pontiff’s visit to the Philippines, earning him the Presidential Merit Medal. Not many men in one lifetime can say they helped protect both a President and a Pope.


His leadership in law enforcement expanded in both scale and significance. As Deputy Director for Operations of PNP Region III, during the devastating Mount Pinatubo eruption, he served as concurrent Task Force Kaligtasan Commander, helping oversee evacuation, rescue, and rehabilitation efforts affecting more than 20,000 families across Central Luzon. Leadership in moments like these is not about titles. It is about courage, urgency, compassion, and decisions that determine human survival. For this extraordinary service, he earned the Distinguished Service Medal, among many other honors.


As Director of PNP Research and Development, GT helped strengthen communications capability, operational mobility, and institutional readiness within the Philippine National Police. He also contributed to the modernization associated with the PNP badge, leaving behind not merely operational achievements but symbolic institutional legacy.


Then came one of the defining operational chapters of his career.


As Regional Director of PNP Region II (Cagayan Valley), his command was adjudged the Best Regional Command Nationwide, earning the prestigious Presidential Streamer Award in 2000, personally recognized during ceremonies attended by then President Joseph Estrada.


And this recognition was not ornamental.


It was earned.


Under GT’s command, authorities neutralized a shabu laboratory in Kalayan Island, Cagayan, and intercepted approximately 229 kilograms of 99.5 percent pure shabu valued at around ₱1.5 billion, one of the most significant anti-illegal drug seizures of its era.


That same year, his excellence in command earned him the prestigious Philippine Military Academy Cavalier Award for Command and Administration.


Across his decades of service, GT accumulated an extraordinary array of honors, including Military Commendation Medals, Military Merit Medals, PNP Heroism Medals, Outstanding Service Medal, Distinguished Service Medal, and multiple recognitions for exemplary conduct and dedicated service.


But what makes GT truly extraordinary is that his excellence was never confined to policing.


Many officers excel only within institutional boundaries.


GT excelled beyond them.


He became Chairman of the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board, where he helped modernize the land transportation sector. Under his leadership emerged the conceptualization of the Garage-to-Terminal Express Service, now known nationwide as UV Express, transforming commuter mobility for countless Filipinos. He also conceptualized the now familiar yellow airport taxi service, something many now encounter routinely without realizing the visionary leadership behind it.


Later, he became Undersecretary of the Department of Transportation and Communications for Rail and Maritime Transport, helping implement the strategically transformative Roll-On/Roll-Off Nautical Highway, a project whose importance to connectivity in an archipelagic nation like ours cannot be overstated.


He also supported the Bagabag Airport development project in Nueva Vizcaya, envisioned to strengthen regional accessibility and tourism.


He served as technical consultant to his younger brother, former RTC Judge, former COMELEC Commissioner, and former Mayor Atty. Ralph C. Lantion, reflecting his continued engagement in governance and public affairs.


GT’s uncompromising commitment to integrity did not end when he laid down the uniform. If anything, it followed him into the far more politically treacherous battlefield of civilian governance, where adversaries do not always carry firearms, but influence, patronage, and access to corridors of power. In 2024, he was appointed by President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. as Chairman of the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA), a role that could have allowed him to leave yet another transformative institutional legacy. For a man whose professional DNA was built on discipline, transparency, accountability, and institutional cleansing, the appointment seemed fitting. Yet history often teaches us that genuine reformers are rarely welcomed by entrenched interests. GT’s instinct for operational honesty and intolerance for irregularities naturally made him uncomfortable company for those accustomed to patronage and accommodation. Some political observers often describe certain eras of governance as influenced by a Malacañang “Rasputin,” a phrase in Philippine political discourse used to describe shadowy unelected power brokers whose influence thrives behind closed doors. Whether one embraces that characterization or not, one painful truth remains familiar in governance. Men who sincerely attempt to confront corruption often find themselves resisted not because they failed, but because they refused to compromise with systems long conditioned to protect themselves. For a man like GT, corruption was simply another adversary to confront, even if this time the battlefield wore barong, tailored suits, and polished smiles instead of uniforms.


Beyond governance and policing, GT was also a sportsman, once serving as shooting guard and small forward for the UP Fighting Maroons Juniors basketball team, proving that discipline often begins long before titles and uniforms.


He was a federalist, helping found the Partido Federal ng Pilipinas, where he served as National Secretary General.


He founded Timpuyog Pilipinas, a civic movement uniting millions of Ilocanos worldwide through patriotism, identity, and service.


And in 2024, during the PMA Alumni Homecoming at Fort del Pilar, he was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing more than fifty years of dedicated, exemplary, and unblemished service to the nation.


And as though a lifetime of extraordinary public service, leadership, and accomplishment were still not enough, GT continues to embody a truth many younger generations urgently need to understand. True greatness never becomes complacent, and authentic leadership never retires from learning. In a world where many would understandably choose the comfort of retirement, the applause of past achievements, or the quiet privilege of simply being remembered for what they had already accomplished, GT continues to move forward with the same hunger for growth, discipline, and intellectual curiosity that defined his younger years. At present, he is pursuing a Doctorate in Public Safety and Security Governance at the Philippine Public Safety College, a remarkable testament that operational excellence must continue to be sharpened by academic reflection and evolving strategic thought. After decades of serving in law enforcement, disaster response, transportation governance, national security, civic leadership, and nation-building, he still humbly chooses to become a student once again. That is not ordinary. That is greatness anchored in humility.


And after narrating all these medals, appointments, honors, and extraordinary milestones, I must confess something deeply personal.


What moves me most is not the résumé.


It is the man.


Because credentials can be listed.


Awards can be framed.


Titles can be printed.


But character is felt.


GT carries the quiet dignity of old-school leadership.


Disciplined but never cruel.


Commanding but never arrogant.


Accomplished but never boastful.


Powerful yet profoundly grounded.


In many ways, he reminds me of the honorable generation my father belonged to. May bahagi sa puso ko na nakakaramdam ng emotional familiarity in his presence, not because he replaces my father, because no one ever can, but because he reminds me of what principled, fatherly, disciplined strength looks like in human form.


In a time where many of our youth are increasingly exposed to shallow models of success, celebrity theatrics, performative leadership, instant influence, and social media noise, I say this with deep conviction.


Study lives like GT’s.


For the youth, emulate his discipline.


For police officers, his professionalism.


For politicians, his patriotism.


For civic leaders, his service mindset.


For ordinary Filipinos, his love of country.


Because nations are not built by noise.


They are built by disciplined men and women whose lives become legacy.


And I remain profoundly grateful that life, in its mysterious kindness, allowed me not merely to hear of General Thompson “GT” Lantion through stories of distinguished service, extraordinary accomplishments, and the admiration of those who served under and alongside him, nor simply admire his remarkable legacy from afar, but to truly know the man behind the medals, the ranks, and the honors, to walk alongside him in shared causes and patriotic endeavors, to learn from his quiet strength, discipline, wisdom, and unwavering love for country, and to be deeply blessed enough to call him not only a respected leader and mentor, but a dear friend whose presence, in many profoundly human ways, reminds me that honor, fatherly strength, old-school patriotism, and authentic Filipino greatness still beautifully exist in this world.

#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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