*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
Many years ago, while discussing leadership in one of my graduate classes, I asked my students a simple question.
“Who deserves the credit when a government program succeeds?”
Almost everyone answered the same way.
“The President, Sir.”
Then I asked another question.
“Who makes sure the President’s instructions actually reach the agencies, are monitored, coordinated, and followed through?”
The room suddenly became quiet.
That silence reminded me of an important lesson in public administration: the most important people in an organization are not always the most visible.
Every successful leader has people behind him who make leadership work. Every successful orchestra has a conductor who is not playing an instrument. Every championship basketball team has assistant coaches who are never interviewed after the game. Every successful President has trusted people working quietly behind the scenes.
One of those people today is Antonio Lagdameo Jr., the Special Assistant to the President.
Most Filipinos may not know him personally. They rarely see him giving lengthy press conferences or engaging in political debates. Yet those familiar with how government operates understand that some of the most demanding responsibilities are carried out away from television cameras.
That is why I often describe him as an invisible achiever.
His office is not designed to build highways, construct airports, harvest rice, or arrest criminals. Those are the responsibilities of implementing agencies. The role of the Special Assistant to the President is different. It is to help ensure that the President’s priorities are coordinated across government, that directives are monitored, and that the machinery of the Executive Branch continues to move efficiently.
Sa madaling salita, hindi siya ang nasa entablado.
Siya ang isa sa mga taong tumitiyak na maayos ang buong palabas.
At kapag maayos ang palabas, ang papalakpakan ay ang mga nasa harapan.
Kapag may problema naman, madalas pati ang mga nasa likod ay nadadamay.
That is the paradox of public service.
The better a coordinator performs, the less the public notices. Success is usually attributed to the agencies that implement projects, while the people who quietly connect the dots remain almost anonymous.
But anonymity should never be mistaken for insignificance.
In fact, some of the most valuable work in government happens inside meeting rooms rather than on campaign stages. It happens in follow-up meetings, inter-agency coordination, policy monitoring, conflict resolution, and ensuring that one office communicates effectively with another.
These are responsibilities that rarely trend on social media.
Yet they are indispensable.
As someone who has spent decades studying governance, leadership, and organizational management, I have always believed that effective administration is measured not only by grand speeches but by consistent execution.
Plans are important.
Vision is important.
But execution is where public service is truly tested.
And execution requires coordination.
This is where the Office of the Special Assistant to the President quietly becomes one of the most important support pillars of the Office of the President.
Of course, occupying such a position also means becoming a natural target of criticism.
That is part of public service.
In a democracy, criticism is inevitable. Every administration is scrutinized. Every senior official is questioned. Every decision is examined from different political perspectives.
That is not necessarily a weakness of democracy.
It is one of its strengths.
However, those who choose to serve at the highest levels of government understand that criticism comes with the territory.
It is one of the occupational hazards of public service.
People may criticize.
Political opponents may disagree.
Social media may amplify every issue.
Yet public servants still report to work every morning because their commitment is to serve, not to seek universal approval.
No public official can expect to please everyone.
The true measure of leadership is not the absence of criticism but the willingness to continue serving with professionalism despite it.
I believe Antonio Lagdameo Jr. exemplifies this quiet professionalism.
He has largely stayed away from political theatrics.
He has allowed his office to perform its coordinating role without seeking constant public recognition.
He has accepted that others will receive the applause when government programs succeed, while criticism may still find its way to those working behind the scenes.
That requires a different kind of leadership.
Not leadership driven by applause.
But leadership driven by responsibility.
Today’s political environment often rewards visibility over substance.
Many public officials measure success by media mileage, social media trends, or the number of interviews they grant.
But government is not sustained by publicity alone.
It is sustained by disciplined administrators who work long hours, coordinate countless meetings, resolve operational bottlenecks, and quietly help transform presidential directives into concrete action.
Those individuals seldom become household names.
Yet without them, even the best policies can fail.
As citizens, we should continue to evaluate every public official fairly and critically. Accountability remains essential in a democratic society. But fairness also requires acknowledging that government is a collective enterprise. Many of its most meaningful contributions come from people whose names are rarely mentioned in headlines.
Antonio Lagdameo Jr. belongs to that category of public servant.
He may never become the loudest voice in the administration.
He may never dominate political headlines.
But sometimes, the quietest workers leave the deepest imprint because they choose results over recognition.
In the end, history has a unique way of remembering public servants.
Some are remembered because they constantly sought the spotlight.
Others are remembered because they quietly kept the government moving while the spotlight was shining on everyone else.
For me, Antonio Lagdameo Jr. represents the latter.
He reminds us that leadership is not always about being seen.
Sometimes, leadership is about making sure the nation continues to move forward—even if no one notices the person helping keep the wheels of government turning.
And perhaps that is one of the noblest forms of public service.
#DJOT
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