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.

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Curious Symmetry of Senate Politics: Minority Walkout, Majority Boycott, and the Test of Parliamentary Integrity

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



“Democracy is not merely the right to disagree; it is the responsibility to participate.”

— Senator Raul S. Manglapus


Moments arise in a democracy when immediate political disputes and partisan alliances fade in importance. The overarching concern shifts to a more fundamental question: are the core institutions remaining steadfast to their constitutional mandates? The recent events in the Philippine Senate presented one such moment. Within the span of only a few days, Filipinos witnessed two extraordinary parliamentary actions. First came the walkout of members of the Minority during the debate on proposed amendments involving virtual attendance and virtual voting. Shortly thereafter came the reported boycott of a Senate session by members of the Majority following developments involving Senator Jinggoy Estrada. Different reasons. Different narratives. Different political actors. Yet both events raised the same fundamental question: What happens to parliamentary integrity when attendance becomes conditional upon political convenience?


As someone who has spent decades studying governance, political institutions, public administration, and democratic processes, I found the symmetry of these events both fascinating and troubling. The irony was difficult to ignore. Only days after the Minority was criticized for walking out of a Senate session, the Majority found itself being criticized for not attending one. Suddenly, the same arguments that had been directed against one side became relevant to the other. The discussion therefore ceased to be merely about the Minority or the Majority. It became a discussion about consistency, accountability, and respect for parliamentary institutions.


The Minority justified its walkout by arguing that the proposed amendments on virtual attendance and virtual voting raised serious concerns regarding transparency, accountability, identity verification, and the overall integrity of Senate proceedings. Sa kanilang pananaw, hindi sapat ang deliberasyon at tila minamadali ang pag-amyenda ng mga panuntunan ng Senado. Their decision to walk out was intended as a form of parliamentary protest. They believed they were defending the institution from changes that could potentially weaken its procedural safeguards.


The response from many members of the Majority was swift and critical. Some described the walkout as obstructionism. Others argued that senators were elected to remain inside the session hall, participate in debates, and vote on issues regardless of disagreement. The principle being advanced was simple and compelling: public office carries with it the obligation to show up and participate. Hindi raw maaaring umalis na lamang kapag hindi pabor ang nangyayari sa loob ng institusyon.


Then politics produced one of its most curious reversals.

Following developments involving Senator Jinggoy Estrada, several members of the Majority reportedly chose not to attend a Senate session. Whether one describes the event as a boycott, a collective absence, an act of solidarity, or an implied walkout, the practical consequence remained the same. The Senate faced questions regarding attendance, quorum, and its ability to conduct official business.


Biglang nagkaroon ng kakaibang symmetry ang sitwasyon.

Last week, the Minority walked out.

Recently, the Majority boycotted.


Magkaiba ang dahilan ngunit pareho ang naging resulta. Empty chairs. Delayed proceedings. Questions about institutional functionality. Public attention shifted away from legislation and governance and toward political maneuvering.


To be clear, this essay is not intended to defend one bloc while criticizing another. Rather, it is an attempt to examine a broader principle. Parliamentary integrity requires consistency. If a walkout is objectionable when performed by one group, then a boycott naturally invites similar scrutiny when performed by another. Institutions become stronger when principles are applied equally regardless of who benefits from them.


The controversy became even more significant when Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano publicly appealed to his colleagues to join what he described as “one deliberate act” and allow the Senate to “go quiet, together and by choice.” Supporters viewed the statement as a principled defense of Senate independence. They argued that the Senate is a co-equal branch of government and must demonstrate that it cannot be pressured or influenced by external forces.


There is certainly merit in defending Senate independence. A democratic legislature must protect its constitutional prerogatives. It must safeguard its institutional autonomy. It must remain capable of acting independently in the performance of its duties. Walang seryosong tagapag-aral ng demokrasya ang magsasabing hindi mahalaga ang kalayaan ng Senado.


However, for many students of parliamentary governance, another question emerged. Can an institution defend its independence without suspending its operations? Can parliamentary autonomy coexist with parliamentary functionality?


For many observers, the answer is yes.


A strong institution demonstrates its independence not by becoming silent but by continuing to function despite controversy. Independence and functionality are not opposing principles. In fact, they often strengthen one another. The ability to continue operating amid disagreement and political tension is one of the defining characteristics of mature democratic institutions.


This is where many observers believed a more statesmanlike course of action could have been taken. Instead of allowing the Senate to fall silent, Senate leadership could have appeared before the chamber, formally opened the session, determined attendance, acknowledged the circumstances surrounding the absence of several senators, and officially declared the absence of a quorum. Such an approach would have protected parliamentary traditions while preserving transparency and accountability.


Kung ang dahilan ng pagkawala ng maraming senador ay ang pagsama kay Senator Jinggoy Estrada, then such reason could have been formally communicated to the public. The Senate President could have called the session to order, recognized the lack of quorum, placed the explanation on the official record, and formally adjourned the proceedings. The practical outcome might have been identical, but the institutional message would have been profoundly different.


Instead of silence, there would have been transparency.

Instead of speculation, there would have been accountability.

Instead of uncertainty, there would have been an official record.


The controversy became even sharper when the Minority publicly responded to the boycott. According to their statements, they were present during the scheduled resumption of session, prepared to deliberate, vote, and continue Senate work. They argued that the Majority leadership not only failed to appear but also failed to formally communicate that the session would not proceed.


For some, this was merely political rhetoric. For others, it raised a serious parliamentary concern. Legislatures do not function solely because of written rules. They also function because of traditions, customs, professional courtesy, and institutional discipline. The expectation is that parliamentary leaders, regardless of political disagreements, will ensure that the institution remains operational whenever possible.


Critics further argued that this may have been one of the few instances in modern parliamentary history where Senate operations effectively stopped not because of a typhoon, a national emergency, or a public health crisis, but because leadership itself chose not to convene. During severe storms, transportation and safety concerns prevented sessions. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, legislative work was disrupted because new systems needed to be developed. Those interruptions were generally accepted because they arose from necessity.


The present situation appeared different because many observers viewed it as a political choice rather than an unavoidable circumstance.


That distinction matters.

A legislature suspended by necessity is one thing.

A legislature suspended by political decision is another.


Many observers could not help but compare the situation to the parliamentary conduct often demonstrated by former Senate President Tito Sotto. Whether one agreed or disagreed with his political views, he generally understood the importance of allowing institutions to speak through procedure. Showing up, opening a session, recognizing procedural realities, and placing events on the official record are not mere formalities. They are expressions of institutional respect.


Critics of the boycott argued that the call to let the Senate “go quiet” created an unintended consequence. It generated the perception that Senate operations themselves had become part of a political strategy. In the eyes of these critics, legislative work, committee activities, deliberations, and other parliamentary functions were effectively placed on hold in order to communicate a political message.


Some even argued that Senate work itself had become hostage to political strategy.


Whether one agrees with that criticism or not, the perception became part of the national conversation. The concern was not that senators wished to defend their institution. The concern was whether suspending the institution’s normal work was the best way to defend it.


For many students of parliamentary democracy, the strongest demonstration of institutional strength is continuity. A legislature proves its resilience not when it becomes silent but when it continues to deliberate, debate, and function despite controversy. Democracy is practiced not through absence but through participation.


This is precisely what makes the recent episode so fascinating. Last week, the Minority walked out because it believed the institution was being compromised. Recently, the Majority boycotted because it believed the institution needed defending. Different motivations. Different explanations. Yet both actions produced the same institutional consequence: an inactive chamber and delayed proceedings.


The deeper issue therefore extends beyond personalities and beyond the controversy of the moment. The real issue concerns parliamentary integrity itself. Legislatures are designed to function during periods of disagreement. In fact, disagreement is one of the reasons legislatures exist. Debate, persuasion, compromise, and voting are the mechanisms through which democratic societies resolve conflict.


The Senate occupies a unique place in Philippine democracy. It is where laws are crafted, investigations are conducted, and national issues are debated. Citizens do not elect senators merely to belong to political blocs. They elect them to participate in governance. Habang nagpapatuloy ang mga political disagreements, hindi naman tumitigil ang pangangailangan ng bansa para sa maayos na pamamahala. The institution must continue functioning regardless of controversy.


What makes the situation particularly revealing is how quickly political roles can reverse. Yesterday’s critics become today’s subjects of criticism. Yesterday’s defenders of attendance become today’s practitioners of absence. Majorities become minorities. Minorities become majorities. Alliances shift. Political calculations change. Yet institutions remain.


An empty chair inside the Senate chamber does not reveal whether it belongs to a member of the Majority or the Minority. Hindi nito ipinapakita kung sino ang tama o mali. Ang ipinapakita lamang nito ay isang bagay: absence.


History often judges political actors not by how they treated their allies but by whether they applied the same standards to themselves that they demanded from others. Public trust grows when leaders demonstrate consistency. It weakens when principles appear flexible depending on who benefits from them.


Last week, the Minority walked out.

Recently, the Majority boycotted.


The circumstances changed, but the central question remained the same: if attendance is a parliamentary duty, should that duty not apply equally to everyone?


In the end, history will not simply remember who belonged to the Majority or the Minority. Mas maaalala nito kung sino ang nanatiling tapat sa institusyon nang maging mahirap ang sitwasyon. More importantly, it will remember whether the Senate upheld the principles of parliamentary consistency and institutional integrity when those principles became politically inconvenient. Because the true measure of parliamentary leadership is not the size of one’s bloc, the strength of one’s alliances, or the volume of one’s rhetoric. The true measure is whether one showed up, respected the institution, protected its integrity, and placed parliamentary duty above political convenience.

#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.

From Admiration to Disappointment: The Political Transformation of Escudero and Legarda


There was a time when the names Francis Escudero and Loren Legarda inspired admiration, respect, and even political hope among millions of Filipinos, particularly the youth. They were not merely senators. They were symbols of what many believed public service should look like. They represented intelligence, competence, eloquence, and a certain level of statesmanship that seemed increasingly rare in Philippine politics. In many universities, youth forums, leadership conferences, and public discussions, their names were often mentioned among the politicians whom young Filipinos could look up to and aspire to emulate.


Both were candidates for Vice President of the Philippines. Both enjoyed national recognition that transcended regional boundaries and partisan affiliations. Both possessed credentials, experience, and legislative accomplishments that earned them admiration even from political opponents. They belonged to a generation of leaders who appeared capable of elevating political discourse beyond the usual noise of personality politics.


Loren Legarda built her reputation through decades of advocacy for environmental protection, disaster preparedness, climate resilience, cultural preservation, women’s empowerment, and legislative diligence. She projected the image of a serious public servant whose commitment to governance extended beyond election cycles. Many viewed her not simply as a politician but as a stateswoman.


Francis Escudero emerged as one of the brightest political stars of his generation. Articulate, intellectually gifted, media-savvy, and politically agile, he cultivated an image of independence and competence. For many young Filipinos, he represented the possibility that intelligence and thoughtful leadership could still thrive within the political system. There was a time when many observers believed his political future had virtually no ceiling.


Together, they became symbols of political promise.


That is precisely why the public disappointment directed at them today has become so intense.


People do not become deeply disappointed by leaders from whom they expected very little. Disappointment grows in direct proportion to expectation. The higher the pedestal, the harder the fall. The greater the admiration, the deeper the sense of betrayal when expectations are not met.


Many Filipinos are now asking a difficult question.

What happened to Francis Escudero and Loren Legarda?


How did two of the most respected and admired senators in modern Philippine history become subjects of criticism from many of the very people who once supported them?


The answer does not lie in a single vote, a single speech, or a single political decision. Rather, it appears to be the cumulative effect of political positioning during one of the most polarizing and politically sensitive periods in recent Philippine history.


Whether fairly or unfairly, both Escudero and Legarda have increasingly become associated in the public mind with the emerging Senate majority bloc that many citizens perceive as protective of Vice President Sara Duterte and resistant to the impeachment process. Regardless of their personal motivations, regardless of the nuances behind every procedural decision, public perception has increasingly linked their names to a coalition whose actions are being scrutinized by a politically engaged public.


Politics is often unforgiving in this regard.


Citizens rarely judge politicians based on lengthy explanations. They judge them based on visible behavior, repeated associations, and public positioning. A senator may insist on remaining independent. A senator may argue that coalition-building is necessary for governance. Yet when people repeatedly see the same personalities standing beside the same political bloc during crucial moments, a new public identity begins to emerge.


Political scientists call this coalition absorption.


Coalition absorption occurs when a dominant political force gradually redefines the public identity of those who associate with it. The politicians involved may never formally abandon their beliefs. They may never switch parties. Yet in the minds of the public, they increasingly become identified not by their individual accomplishments but by the coalition they are perceived to support.


Perhaps this is what many Filipinos are witnessing today.


For decades, Loren Legarda was viewed as a stateswoman whose advocacy transcended partisan politics. Francis Escudero was viewed as an independent-minded leader capable of balancing political pragmatism with institutional responsibility. Yet many of their former admirers now express concern that both have become identified with a political coalition whose priorities are increasingly viewed through the lens of power preservation rather than institutional accountability.


What makes the situation even more tragic from a political and historical perspective is the emergence of harsh public labels that would have been almost unimaginable a few years ago. In social media discussions, political commentaries, and online debates, Loren Legarda is now being branded by some critics with derogatory labels questioning her political consistency and the principles she once represented. Some of these descriptions are so severe that they stand in stark contrast to the admiration she enjoyed for most of her public life. Meanwhile, Francis Escudero finds himself subjected to intense public scrutiny arising from controversies and discussions surrounding the ongoing flood control scandal. Whether such associations are justified or not is a matter for facts, investigations, and history to determine. Yet the political reality is that his position as Senate President has placed him at the center of a national conversation about accountability, governance, and institutional responsibility.


Fairly or unfairly, both are now carrying political burdens that have begun to overshadow decades of legislative accomplishments, public service, and statesmanship.


Perhaps this is one of the cruelest realities of politics.

A reputation built over thirty years can be damaged within thirty days.


A legacy constructed through hundreds of laws, countless public engagements, and decades of service can suddenly be challenged by a handful of highly visible decisions made during moments of national tension. History can be remarkably unforgiving. It does not always remember every accomplishment equally. Sometimes it remembers defining moments. Sometimes it remembers where leaders stood when institutions were tested. Sometimes it remembers the alliances they chose more than the achievements they accumulated.


For many former supporters of Escudero and Legarda, the sadness is not rooted in hatred. It is rooted in disappointment.

They are not criticizing two ordinary politicians.

They are questioning two individuals whom they once believed represented something greater.


In conversations among politically engaged Filipinos, especially the youth, one recurring sentiment continues to surface. They are not angry because Escudero and Legarda are powerful. They are angry because they expected them to be different.


That distinction matters.

Nobody is shocked when traditional politicians behave traditionally.

Nobody is surprised when political opportunists act opportunistically.


But when individuals long regarded as statesmen and stateswomen become associated with decisions that many perceive as inconsistent with their historical image, public disappointment becomes amplified.


Whether such disappointment is justified remains a matter of debate.

Perhaps both leaders genuinely believe they are protecting institutional stability.

Perhaps they believe they are preventing political chaos.

Perhaps they see dimensions of governance that ordinary citizens do not.

History may eventually vindicate them.

History may eventually condemn them.

Only time will answer that question.


What is already clear, however, is that the public conversation surrounding Francis Escudero and Loren Legarda is no longer centered on their intelligence, credentials, or legislative accomplishments. Those achievements remain undeniable and significant.


The conversation today is about legacy.


Because there comes a point in every political career when a leader is judged less by what he or she accomplished and more by what he or she chose to defend when institutions were under stress.


That is the question many Filipinos are asking today.

Not what Francis Escudero and Loren Legarda achieved in the past.

But what they chose to become when the nation needed them most.


And perhaps that is the saddest irony of all. Two politicians once admired by a generation of young Filipinos as symbols of principled leadership now find themselves defending not their accomplishments, but their choices. The tragedy is not that they are being criticized. Criticism is part of public life. The tragedy is that decades of public service, legislative excellence, and earned admiration are now being weighed against a handful of decisions made during one of the most consequential periods of their political lives. Whether history ultimately remembers them as guardians of institutional stability or as participants in the decline of public trust remains unwritten. But the fact that such a question is now being asked at all speaks volumes about how quickly political colors can change—and how fragile even the most respected legacies can become.


#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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