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, June 19, 2026

Success Is Not Final, Failure Is Not Fatal: Why Alan Peter Cayetano’s Political Narratives Are Far From Over

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


“Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts.”
Winston Churchill


Few quotations have endured through history as powerfully as these words of Winston Churchill. Although they were spoken in the midst of one of history’s greatest wars, they continue to resonate in modern democratic politics. Elections end. Leadership contests conclude. Institutional battles are won and lost. Yet political struggles rarely end with a single vote. More often, they evolve into a new contest fought through ideas, constitutional debates, public confidence, and competing political narratives.


That is precisely how I view the present political situation in the Philippine Senate.


Many observers believe that the election of Senator Sherwin Gatchalian as Senate President marked the conclusion of the political contest. Institutionally, that assessment is understandable. The Senate has elected its leader. The majority has prevailed. Government continues to function.


But politics does not always end where institutions say it does.


History teaches us that institutional victories and political victories are not always the same. A leadership vote determines who occupies an office. It does not automatically settle the battle for legitimacy, influence, credibility, or public confidence. Those battles continue long after the gavel falls.


Marami ang nag-aakala na dahil tapos na ang botohan, tapos na rin ang laban. Sa aking pananaw, ang natapos ay isang institutional battle. Ang mas malaking political contest ay nagsisimula pa lamang.


Former Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano has spent decades in national politics. Whether one agrees with his positions or not, he has consistently demonstrated resilience and political adaptability. Leaders with long political experience rarely define their careers by a single institutional setback. They understand that politics is a marathon, not a sprint.


Political history suggests that experienced political leaders seldom regard defeat as the end of their political journey. More often, they regroup, reassess, reorganize, and prepare for the next chapter. The battlefield changes, but the political struggle continues.


For this reason, I believe it would be premature to conclude that Alan Peter Cayetano’s political narratives have reached their conclusion.

Yesterday, the contest centered on the Senate Presidency.

Today, the discussion is shifting toward constitutional governance, institutional independence, and public trust.

Tomorrow, the political landscape may again change depending on how national events unfold.

That is the nature of democratic politics.


One recurring pattern in democratic societies is that every major institutional conflict eventually transforms into a battle of narratives. One side explains why its victory strengthens democratic institutions. The other offers an alternative interpretation and seeks to persuade the public that its understanding of events deserves equal consideration.


The Senate floor may have settled the leadership vote.

The Filipino people will ultimately decide which political narrative they find more convincing.


One cannot ignore the possibility that the coming months will witness increasingly vigorous public debate. Constitutional issues, Senate proceedings, governance questions, and major national developments will likely be examined through television interviews, opinion columns, legal forums, universities, podcasts, social media platforms, and public discussions.


Politics today is no longer confined to legislative halls.

Every interview matters.

Every speech matters.

Every public statement matters.

Every digital platform contributes to shaping public opinion.

At this point, I would like to introduce what I call the Political Bomb Theory.

This is not a reference to violence, nor should it be understood literally.

It is a political metaphor.


The Political Bomb Theory refers to a defining national event capable of dramatically reshaping public opinion, altering political momentum, and changing the direction of the national conversation. Such an event may arise from a constitutional controversy, a governance crisis, a major corruption issue, an economic shock, a national security concern, or another development that captures the attention of the Filipino people.


History repeatedly reminds us that major political realignments are often triggered by defining national events rather than ordinary political disagreements.


My reading of the present political landscape is that every experienced political leader understands this reality. No political camp, whether in government or in the opposition, assumes that today’s political environment will remain unchanged tomorrow. Every significant national development has the potential to strengthen one political narrative while weakening another.


When that defining moment arrives, every political camp naturally seeks to explain it from its own perspective.

Government seeks to defend its record.

The opposition seeks to present an alternative vision.

The Filipino people ultimately decide which narrative deserves their confidence.

That is how democracy functions.

The same political dynamics are likely to be visible during the impeachment proceedings involving Vice President Sara Duterte.


Political history likewise suggests that impeachment trials are never purely legal exercises. They are constitutional proceedings with profound political consequences. Every procedural ruling, every constitutional argument, every evidentiary issue, and every interpretation of Senate rules will inevitably receive both legal scrutiny and public attention.


Inside the Senate, senator-judges deliberate on constitutional questions.

Outside the Senate, citizens deliberate on legitimacy, fairness, accountability, and governance.

Sa madaling salita, dalawang arena ang sabay na gumagalaw.

Ang isa ay ang impeachment court.

Ang isa ay ang court of public opinion.

Both will influence how history remembers these proceedings.

For the new Senate leadership, this creates an enormous responsibility.

Winning the leadership vote was only the beginning.

Maintaining institutional credibility will be the greater challenge.


Every ruling will be examined.

Every procedural decision will be scrutinized.

Every public statement will influence public perception.

Leadership is not measured only by securing votes.

It is measured by sustaining public confidence.

The same principle applies to every political opposition.

Long-term political relevance cannot depend solely on criticism.


It must also be supported by consistency, credibility, and a persuasive vision that resonates with the Filipino people.


Churchill’s wisdom therefore remains timeless.

Success should never create arrogance.

Failure should never produce surrender.

Political victories are temporary.

Political setbacks are equally temporary.


What ultimately matters is the ability to adapt, remain faithful to democratic institutions, uphold constitutional principles, and continue earning the confidence of the Filipino people.


The Senate leadership contest may have ended one institutional battle.


But the larger political contest over legitimacy, leadership, constitutional governance, and competing political narratives is still unfolding.


Only history, and ultimately the Filipino people, will determine how that story ends.

#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.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Perfect Reshuffle: A Bold Step Toward a Stronger, More Competent, and Reform-Oriented Government

Why Appointing Benhur Abalos to the DILG Could Be the Administration’s Smartest Move


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


Every President reaches a point in his administration where difficult decisions can no longer be postponed. Habang papalapit ang huling dalawang taon ng isang administrasyon, every Cabinet appointment becomes more critical because there is very little room left for trial and error. Ang focus ay hindi na dapat political accommodation kundi performance, competence, accountability, at legacy.


If the reported Cabinet reshuffle is indeed finalized, I believe this is one of the most well-thought-out decisions of the Marcos administration. Hindi ito simpleng pagpapalitan lamang ng mga pangalan sa Gabinete. It appears to be an attempt to match competence with responsibility—to put the right leaders in the departments where they can perform best. Sa public administration, ang pinakamahalagang prinsipyo ay simple lamang: the right person must lead the right institution.


Among all the reported appointments, one decision stands out the most—the return of Benhur Abalos to the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG). For me, ito ang pinakamahalagang appointment sa buong reshuffle.


The DILG is far more than a department supervising local governments and the police. Ito ang pangunahing tulay ng national government sa mahigit 1,700 local government units sa buong bansa. Every national policy, whether on peace and order, disaster preparedness, infrastructure, health, education, or economic development, ultimately succeeds or fails at the local level. Kaya ang DILG Secretary must not only be an administrator but also a communicator, consensus-builder, negotiator, crisis manager, at isang lider na marunong makipagtrabaho sa iba’t ibang personalidad at political affiliations.


Benhur Abalos has already demonstrated those qualities. His experience as Mayor of Mandaluyong, MMDA Chairman, and former DILG Secretary gives him a practical understanding of how government works from the grassroots upward. Hindi na niya kailangang mag-adjust nang matagal dahil alam na niya ang sistema, ang kultura ng departamento, at higit sa lahat, ang dynamics ng local governance.


What I admire most about Secretary Abalos is his leadership style. Hindi siya kilala bilang puro politika lamang. He is known for being accessible, collaborative, and action-oriented. Marunong siyang makinig bago magdesisyon at mas pinipili niyang mag-coordinate kaysa magdikta. Those qualities are exactly what the DILG needs, especially during the remaining years of the administration.


More importantly, I believe Secretary Abalos can become one of President Marcos Jr.‘s strongest political governance assets—not in the partisan sense, but in strengthening cooperation between the national government and local governments. Habang papalapit ang 2028 elections, natural lamang na magsisimulang magkaroon ng iba’t ibang political alignments ang mga local officials. Ngunit ang natitirang panahon ng administrasyon ay hindi dapat maubos sa maagang pamumulitika.


Through the DILG, Secretary Abalos has the opportunity to remind governors, mayors, vice mayors, and barangay officials that governance should always come first. Maaari niyang hikayatin ang mga lokal na opisyal na ipagpatuloy ang suporta sa mga programa ng pamahalaan—whether in infrastructure, peace and order, disaster resilience, education, health, livelihood, or investment promotion—regardless of whatever political preferences they may eventually have in 2028.


Hindi naman nangangahulugan ito na mawawala ang kanilang political freedom. Every elected official has every constitutional right to support the candidate of his or her choice when the proper election period arrives. However, before politics takes center stage, there remains an unfinished responsibility to govern. Ang tunay na sukatan ng isang local executive ay hindi kung sino ang kanyang susuportahan sa susunod na halalan, kundi kung paano niya napaglingkuran ang kanyang mga constituents habang siya ay nasa panunungkulan.


If Secretary Abalos succeeds in strengthening the partnership between Malacañang and the local government units, he may become one of the administration’s most valuable Cabinet members. Ang magiging legacy niya ay hindi lamang tungkol sa DILG. It will be about keeping local governments united behind governance rather than divided by premature partisan positioning. Sa tingin ko, iyon ang isa sa pinakamahalagang papel na maaaring gampanan ng isang DILG Secretary sa nalalabing panahon ng administrasyong Marcos.


The other reported appointments are equally encouraging.


Jonvic Remulla appears to be an excellent choice for the DPWH. Ang departamento ngayon ay nangangailangan hindi lamang ng mahusay na administrator kundi ng isang reformer. Following the controversies surrounding infrastructure and flood control projects, public confidence must be restored. Jonvic Remulla has built a reputation for decisive leadership, operational efficiency, and strong coordination with local governments. If he can institutionalize transparency, improve project monitoring, and enforce engineering accountability, maaari niyang maibalik ang kredibilidad ng DPWH bilang tunay na ahensya ng nation-building.


The reported return of Vince Dizon to the DOTr is likewise a practical decision. Transportation is a highly technical department where continuity matters. Hindi puwedeng paulit-ulit na nagsisimula sa umpisa ang bawat bagong Secretary. Vince Dizon has consistently shown that he values execution more than publicity. Ang kailangan ngayon ng DOTr ay completion of ongoing railway systems, airports, seaports, at commuter modernization. His familiarity with these projects gives him an advantage in delivering results immediately.


Meanwhile, Frederick Go appears to be a natural fit for the DTI. Economic growth requires leaders who understand both government and business. Hindi sapat ang puro economic theories lamang. Kailangan ng Secretary na marunong makipag-usap sa investors, entrepreneurs, manufacturers, exporters, at maging sa MSMEs. Frederick Go’s extensive private-sector experience gives him credibility in promoting investments, strengthening industries, and creating a more competitive Philippine economy.


Taken together, these appointments reflect what appears to be a philosophy of governance rather than politics. Mukhang ang batayan ng reshuffle ay competence, experience, at institutional fit kaysa sa political accommodation lamang. Kung ito nga ang direksyon ng administrasyon, then it deserves recognition.


As promising as these appointments are, I sincerely hope this is only the beginning.


The President has less than two years remaining in office. Ito na ang panahon para gumawa ng pinakamahihirap ngunit pinakamahalagang desisyon. I also hope to see new faces in other Cabinet departments, attached agencies, and line bureaus that have consistently failed to meet public expectations. Public office should never become a reward for loyalty alone. Dapat ang sukatan ay performance, integrity, innovation, at measurable results.


Those who have become baggage to the image of the administration—whether because of inefficiency, weak leadership, lack of vision, or recurring controversies—should respectfully make way for a new generation of leaders who can bring fresh ideas, renewed energy, and the courage to implement reforms.


At the end of the day, history will not remember how many Cabinet Secretaries served under a President. Ang maaalala ng kasaysayan ay kung gaano kahusay ang kanilang naging serbisyo sa sambayanang Pilipino.


Sometimes, meaningful reforms do not begin with new laws. Minsan, nagsisimula lamang ito sa isang matapang na desisyon—placing the right person in the right position at the right time.


#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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