Introduction To Politics and Governance
Introduction To Politics and Governance
Introduction To Politics and Governance
and Governance
Maria Elissa J. Lao
Summary of Lecture
Politics
Politics as the art of government
Politics as Public Affairs
Politics as compromise and consensus
Politics as Power
Politics in the Philippine Context
Legitimacy, Authority and the EDSA
revolution(s)
National Budget
How do you spend 1.414 trillion pesos?
P158,210,142,000 Department of Education (DepEd) P129,890,023,000
Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH
P62,937,459,000 Department of Interior and Local Governments (DILG)
P56,483,128,000 Department of National Defense (DND)
10 B Economic Stimulus Fund (ESF)
P302.65 billion, or 21% of the P1.4-trillion budget will go for interest
payments of outstanding debts
P378.87 billion earmarked as off-budget allocation for principal
amortization of debts, which will “rolled over” by P437.086-billion worth of
new borrowings
The Power of Impoundment - Section 38, Book VI of the budget law as derived
from Section 43 of PD1177 ensures that the President can refuse to allocate the
money Congress appropriated.
• The Power to Reallocate “Savings” - Section 39, Book VI of the budget law as
derived from Sections 44 and 45 of PD 1177, empowers the President to
channel savings to cover deficits of other items in the budget.
• The Power to Line-Veto - Article VI, Section 27(2) of the 1987 Constitution,
which is similar to Article VIII, Section 20(2) of Marcos’ 1973 Philippine
Constitution, guarantees the power of the executive to veto specific items of the
budget while retaining the others.
• The Power to Reenact Budget through Vetoing - Article VI, Section 25(7) of the
1987 Constitution, which is similar to Article VIII, Section 16(6) of Marcos’ 1973
Philippine Constitution, allows the President to reenact budgets should
Congress fail to override a presidential veto of the budget.
• The Power to Unilaterally Contract Loans - Article VII, Section 20 of the 1987
Constitution, which is similar to Article IX, Section 15 of Marcos’ 1973 Philippine
Constitution, allows the presidency to raise as much money as she can, using
future revenue-generation capacity as collateral.
National Government Debt per P 42, 819.42
Filipino (using end-Oct 2007 NG
Debt and NSO projected 2007
population)
Debt Service
612.80 P 6,908.15
Interest Payments
303.30 P 3,419.11
Principal Amortization
309.50 P 3,489.03
Education, Culture and
Manpower Development
164.10 P 1,849.96
Health
18.36 P 206.93
Civil Society
Governance
“stakeholdership”
Politics in the Philippine Context
Authority exists because it is generally agreed
on and that most people believe it exists. The
existence of this sort of feeling to the extent that
it does exist is called legitimacy.
Charismatic - based on exceptional qualities of a
person
Traditional - rests on the sanctity of tradition
Rational/legal – rests on legality and legitimacy of rule
based on accepted patterns of normative rule of
leadership.
Politics in the Philippine Context
Legitimation crisis: revolutions
Marxist
Non marxist
• Disequilibirum of the political system
The EDSA revolutions
EDSA I
EDSA II
EDSA III