CITY OF SAN FERNANDO鈥擜ppeals by President Benigno Aquino III to Pampanga voters to elect Liberal Party (LP) candidates, articulated in rallies on Oct. 5, 2012, and March 1, 2013, went largely unheeded.
Election returns on Tuesday showed that the presidential endorsement appeared to have rubbed off only on Representative-elect Oscar Rodriguez of the third district and five mayoral bets in the towns of Arayat, Masantol, Guagua, Candaba and the City of San Fernando. Just one LP candidate made it to the provincial board.
The election did not make Pampanga an LP country, although
Mr. Aquino commanded 327,670 of more than 800,000 votes in the 2010 presidential race.
What is very clear this time is that Pampanga has increasingly become a turf of the Pineda family and its allies through the local party, Kambilan.
Mother-and-son
Commission on Elections data as of 10 a.m. on Tuesday showed Gov. Lilia Pineda leading with 444,989 votes against former Gov. Eddie Panlilio鈥檚 111,794 votes.
Pineda鈥檚 son and running mate, Dennis, is leading LP鈥檚 Maria Amalia Tiglao-Cayanan in the race for vice governor.
This is the first time that a mother and her son would occupy the two highest positions in the Pampanga government.
Pineda said her reelection is a sign she is being appreciated. 鈥淚 think it speaks of their trust in me,鈥 she said.
The allies of the Pinedas鈥擩oseller 鈥淵eng鈥 Guiao, former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Juan Pablo Bondoc鈥攍ed congressional races in the first, second and fourth districts.
Seven members of the provincial board allied with the Pinedas are leading.
At least 12 winning candidates for mayor belong to Kambilan; five, LP; two, Nationalist People鈥檚 Coalition; one independent; and one Partido Abe Kapampangan, which is allied with Kambilan.
Real reason
Mr. Aquino鈥檚 charm, or lack of it, is not a big factor in the defeat of Panlilio, said Grace Jamon, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines. The burden, she said, was on Panlilio, a former priest.
鈥淎s he applied ethics and tenacity in governance, he was perceived to be too morally self-righteous,鈥 Jamon said.
She said given the political culture in Pampanga, weighed heavily by poverty, the masses did not favor middle class, antipoverty and prodemocracy positions, which are Western-inspired concepts.
Jamon said Pineda, known in the province as 鈥淣anay Baby,鈥 is popular because 鈥渟he is a woman, her branding is a mother, she comes off as sincere.鈥
For Harvey Keh, a colleague of Panlilio in the good governance movement, Kaya Natin, the victory and dominance of the Pinedas meant that 鈥渏ueteng politics still rules in Pampanga.鈥