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Frustration over failed opposition unity talks
Published on: Monday, January 24, 2022
By: Philstar
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Frustration over failed opposition unity talks
(From left) Robredo, Moreno, Pacquiao and Lacson.
MANILA: Presidential bets expressed frustration over the result of the opposition’s unification talks before the filing of candidacy for the 2022 elections but said they would be open to take part in unification talks again should the opportunity arise.

At the Jessica Soho Presidential Interviews aired over GMA News late Saturday evening, presidential candidates Vice President Leni Robredo, Sen. Panfilo Lacson, and Manila City Mayor Isko Moreno were asked how they felt about the failed unity talks before the filing period.

Robredo, who described herself as a presidential candidate who is open to working with anyone, said she was frustrated when a broad and united opposition did not happen.

“We were successful in uniting so many different groups that were not politicians even if they were not in our party... If I was chosen, I would be their candidate. If I wasn’t chosen, I would support their choice,” she said, referring to opposition coalition 1Sambayan.

But is a united opposition still possible with the elections already three months away? “It’s going to be harder now because we’ve all filed and we all have our funding sources, but it’s not impossible. I hope we can grab the opportunity to unite.”

Ahead of the filing of her candidacy, Robredo — who has long been recognised as the de facto leader of the opposition — said that there ought to be just one candidate fielded against the administration’s bet. The vice president earlier met with all three candidates who eventually formalised their bids for the country’s top post.

Asked about her ties to the Liberal Party despite her decision to run independently, Robredo said: “I never left the Liberal Party but I am running independently because we hope to convey the message that we are open to everyone... The journey is long but I think I made the right decision.”

Robredo went as far as saying that she would vote for Pacquiao if she was not in the race. Pacquiao was one of the first ones she approached for a possible alliance, a move that other opposition groups questioned given Pacquiao’s close relationship with the administration earlier.

“I know him personally, and I know that he is a very sincere person,” she said in Filipino.

Lacson, for his part, said that he went into unification talks wanting concrete proposals on how to unify the administration opposition.

“The problem was it didn’t strike me that way... And I had concrete unification proposals were rejected outright and didn’t go through,” he said.

Towards the end of 2021, Robredo said that Lacson’s proposal was to agree to withdraw their candidacies at a certain time and support whoever has a better showing in election surveys. She said she rejected this proposal.

“I still have a chance. We have to hold on to hope. I’m always inspired by my supporters. It so happens that there’s still three months to go. In the course of time we’re making adjustments but anything can happen before then,” Lacson also said Saturday when asked about his chances.

Moreno had a more strident critique of the opposition when he was asked about it.

“If it’s going to be talked about, then I will join. But if they’re just going to be talking about unification for one candidate, then they can just talk amongst themselves,” he said in mixed Filipino and English.

“The unification they’re talking about is only to benefit themselves as politicians. The unification I want is unification for the people.”

Moreno has long positioned himself as a moderate and has ridden the fence between supporting the administration and opposing it.

The Manila chief could not give a categorical answer when asked whether he was part of the opposition or the administration. Asked where his loyalties lie, Moreno simply said: “the people.”

“Duterte did many things that can be copied and continued. But the things he did that weren’t very good, they should be criticised,” he said. He did not specify what these were.

Moreno had previously been supportive of the administration’s programmes and policies, including its “war on drugs” and dolomite white sand beach in Manila Bay. However, he has also been a vocal critic of the administration’s face shield rule in the city of Manila.

Most recently, he admitted he would welcome President Rodrigo Duterte into his Senate slate with open arms, months after the tensions first flared between the two.

“I don’t need a brand, that’s just something you sell as a candidate. That’s something a scriptwriter wrote for you when should be selling what you’ve done and your proof of what you can do,” Moreno also said.

Pacquiao and Lacson had a similar angle when asked the same question. The latter said he “praises what is right, but criticises what is wrong.”

Pacquiao for his part said he just “doesn’t agree with bad things” and that the law should be implemented. Neither of them specified which policies they disagreed with. 

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