The declaration of Sen. Noynoy Aquino to run for president last September 9, 2009
has caused reactions from people who strongly support his candidacy as well as from
those who believe that he is not qualified nor winnable. The other day, an Internet
blogger told me bluntly, “I have already explained why Noynoy is not winnable, but you
have not cited a single reason why he is.”
I thought about it and I have many reasons why I believe Noynoy is winnable. However,
since he asked me to cite a “single reason,” I weighed all my reasons -- and there were
many -- and selected a “single reason.” And here’s what I told him:
“You asked me for a ‘single reason’ why Noynoy is going to win and that is CHANGE.
Noynoy is the only candidate that can truly say that he's for CHANGE. His ‘inexperience’
would even help him. He is a ‘virgin’ candidate who would not sell out to special interest
groups. And best of all, he gives HOPE to our people who have suffered too long under
Gloria's corrupt regime.”
I call Noynoy a “virgin” candidate not because he is a bachelor but because of his “virgin”
political life -- clean and free of scandals.
Born Benigno Simeon Cojuangco Aquino III, on February 8, 1960, “Noynoy” was born into
an old political family. However, his early life was insulated from politics because of the
incarceration of his late father, Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., when the dictator Ferdinand
Marcos declared martial law in September 1972. Noynoy was only 12 years old then. In 1980,
Ninoy was released from prison on the condition that he and his family will go to exile in the U.S.
and never return home. But after a few years in exile, Ninoy decided to return home to lead the
fight for freedom and democracy. On August 21, 1983, an assassin’s bullet killed him instantly
as he stepped down from the airplane at the Manila International Airport, now the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport.
His widow, Cory Aquino, went home to pick up the pieces. In 1986, the “People Power” revolution
toppled the Marcos dictatorship and Cory ascended to the presidency. The following year, Noynoy
nearly lost his own life during one of the seven coup attempts by rebel soldiers. He was hit by five
bullets but survived. However, three of his four escorts were killed and the fourth was wounded. A
bullet is still embedded in his neck today.
In 1998, Noynoy was elected to the House of Representatives. He was reelected in 2001 and
again in 2004. He served the House as Deputy Speaker from 2004 to 2006. In 2007, Noynoy
was elected to the Senate for a six-year term.
Noynoy demonstrated his leadership in various capacities with the Liberal Party. He served the
party as Secretary General from 1999 to 2002, Vice-President of the Luzon Liberal Party from
2002 to 2004, Secretary General again from 2004 to 2006, and Vice Chairman of the party from
2006 to the present.
It was not an easy road that Noynoy took to reach where he is today. The road was pockmarked
with banishment, tragedy, and other setbacks. But it was an experience that tempered his psyche,
strengthened his character, and emboldened his determination to succeed in all endeavors that
he pursued in life.
And it all began on August 25, 1975, when Ninoy wrote his son Noynoy a letter from his detention
cell in Fort Bonifacio. Ninoy wrote, “You are my only son. You carry my name and the name of my
father. I have no material wealth to leave you. I never had time to make money while I was in the
hire of our people. For this I am very sorry.
“The only valuable asset I can bequeath to you is the name you carry. I have tried my best during
my years of public service to keep that name untarnished and respected, unmarked by sorry
compromises for expediency. I now passed it on to you, as good, I pray, as when my father,
your grandfather passed it on to me.
“Forgive me for passing unto your young shoulders the great responsibility for our family. I trust you
will love your mother and your sisters and lavish them with the care and protection I would have
given them.”
Ninoy concluded his letter by saying: “The only advice I can give you: Live with honor and follow
your conscience. There is no greater nation on earth than our Motherland. No greater people
than our own. Serve them with all your heart, with all your might and with all your strength. Lovingly,
Dad.”
It was a covenant between father and son. For 34 years, Noynoy kept and treasured his dad’s letter.
He carried the name he inherited from his father, untarnished, respected, and unmarked by
compromises. And should he be elected the next president, Noynoy will serve our Motherland
and our people with all his heart, with all his might, and with all his strength -- just like the way Ninoy
wanted it to be.
Indeed, Noynoy will become the instrument of CHANGE, just like Ninoy could have been had he
not died in the hands of military assassins on that fateful day in 1983. Four years later, Noynoy
was shot five times by rebel soldiers. But fate spared him from death. It wasn’t time for him to
die yet. He still had an unfinished task to accomplish. And he was prepared to carry out that task.
The passing of his mother, former president Cory Aquino, on August 1, 2009, put that task
squarely on Noynoy’s shoulders. There was no turning back. It was his calling and on the 40th
day of Cory’s death, Noynoy stepped up to the plate and declared his run for the presidency.
It couldn’t have happened at a more opportune time. With poverty level at 40%, hunger at
60%, unemployment at 25%, and the poor eating “pagpag,” the Philippines need a leader
who would truly make a change, not only in terms of economic progress, but would also
change the character of the nation. And what a better way to achieve that than to have a
leader with moral integrity and impeccable character.
In a recent survey conducted last September 5 and 6 by Social Weather Stations (SWS)
among 1,200 respondents in vote-rich Luzon, an overwhelming 50% of the respondents
said they would vote for Noynoy. And that was before Noynoy formally announced his
presidential bid. Indeed, the wind of change is now blowing in Luzon and will soon reach
the Visayas, Mindanao, and the far-flung Sulu archipelago.
And there is no doubt in my mind that Noynoy would manifest the character that the people
would expect -- nay, demand! -- of their leader. The people have suffered long enough that
promises made by the presidential candidates are not good enough. They want a “virgin”
candidate -- untarnished, respected, honest, and someone who will change the character
of our nation. Noynoy is that man.