There are moments when reform stops being theoretical and becomes a test of whether a system can still respond to itself. The current push to revisit longstanding political reforms places the country squarely in that position.
For years, two structural questions have shaped our politics more than any campaign slogan.
First: Should the President and Vice President continue to be elected separately, each carrying an independent mandate?
Second: can political parties remain loose coalitions of convenience, or must they finally mature into institutions defined by ideology, discipline and accountability?
These questions are no longer academic. They are now being asked of the system itself.
We have lived long enough to observe the pattern that emerges when our two highest offices pull in different directions. Sometimes the distance is polite. Sometimes strategic. Sometimes deeply personal.
The system absorbs the tension, as it always has. But the public carries the burden. Policy momentum slows. Administrative confidence wavers. Long-term planning gives way to short-term calculation. The republic waits for coherence that never quite arrives.
Electing the President and Vice President as a tandem would not guarantee harmony. But it would guarantee coherence. A single ticket offers one mandate and one governing rhythm.
It integrates the vice presidency into the national plan from the outset — no longer a parallel center of gravity, no longer an improvised afterthought. Succession becomes predictable. Governance becomes continuous rather than conditional.
You can argue that systems shape human behavior. If our structure allows a split between the two highest officials, then a split becomes the norm. If the system does not, leaders behave according to the boundaries it sets. When tension rises at the top, the responsible response is not to assign motive — but to examine the structure that made such tension possible.
But coherence at the top means little if the political foundation beneath it remains weak. A tandem collapses without real political parties. Parties with ideology and a concrete, coherent program of government. Parties that discipline their ranks. Parties that vet leaders, train them and remove them when they drift from shared principles. Without this, elections remain contests of personality and governance becomes episodic rather than directional.
Strengthening parties is not a foreign idea. It is an unfinished Filipino project. In the 1990s, institutions like the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung and the Hanns Seidel Foundation were among those engaged in democracy support and political education in the Philippines. The logic behind building stronger political institutions has not changed. Only the urgency has.
What makes the current moment different is not who raised the issue, but that it has been formally raised. A directive has come from the Palace asking Congress to prioritize reforms long debated but rarely advanced. Anti-dynasty measures, partylist reform, and institutional transparency are now before Congress as matters requiring action. That alone does not reform the system. But it forces the system to reveal whether it is capable of reform.
If we elect ideologies, continuity will no longer depend on surnames. Leadership can change without derailing direction — because the idea, not the individual, carries the mandate. When that idea no longer serves the majority, it is replaced. Democratically. Predictably.
People often ask how to curb vote buying or the sinful costs of elections. The answer lies upstream. When parties — not individuals — are strengthened and regulated, elections shift from transactions to well-informed choices. Leadership becomes a pipeline, not an inheritance. The capable and the young gain real entry into public life.
This is not about today’s personalities. It is about whether the republic can still correct its own design. The two offices will always exist. The question is whether they will continue on parallel tracks — or finally serve one republic, under one governing logic.
Perhaps what matters most now is not who called for reform — but whether the system can answer when it is finally asked.