MARLEN V. RONQUILLO

THERE is a given about Congress, post the 2019 elections. The two chambers, the pliant House and hard-to-fathom Senate, have solid, pro-Duterte majorities. Loyal supporters of the administration call them “supermajorities,” though anything called “super” in politics is generally a concoction of partisans than a state of truth. Politics is very fluid and that state of fluidity has the constantly shifting tides and moods of Philippine politics as Exhibit A.

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