Showing posts with label gringo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gringo. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

UNA BETS DOMINATE PULSE ASIA POLL


Candidates of the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) dominated the latest survey conducted by Pulse Asia.

The survey conducted from November 23 - 29 involving 1,200 respondents showed UNA could win seven out of the 12 senatorial slots in 2013.

Sen. Francis Escudero led all senatorial bets with a score of 74.1 percent, while Sen. Loren Legarda got 68.3 percent. Both Legarda and Escudero are guest candidates of UNA.

The survey results showed at least five other UNA senatorial bets landing in the Magic 12. San Juan Representative Jose Victor Ejercito is currently in 4th place with 57 percent and Rep. Juan Ponce “Jack” Enrile Jr. is in 5th with 53.2 percent.

Incumbent Sen. Gregorio Honasan is in 8th with 44.9 percent while Vice President Jejomar Binay’s daughter Nancy Binay jumped to 9th place with 41.3 percent.

Former Sen. Juan Miguel Zubiri rounds out list in 12th with 40.5 percent.

Other UNA candidates in the top 20 are former Senator Richard Gordon in 14th, Grace Poe – Llamanzares in 17th, former Senator Ernesto Maceda in 19th and Margarita “Tingting” Cojuangco in 20th place.

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Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Statement of Senator Gringo Honasan in the Inquirer


via the Philippine Daily Inquirer: 

Aquino, UNA should work together to fight poverty – Honasan

By 

Senator Gringo Honasan
MANILA, Philippines — Senator Gregorio Honasan said the United Nationalist Alliance has not been and would not be the bad guy in President Benigno Aquino III’s campaign for good governance on the so-called tuwid na daan (straight path).
But he said Aquino’s self-righteous supporters could be.
Honasan, UNA’s only reelectionist exclusively in its fold, said President Aquino and their coalition’s have been facing common enemies in “poverty, hunger, ignorance and, in this case, too much partisan politics.”
“I am convinced that the UNA is not the enemy of the President,” Honasan told the Philippine Daily Inquirer in a telephone interview.
“The permanent enemy of the President and the UNA, including the administration coalition … is poverty, hunger, ignorance and, if I may add in light of the recent developments, too much partisan politics,” Honasan added.
Honasan said that with President Aquino and UNA’s leaders—Vice President Jejomar Binay, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile and former President Joseph Estrada—all enjoying high trust ratings, they could do much more to rally the country to economic growth even beyond 2016.
Honasan was reacting to President Aquino’s remarks during his proclamation of the senatorial candidates of the administration coalition.
Aquino said that if the members of the Liberal Party-led coalition were on the right path, how could those running against them—in apparent reference to the UNA slate members—also be on the right way.
Honasan expressed belief that President Aquino didn’t mean to disparage the members of the UNA coalition but made the remark only in the context of promoting the LP slate.
“I’m not referring to the President but there are those who pass themselves off as competent, all-knowing and clean but who are not and who are talking too much.
“To me, no one really cares what they think,” Honasan said.
“What’s important is President Aquino, Vice President Binay, Senate President Enrile and former President Estrada must combine and take a long term view.
“These elections would end and we will have to buckle down to work…. UNA is a critical ingredient in pursuing the President’s programs,” Honasan added.
Honasan said no set of national officials, whether elected or appointed, could match the combined trust ratings of the four officials.
Asked what alternative UNA could present to the people if it’s not the enemy of President Aquino, Honasan said, “Then we’ll move into high political ground.”
“If the people below the President would insist on a position of self-righteousness—as what I’ve said passing themselves off as competent, knowledgeable and clean, even when they’re not—then UNA is diametrically opposed to that,” Honasan said.
Honasan said the fact that UNA has in its fold supporters of former President Joseph Estrada, stalwarts of the Arroyo administration and independents shows the alliance’s long-term view of national unity.
“If the people below the President, the President’s subordinates take a different view, then UNA will be diametrically opposed to that because it’s in the way of political unity and economic development, economic prosperity and social cohesion, which are the desires of national security,” Honasan said.
Honasan, however, wouldn’t ascribe any ill-motive to Sen. Franklin Drilon’s statement on common candidates of the LP and UNA being discouraged from joining UNA rallies.
“I am not in a position to pass judgment on Senator Drilon’s statements,” Honasan said, adverting to the tradition of senators not questioning the motives of other senators.
Sen. Francis Escudero, Sen. Loren Legarda and Grace Poe-Llamanzares are common candidates of the LP coalition and the UNA.