WE WUZ robbed. True or not, losers still lost.
As there’s nothing you can do to undo what’s done,
may as well accept it, with all graciousness, with all humility. And go into
some introspection, into reflection over the might-have-beens – no, not to sulk
and wallow in blaming and self-pity, but to find the resolve to do much better
for the next run. It’s only three years away, you very well know.
To that end, what I have long proffered as post-election
prescription for the solace of the hurting also-ran is this rumination of
Pulitzer Prize-winning The New York Times
columnist William Safire in his The First
Dissident subtitled The Book of Job
in Today’s Politics, thus:
“IS SUFFERING a defeat good for a
political person? The run for office is a short run, and the loser is not
likely to find comfort in talk about the long run. But can rejection at the
polls be fairly presented as what condolence-bearers sardonically call ‘a
character-building experience’?”
Yes, and yes. And the dearly lamented
Carmelo F. Lazatin, better known as the Tarzan
exemplified it.
Tarzan lost in his very first try for
an elective post – mayor of Angeles City in 1980.
Losing an election early in political
career is deemed constructive. As Safire says, “a therapeutic trouncing
introduces a little real humility into candidates who must at least profess
humility.”
Though not exactly a long shot in the
1st district congressional contest in 1987 – he was the
beatific Cory’s choice, after all – Tarzan managed to squeak through victory –
by a plurality of less than a hundred votes against his closest rival, if
now-selective memory still serves right.
Tarzan rolled through victory after
victory thereafter – three terms in the Lower House, notwithstanding his being
derided as the chair of the comite de
silencio at the camara de
representante; first ever city mayor to serve three terms; back to Congress
in 2010.
He lost in his comeback bid for the
mayorship in 2013 and was readily consigned to the dustbin of the political has-beens.
Only to resurrect – by proxy – in 2016 with the masterful crafting of the twin
victories of his namesakes – Carmelo Jr. aka Pogi, and Carmelo II aka Jon – at the
city council, and in the first congressional district, respectively.
Contrary to all expectations, aye, in
direct defiance of age and health, Tarzan won the chairmanship of the city’s
premier barangay of Balibago in 2018.
It was to be Tarzan’s final yell,
succumbing to cardiac arrest over the ravages of age seven months later.
But not his last hurrah – if only from
the grave – with the definitive victory of Pogi as hizzoner of Angeles City,
and the impressive re-election of Jon as Pampanga 1st District
representative.
The sons handling contemporaneously
the positions held by the father one after the other. What greater political
legacy than this?
Tarzan could not have known it but
what Safire called the “law of political return” impacted upon him, ingraining him
with the “comeback quality.”
Qualified, thus: “Defeat, if it does
not destroy them, tempers leaders. After reaching deep within for internal
resources, they can rightly claim to have grown as a result of what the voters
have taught them. In the art of comeback, one lesson is not to insist that
voters admit they were wrong last time, even if their choice of candidates
turned out to be inept or corrupt in office. On the contrary, the putative
comebacker should compliment the electorate on having been right in spotting
his own shortcomings in policy or personality or presentation, which have been
corrected – with no compromise of principle, of course. Last time losers should
assert with pride that they have learned enough to become next time’s winners.”
Else, they stop running altogether.
And stop losing forever.
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