Diehard Duterte Supporters
Hardline supporters of Rodrigo Duterte
Diehard Duterte Supporters (DDS ) is a label popularly associated with (and also adopted by) the supporters of the 16th president of the Philippines , Rodrigo Duterte ,[ 1] who they see as a necessary strongman .[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] The term was popularized during the 2016 presidential elections and has since been used to refer to the most "diehard" among Duterte's loyalists.[ 5] The term is also commonly used by his opposition to refer to people who they allege to be engaging in internet trolling and disruptive behaviour online to defend Duterte.[ 6]
Its initialism, DDS, was taken directly from the Davao Death Squad —an alleged vigilante group that had existed in Davao City during Duterte's term as mayor .[ 7]
Ideology
As their self-appellation suggests, the DDS are identified by their unwavering loyalty to Rodrigo Duterte and his daughter, Sara Duterte , rather than alignment to any particular political-economic ideology.[ 8] The DDS mirror Duterte's policy stances and shifts , even when such shifts contradict his self-identification as a socialist and membership in a democratic socialist party,[ a] PDP–Laban .[ 12] [ 18] [ 19] Accordingly, observers have described the DDS as a right-wing populist or even far-right phenomenon the existence of which preserves the status quo .[ 2] [ 11] [ 20] [ 21] Such an assertion has been demonstrated by the expansion in recent years of the historical and religiously informed cultural hostility toward left-wing politics in the country as the Philippines has been described as the most right-wing country in the world,[ 9] [ 22] which had been previously reserved for the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) but which had during Duterte's presidency begun to include national-democratic , social-liberal and even centrist organizations such as the Makabayan , Akbayan and Liberal parties,[ 23] respectively.
In common with Duterte's original support base outside Manila ,[ 24] the DDS had been enthusiastic about the subsequently derailed transition to a federal form of government through constitutional reform .[ 25] Some within the DDS, disillusioned by both the social doctrines of the Catholic Church and the sanctimoniousness of the professional–managerial class (PMC), may have also stood behind left-leaning causes such as the redefinition of civil marriage ,[ 26] which Duterte had also supported but has since backtracked on.[ 27] The DDS have also mirrored calls made by some core supporters for the installation of a revolutionary government with Duterte as leader .[ 2] [ 28] Such calls, however, have been motivated less by a willingness to pursue systemic transformation than by a desire for greater participation in the status quo .[ 2]
Behavior
The DDS are distinguished by their uninhibited use of rabid and vitriolic speech ,[ 8] [ 29] which mirrors Duterte's own.[ 30] [ 31] [ 32] They respond to the slightest criticism of Duterte with accusations of bias , shilling ,[ b] wokescolding , CPP membership or sympathizing with the New People's Army (NPA), notwithstanding Duterte's own tactical dealings with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) during his mayorship of Davao.[ 33] [ 34] The DDS usually engage in online bullying and harassment against all activists, as well as the Otso Diretso electoral alliance , Vice President Leni Robredo , and even fellow Dutertists suspected of disloyalty,[ 4] [ 35] [ 36] often by issuing threats or tagging them implicitly for punishment .[ 1] [ 8] [ 37] Dilawan [ c] and pulahan [ 40] are two of the slurs most frequently employed to shut down or gaslight those marked for harassment.[ 8] [ 41] [ 42] The DDS, despite Duterte's claims to being a socialist,[ 9] [ 19] have also participated in amplified smear campaigns directed against organizers of and contributors to COVID-19 mutual-aid efforts.[ 43] [ 44] It is for these reasons that the DDS are collectively considered even by otherwise sympathetic analysts as a successful hate group .[ 45]
Long before the DDS' ascent to national prominence,[ 46] [ 47] however, certain PMC actors themselves had allegedly orchestrated smear campaigns, known locally as "black propaganda", through SMS and other means against disfavored politicians and unapproved-of election candidates.[ 48] [ 49] Such derision has been described as a desire on the part of members of the PMC to "want to humiliate their adversaries by attributing to them a desperate lack of intelligence, empathy, and virtue".[ 50]
Organizational representation
Several organizations and social-media communities bear the DDS initialism as a way of signifying unapologetic allegiance to Duterte.[ 51] Some of these are the Duterte Youth , Pederalismo ng Dugong Dakilang Samahan (PDDS) and Partido Federal ng Pilipinas (PFP).[ 52] [ 53] These organizations claim to represent sectors of Philippine society marginalized by those who had taken power through the first EDSA Revolution and betrayed by those behind the second .[ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Global context
The DDS is part of an ascendant global far right;[ 54] indeed, members find affinity with right-wing populist movements across the globe and their respective leaders.[ 13] [ 21] In the academic and popular discourse, parallels had been drawn between the DDS and other strongman populist movements such as Erdoğanism in Turkey , Bolsonarism in Brazil and Trumpism in the United States ,[ 23] [ 45] among many others,[ 55] notwithstanding the uniqueness of the conditions that give rise to and, in turn, motivate each of them.[ 56] For instance, it has been demonstrated that popular support for Duterte has been driven to a significant extent by expatriate workers resentful of having to support themselves and their families from abroad,[ 54] a motivating factor only partially shared by workers in core countries . Also, Filipino culture is more susceptible to strongmen, as in the ancient Philippines, tribal leaders needed a cult-like following to maintain power. In addition, far-right beliefs are prominent in Filipino culture.[ 54]
See also
Notes
^ National democrats,[ 9] along with others who are placed to the left of social democrats and democratic socialists on the political spectrum,[ 2] [ 10] themselves refute Duterte's self-proclaimed socialist credentials given his inability, due to structural constraints,[ 10] [ 11] to concretely and seriously tackle the economic aspects of liberalism.[ 12] [ 13] Such constraints have had a similar dampening effect on the actions of other socialist leaders such as François Mitterrand and Evo Morales .[ 14] [ 15] [ 16] Significantly, however, and unlike his predecessors, Duterte is the first Philippine president to have had "no reservations" in openly declaring his ostensible socialism while operating within a hostile political-economic environment,[ 9] drawing comparisons to Bernie Sanders ' renormalization of the previously taboo term socialism in US political discourse.[ 17]
^ Shills are referred to as bayaran (literally "paid") in the national language which, to some extent, may also refer to prostitutes.
^ Dilawan loosely translates as "Yellow-supporter" in the national language , in reference to the color employed by protesters in the People Power Revolution . This usage, however, is a misnomer given how Duterte's own party had participated in the protests and was indeed co-founded by none other than Corazón Aquino's husband .[ 38] In addition, Sara Duterte , Duterte's daughter, recounts how her father had helped sear the significance of EDSA I into her mind.[ 39]
References
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