Arroyo not losing sleep over ouster calls
Philippine President Gloria Arroyo is not losing sleep over loud calls for her resignation as a result of the purported bribery and overprice scandal attending the scrapped National Broadband Network project.
In an interview Saturday (Feb 23) over dzRH, the President said she had been sleeping “seven hours a night”, and that this was part of her “energy management”.
“Because they say, if you want your left and right sides of the brain to work efficiently, it should be customary for you to have seven to eight hours of sleep at night,” she added in a mixture of English and Filipino.
When asked by radio commentator Joe Taruc about the “Gloria resign” call, the President said she would rather focus on the economy than think about it.
She said the economy would not have drastically improved if she had paid attention to “political disturbances”.
"That's why I am focused like a laser beam on the economy. So you can see the fruits of that focus, and that's my attitude until now," she said.
Arroyo said that despite the current political tumult, she remained on track to fulfill her duties as President.
"Yes, that's part of my discipline," she said, recalling the advice of her late father, President Diosdado Macapagal to "do what is right; do your best and let God take care of the rest".
She said her father even advised her that the presidency was “not a position to be enjoyed.
"It's a position where you have to work hard for the good of the people, and if necessary, it's a position where you should be willing to suffer," she said, quoting the late President.
Arroyo said she had been ignoring the name-calling and remarks that, she said, had been “twisted” by the media: "Deadma lang ako doon (I just ignore them)."
But she lamented that a former member of the Cabinetformer Presidential Management Staff chief and now Albay Gov Joey Salcedahad been dragged into the mess.
At an economic forum on Wednesday at the Ateneo de Manila University in Makati City, Salceda was quoted as saying that “she (Ms Arroyo) may be a bitch, but she's the luckiest bitch around.”
He said the numbers were proving that the economy had grown, but he later apologised for the remark, saying it was made "tongue in cheek".
Arroyo said the entire quote was actually, "If she's a bitch, she's one lucky bitch because of the improving economy."
"That's the context,” she said. “On the day he was quoted, I was out in the field, so I did not understand at first why he sent me through text messages his apologies, where he said his remarks were made in the context of affection. I (didn't) know what he was apologising for."
The President said she had forgiven Salceda for his well-publicised quip.
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