Skip to content
No results
Screencap Media PHScreencap Media PH
  • News
    • Nation
    • Regions
    • Metro
  • World
  • Business & Finance
  • Opinion
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Special Reports
    • Advocacy
    • Features
    • Health & Wellness
Get Started

DATE
TIME
CITY Detecting...
WEATHER --
USD ₱-- EUR €-- JPY ¥-- BTC $--

Screencap Media PHScreencap Media PH
  • News
    • Nation
    • Metro
    • Regions
    • World
  • Business & Finance
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
    • Innovation
  • Breaking News
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Culture
    • Health & Wellness
    • Travel
    • Motoring
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Special Reports
  • VIDEOS
Screencap Media PHScreencap Media PHScreencap Media PH

Pa-Victim or PR Strategy?

  • Gabriela Silang, Receipts Don't Lie
  • Opinion
  • April 25, 2026
  • No Comments

There’s a rather animated young congressman from a coastal district in southern Luzon—let’s call him “L3”—who has recently discovered the power of indignation.

Through resolutions and social media, he now paints a dramatic narrative of “exclusion” in a national assistance program—complete with numbers, outrage, and just enough selective detail to sound compelling.

Unfortunately, the math he himself presented refuses to cooperate.

Eighty-four barangays, he says, were “left out.” But anyone who actually understands how these programs work—and how that province operates—knows the split tells a far less convenient story. One municipality complied: submissions filed, requirements met, releases processed. The other? Not a single barangay made it through the most basic step.

No submission. No documents. No processing. No release. And yet we are told this is exclusion.

That’s not how public financial management works. That’s not even how common sense works.

Because in government, funds don’t move on speeches. They move on to compliance.
No request, no documents, no release. It’s that simple.

Which makes the performance all the more curious.

Because now, receipts are starting to surface.

A circulating message—purportedly from a barangay official—claims that they were explicitly prevented from attending the national government event by their own local leadership. The tone is telling: not confusion, not exclusion—but apology. An admission that they wanted to participate, but were not allowed to.

If accurate, that changes everything.

This would no longer be a story of barangays being left out—but of barangays being held back.

And one has to ask: for what purpose?

Context, as always, is instructive.

Because not too long ago, during campaign season, the same circles now crying foul had no hesitation engaging with top national figures when it suited them. Access was not an issue then. Coordination was not a problem. The machinery worked—when it was politically convenient for them.

Now, suddenly, the narrative has shifted.

And then there’s timing.

In a recent public appearance, L3 himself openly floated the idea of seeking a higher provincial post. Since then, the pattern has been hard to miss: repeated attacks against the incumbent governor, steady amplification of perceived grievances, and a growing appetite for spectacle.

Because when positioning begins early, every issue becomes material—even if it requires bending the frame.

But governance is not a stage, and public funds are not props.

You cannot manufacture exclusion where there was no participation.
You cannot claim denial where there was no request.

So the question now is simple: beyond the noise and the intrigue, what exactly has L3 proven?

At some point, the noise stops being advocacy and starts looking like strategy.

And the public—especially those who understand how programs are actually implemented—can tell the difference.

In politics, perception may be currency.

But in governance, process is proof—and proof leaves a paper trail.

Disclaimer / Editor’s Note:
This article is an opinion/commentary piece. The views expressed are those of the author and are based on the author’s interpretation of publicly available statements, program processes, and circulating information relevant to the issue. It is not intended to present unverified allegations as fact, nor to malign any individual or institution. Persons or offices mentioned or alluded to are entitled to respond, clarify, or present their side, and the publication remains open to carrying such response in the interest of fairness and public accountability.

Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Reddit
PrevPrevious5 Detainees Dead, 1 Critical After QCPD Patrol Vehicle Crash in Payatas
NextTyla Steps Into Her Next Era With A*POPNext

Leave a ReplyCancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Nation

NAPOLCOM Probes EDSA Busway Crash Involving Police Vehicle

  • Peter Fernandez
  • April 20, 2026

A separate investigation has been...

Nation

DepEd Starts Nationwide Preps for SY 2026-2027 Reforms

  • Miguel Uy
  • April 25, 2026

The Department of Education (DepEd)...

Metro

Rider dies while lining up for fuel aid in QC

  • April 19, 2026

A rider died while waiting...

Nation

PNP studying use of electric patrol cars amid possible fuel price surge

  • March 5, 2026

The Philippine National Police is...

Entertainment

Meet AYO, the Davao Boy Group Redefining What P-Pop Can Be

  • Jules Vivas
  • April 22, 2026

There’s a knock at the...

Breaking News

Half of Filipinos Say Quality of Life Worsened in Q1 2026 — SWS

  • Mervin Reyes
  • April 23, 2026

Half of Filipino adults reported...

Business & Finance

Metrobank starts ASEAN sustainability peso bond offer

  • March 17, 2026

Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co....

Nation

ICC Lawyer Says Arrest Warrants for Dela Rosa, Go Likely

  • February 18, 2026

  Arrest warrants against Senators...

Follow us:

Facebook Instagram X-twitter Tiktok

ABOUT

In everyday life, taking a screencap is the fastest way to share stories, proof, and receipts with friends. It is a habit, a reflex, and now, our approach to journalism.

Quick links

  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Careers
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Careers

Contact

  • Submit a News Tip
  • Member Services
  • Advertise with Us
  • Community Network
  • Submit a News Tip
  • Member Services
  • Advertise with Us
  • Community Network

© 2026, SCREENCAP ® | All rights reserved.

  • Terms and Condition
  • Privacy Policy