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Arroyo faces renewed attacks after admission
Opponents of Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo stepped up calls for her to resign on Tuesday after she admitted talking to an election official during vote-counting, but analysts said she appeared safe for now. Arroyo saying late on Monday she had a "lapse in judgment" looked set to embolden the opposition, which says recordings of telephone conversations prove she cheated in last year's poll. But analysts doubt the opposition has the strength to impeach Arroyo or the popular support needed to stir up the kind of huge protests that forced Joseph Estrada from the presidency in 2001.
In a carefully worded televised statement late on Monday, Arroyo said she spoke to an election official and was sorry, but denied she had tried to influence the election result. The opposition, which also accuses the president's family members of taking kickbacks from illegal gambling, has said the conversation was with election commissioner Virgilio Garcillano. Local media have reported that she discussed the vote tally in various districts and received assurances that her losses would be limited. By admitting a lapse in judgment but denying wrongdoing, Arroyo took an "intelligent, calculated risk" that is likely to deflate the pressure, said Simon Flint, head of foreign exchange strategy for emerging Asia at Merrill Lynch in Singapore. "The worst may not be over but the worst of the worst -- the fear we had that this could really escalate out of control -- is less of a possibility today than it was 24 hours ago," he said. "If the opposition do have a plan and they do have more evidence against her, then they're not executing the plan particularly well." Philippine dollar bonds and the peso fell early on Tuesday in the wake of Arroyo's statement, but recovered later. Manila's main stock index ended down 0.42 percent. LEGAL CASE SHAKY Analysts see little chance of Arroyo quitting and say it will be very difficult for the opposition to impeach the president because of her majorities in both houses of Congress. Protests against Arroyo in recent weeks have been relatively small and she still has the support of key sectors such as the middle class, the Catholic Church and the military. The head of a congressional panel investigating the recordings said that the tapes should now be played in Congress so law makers could decide for themselves whether Arroyo had tried to influence the election. "There are more questions raised by the president's admission," Gilbert Remulla told television. "She should waive her right to privacy so that we will know the extent of the conversations." Benito Lim, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines, said Arroyo was betting the opposition would be unable to take advantage of her troubles because it had no credible leader to challenge her. "That is her gamble for now," he said. The Philippine Daily Inquirer on Tuesday quoted constitutional expert Antonio Betito as saying the president's lawyers had advised her that she could make the admission without leaving herself vulnerable to legal action. "Even if she admitted talking to a commissioner, the tape could still not be used as evidence," he said. "The president admitted being the one on tape. So what? What can we do?" The president's allies have said that since the conversation was illegally tapped, it is inadmissible as evidence in court.
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