About Martin

MARTIN
ROMUALDEZ: GIVING BACK TO THE PEOPLE
By: Bing Parel-Salud, PEOPLE ASIA MAGAZINE July 2007 issue
“If you live in the past then you stay there,”
casually remarks Ferdinand Martin Romualdez, the newly elected
congressman of Leyte’s First District. We were at his home in
a plush Makati subdivision, and this writer was not totally prepared
for the candor displayed by the lawyer businessman. After all, he
carries a well-known surname that could sometimes be a boon or a bane
– depending on who you ask.
“I’m very proud of my father’s
achievements,” Martin says of former Leyte governor and
Ambassador Benjamin Romualdez. “However, those are his
achievements, and I would like to make my own mark. I only use those
achievements or standards as a bar to aim for, if not surpass. I will
not lean on those accomplishments and take the credit because I really
had nothing to do with that.
“And I think that also goes for whatever shortcomings my
family has in the past. I am not an apologist; I will never be one. But
at the same time, there’s nothing to be ashamed of because
everyone makes mistakes, everyone has shortcomings,” the 43
year old neophyte politician discloses.
While some eyebrows were initially raised at the news that the
businessman was throwing his hat into the political ring –
and under the Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (Kampi) party of President
Gloria Macapagal- Arroyo at that – not many were surprised.
In the first place, “politics has always been a part of our
family tradition, our political history dating back to the time of my
great grand uncle, Papa Miguel, who became the first mayor of Manila.
It is, as they say, in the blood. Although my first foray into a
semi-political life was as a Kabataang Barangay (KB) member some 25
years ago. I was president of my home municipality of Tolosa and
eventually became the provincial federation president, and we felt that
it was a very worthwhile experience,” he explains.
He was, to say the least, proud of the fact that even at a young age,
he was able to go around the province and visit just about every
municipality, meeting with other KB heads and conducting information
drives on various projects, among them livelihood, financing and soft
loan programs. “Those were exciting times in the sense that I
got to go out in the outlying municipalities and see how the rest of
the people actually live,” he remarks.
Asked what he was like as a kid, Martin laughs, “I was the
third of four children, I had two older brothers and being the third
child afforded me the opportunity to watch and observe the mistakes of
my two brothers so I would know how to behave lest I be
punished.” This, he adds, enabled him to learn the rules.
“I would know where my brothers would falter and I would make
sure that I avoided doing the same mistakes.”
The biggest lesson Martin has learned, however, is the power of
communication. “My parents were very emphatic about the
family being tightly knit, and communication – then and now-
is key. My father’s job as governor and ambassador brought
him to places far away from us, yet he managed to maintain close
contact with the family. It went a long way in forging strong bonds
that we have in the family.
“My mother dutifully and lovingly wrote to us when we were
studying in the United States, and that meant so much because the
handwritten letter always seems a warmer and more endearing form of
communication,” he reveals, laughingly adding that his mother
now knows how to text and email while his father use the cellphone
“incessantly like most everyone else.”
It’s obvious that family means a lot to the young politician.
His wife former 1996 Bb. Pilipinas International Yedda Marie Mendoza
Kittilsvedt, is “not just a beautiful person in terms of her
physical attributes but also a beautiful person inside. She’s
such a caring wife and mother that I never have to worry about my
children. She’s always there to support me in whatever I
decide to do, and she has been most definitely the great woman behind
me who quietly works in the background.” he says.
“Coming home to see her and the children makes all the stress
and worries just evaporate. All the fatigue melts away,” he
unabashedly admits.
And it seems he will need all the support his wife can give him now
that he has decided to get into the “exciting”
world of politics. A law graduate of the University of the Philippines,
and who later went to Harvard (Administration and Management) and at
Cornell University (Bachelor of Arts in Government), it would be quite
an understatement to say that Martin has a smart head on his shoulders.
It wouldn’t be too presumptuous either to say that his
academic accomplishments, plus his experience in the private sector,
could benefit his constituents. Tourism is one of the areas he would
like to focus on, which dovetails with the current program of the
administration. “The province has an agriculture-based
economy, but it has a great potential in terms of growth for
eco-tourism. The ingredients are all there – a beautiful
geography, beautiful environment, beautiful people – we just
need to enhance the infrastructure and tap people who are willing to
serve, because it is basically a service oriented industry,”
the president of the prestigious Cornell Club of the Philippines says.
What drives him now, he reveals, is the desire to give back.
“My father always said we owe everything to Leyte in the
sense that it is part of our heritage. My father’s political
career spawned opportunities that allowed us to have the best education
possible, which in turn helped us in our own respective business
careers. Right now, it is a matter of giving back, and that’s
what we’re prepared and eager to do.”
While the past has a tendency to hamper plans for the future,
especially in the realm of politics, it’s one that does not
really discourage Martin. “Everything has been politicized
almost to the point of things becoming ridiculous, conveniently used as
an excuse for the shortcomings of the present. That’s what
weighs this country down. Let’s build on the good things from
the past, and not just discard everything wholesale just because it was
done by someone else,” he says.
At the end of the day, what really matters is to work and produce
results that would benefit everybody, particularly his constituents in
Leyte. “I’d like to make a positive difference,
because if not, then I don’t think I’d even get
into politics because this is not exactly the easiest world to get
into. I have spent a greater part of my professional life in the
private sector. And armed with some experience in the business world,
so to speak I would like to see how I could bring that with me to the
public sector, and share whatever experience or knowledge I can and
give back to the province.”
“I’m a product of my environment, and so I grew up
as a very secure person in that sense. I don’t care if people
take credit (for something) whether it’s due them or not, so
long as under my watch, I did a good job.” Martin concludes.
Work Experience