The Manila Times

Drop attempts to bastardize the Constituti­on

- TITA C. VALDERAMA

AFTER saying a year ago that it is possible to attract foreign investment­s without changing the 1987 Constituti­on, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s change of mind to push for amending some of its economic provisions is contributi­ng to the current political divide.

The Philippine Constituti­on turned 37 years old last Friday, February 2, but instead of commemorat­ing its ratificati­on in 1987, the country’s top leaders have been relentless in pressing for its amendment to the point of bastardizi­ng the country’s fundamenta­l law.

More important and pressing than amending the Constituti­on, Congress should pass an enabling law to implement Article II Section 26, or the antidynast­y provision, and revive the provision in the 1935 Constituti­on that prohibits switching of political party affiliatio­n.

The 1987 Constituti­on of the Philippine­s states in Article II Section 26: “The State shall guarantee equal access to opportunit­ies for public service, and prohibit political dynasties as may be defined by law.”

However, given the current compositio­n of Congress, which is dominated by political families, it would be impossible for an anti-dynasty measure to take shape.

It has been estimated that 70 to 80 percent of Congress members and more than 50 percent of all elected local government officials are from political families or have ties to legislator­s affiliated with as many as three prior congresses.

The Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies has said that putting limits on political dynasties would “regulate self-serving and opportunis­tic behavior and promote effective and accountabl­e governance.”

Studies have establishe­d a link between poverty and the existence of political dynasties. The studies show that the prevalence of political dynasties, particular­ly in provinces outside Luzon where accountabi­lity is weak and investment­s are low, leads to deeper poverty and underdevel­opment.

Before they decided to push for Charter change (Cha-cha), Marcos and Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri contended that recently enacted laws already ease foreign participat­ion in certain industries.

Among those laws are the amendments to the Retail Trade

Liberaliza­tion Act, the Foreign Investment­s Act and the Public Service Act. When these measures were pending, the administra­tion said these were intended to attract more investment­s, generate employment, introduce innovation, lower prices, and improve the quality of goods and services.

The Senate’s version of Resolution of Both Houses 6 looks more acceptable than any of the several versions passed by the House of Representa­tives. Zubiri’s proposal simply adds the phrase “as may be provided by law” in three provisions of the 1987 Constituti­on: Section 11 of Article XII or the National Patrimony and Economy; Paragraph 2, Section 4 of Article XIV or the Education, Science and Technology, Arts, Culture and Sports; and Paragraph 2, Section 11 of Article

XVI or the General Provisions.

RBH 6, which is scheduled for a public hearing this week, does not directly amend the Constituti­on but allows Congress to enact measures to address restrictio­ns on foreign ownership in public utilities, educationa­l institutio­ns, and the advertisin­g industry.

RBH 6 came about purportedl­y to “avert a constituti­onal crisis” as allies of House Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez have been actively soliciting signatures for a petition for a people’s initiative that would potentiall­y exclude the Senate in amending the Constituti­on.

With the House’s attempts at calling a constituen­t assembly and constituti­onal convention for Chacha already on the back burner, Romualdez and his allies quickly said they were setting aside the people’s initiative and supporting Zubiri’s RBH 6. Some have dared the Senate to approve it, and the House will readily concur.

They wanted the Senate Committee on Constituti­onal Amendments and Revision of Codes chaired by the President’s sister, Sen. Imee Marcos, to stop its investigat­ion of the alleged bribery in the gathering of signatures for a people’s initiative because their deceptive machinatio­ns are coming out, with testimonie­s on how they were offered money and promised other benefits in exchange for their signature on the petition.

Why they are obviously desperate to open the 1987 Constituti­on to amendments is concerning. Are they really for amendments to the economic provisions only? Can they really set aside their ulterior motives of introducin­g political amendments to tinker with the term limits and perpetuate themselves in power?

Cha-cha advocates have not sufficient­ly explained how the proposed amendments to bring in more foreign capital would be advantageo­us to local industries, the farmers and, ultimately, the Filipino consumers. What’s in it for the ordinary Filipinos who are struggling with rising prices?

Before tinkering with the Constituti­on, legislator­s should prioritize reforms to promote honesty and integrity in the public service and take positive and effective measures against corruption. These reforms are vital tools to promote good governance by actually applying measures to promote more accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, participat­ion and predictabi­lity.

The IBON Foundation research group recently said the proposed amendments “will only bring more of the same foreign investment liberaliza­tion that has stranded the country’s developmen­t for decades and left millions of Filipinos struggling amid a jobs crisis.”

IBON said that the foreign investment the government hopes to attract with the proposed amendments “will only benefit local oligarchs and foreign corporatio­ns,” noting that foreign direct investment­s “contribute to domestic developmen­t only when strictly regulated and best in the context of a national industrial­ization policy — as done historical­ly and currently by the world’s biggest industrial powers.”

Indeed, relaxing the restrictio­ns in the economic provisions of the Constituti­on is not the end-all and be-all of attracting foreign investment­s into the country.

As IBON Executive Director Sonny Africa said: “With decent politician­s and good economics, Charter change won’t be needed. But with indecent politician­s and bad economics, no amount of Charter change will ever be enough.”

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