Panay News

Pirma is back: Charter change drive on air, on ground starts

- ( Krixia Subingsubi­ng, Inquirer Research, Dexter Cabalza, Jeanette Andrade © Philippine Daily Inquirer)

MANILA — Television viewers were bombarded on Tuesday night with the repeated airing of a commercial that sought to discredit the Constituti­on and the Edsa People Power Revolution, in a campaign mounted by the same group that tried to revise it through a people’s initiative during the Ramos administra­tion.

The ad, which ran during primetime news programs on various networks, made its debut amid persistent talk that national and local government agencies were being used to gather signatures for procharter change petitions nationwide.

On Wednesday, it came to light that the advertisem­ent had been paid for by the Gana Atienza Avisado law firm on behalf of its client, the People’s Initiative for Reform Modernizat­ion and Action ( Pirma), which was known for an unsuccessf­ul attempt to remove constituti­onal term limits on elected officials, including the President and the Vice President, in 1997.

Harping on the theme “Edsa-pwera” (a play on the vernacular “etsapuwera,” or excluded), the ad claimed that the Constituti­on had failed to deliver on its promises to improve education and agricultur­e, saying any gain made was felt only by big businesses and monopolies.

“It’s time to take action,” it said. “It’s time to rectify the defective 1987 Constituti­on. Gawing ‘saligang patas’ ang Saligang Batas. [Make it a fair Constituti­on)\].”

The commercial, which ran for nearly a minute, had actors representi­ng various sectors in a “frozen” state — in the classroom, in the market and in the offices — an apparent metaphor for their slow progress. In one scene, a barrier gate comes down with the sign “Global i nvestors not allowed,” alluding to constituti­onal limits on foreign ownership in real estate and other key industries.

Later, t he voiceover laments: “Land ownership for foreign investors, Edsa

The closing frame showed a group of people holding placards that read: “Agricultur­al reform,” “No to business monopolies,” “Better schools, better education,” and “Welcome global investors.”

Product of long process

Speaking to the Inquirer, the law firm’s senior partner, Alex Avisado, said the airing of the commercial was “not a sudden thing, but a product of a long process.”

“This ( ad) was one of the outputs from our consultati­ons, to bring to the public the current discussion­s to amend t he Constituti­on through a people’s initiative,” he said.

“What you saw in the ads, those are just among the topics that we aim to discuss: employment, poverty, education,” he said, adding that Pirma had not yet crafted any proposed amendments to the Constituti­on.

Avisado did not give a direct answer when asked whether Pirma was also behind the signature campaigns pushing for a people’s initiative across the nation.

Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos denied his agency had any hand in the charter change petition.

“As far as the DI LG [Department of the Interior and Local Government] is concerned, our personnel and officials are prohibited from initiating such signature campaigns. We could probably only see and monitor this because this is a valid exercise of each individual’s right,” he said.

During the Du te rte administra­tion, t he DILG spearheade­d a petition calling for the lifting of the “restrictiv­e

economic provisions” in the Constituti­on.

Founded by former National Security Adviser Jose Almonte, Pirma was formed in a bid to change the Constituti­on through a people’s initiative — essentiall­y a petition signed by 12 percent of the country’s total registered voters.

This is one of three ways to make amendments to the Constituti­on. The other two are via constituen­t assembly, which is composed of lawmakers, and via constituti­onal convention, whose members are elected.

During the presidency of the late Fidel V. Ramos, Pirma proposed a shift to a parliament­ary system of government and the lifting of term limits on elected officials.

The campaign drew outrage with the political opposition accusing Ramos of being behind it, but he denied this. Later, the Supreme Court unanimousl­y shot down Pirma’s initiative, with eight justices saying there was no enabling law for it, and six others ruling that the petition was defective.

Failed attempts

Succeeding administra­tions also saw several failed charter change attempts.

Former President Joseph Estrada pushed for what he called Concord, or Constituti­onal Correction for Developmen­t, which he said was intended to allow foreigners to own land, public utilities, and media outfits. But this met with strong opposition from the Catholic Church and other sectors, forcing him to shelve the proposal in January 2000.

During the term of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, another initiative called “Sigaw ng Bayan (people’s call)” was launched, but the Supreme Court rejected it in October 2006, citing its failure to comply with the basic requiremen­t that the “initiative must be directly proposed by the people.”

The late former President Benigno Aquino III, son of the late former President Corazon Aquino, under whose government the present Constituti­on was formed after the peaceful uprising that toppled Ferdinand Marcos’ regime in 1986, was firmly against charter change.

In December 2016, former President Rodrigo Duterte signed Executive Order No. 10 creating a consultati­ve committee t o rev i ew t he provisions of the Constituti­on. But this move did not prosper.

After he won t he 2022 elections, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., son and namesake of the late dictator, said charter change was not his priority. But in December, he said the government had begun to consider amending the Constituti­on’s economic provisions to attract more foreign investors.

In the Inquirer interview, Avisado said Pirma’s f i rst campaign had failed because the Supreme Court had ruled that only amendments, and not revisions, could be made through a people’s initiative.

Tantamount to bribery

“We give credit to the people behind Edsa and what Edsa stands for and we would never diminish the contributi­ons of Edsa,” he said, adding: “That was just a creative way to attract the attention of the people (to provoke) public discussion.”

But human rights lawyer and former Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares was not amused by the commercial, saying he wondered “if the funds for the ‘Edsa Pwera’ ads come from public funds.”

 ?? ?? Unlike earlier charter change campaigns, the ad that debuted on Tuesday night Jan. 9, 2024, heaped the blame on the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.
Unlike earlier charter change campaigns, the ad that debuted on Tuesday night Jan. 9, 2024, heaped the blame on the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution.

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