Panay News

Pirma claims 2.5M signatures collected; senators warn of ‘No-el’

‘Poorest of poor’ shrinking among gov’t’s college assistance grantees

- ( Jerome An i n g , Marlon Ramos © Philippine Daily Inquirer)

MANILA Fewer and fewer students classified among “the poorest of the poor” are receiving tertiaryle­vel education assistance f rom the government, with the number of such beneficiar­ies sharply dropping by more than 130,000 from 2018 to 2022, a periodic education monitoring report has shown.

The Second Congressio­nal Commission on Education ( Edcom II) published its report titled “Miseducati­on: The Failed System of Philippine Education ,” which it submitted to both chambers of Congress on Monday and Tuesday.

The 398- page report MANILA — Proponents of a people’s initiative seeking to amend the 1987 Constituti­on said they had gathered 30 percent, or about 2.5 million of their target of over 8 million signatures, as senators warned that the petition might lead to “no elections” (No-el) being held in 2025 and 2028.

At a news forum on Wednesday, People’s Initiative for Reform, Modernizat­ion and Action (Pirma) national convener Noel Oñate said his group expected to finish collecting signatures by March or April to complete its campaign for Charter change (Cha-cha).

“Based on what’ s happening now, it seems we will achieve the 12 percent and might even exceed it [because] on the average, we are collecting 15 percent [per district],” Oñate said at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay forum.

The Constituti­on requires initiative­s to amend it to be supported by a petition signed by 12 percent of all registered voters nationwide, with the support of at least 3 percent of the electorate from each legislativ­e district.

A people’s initiative is one of three ways to introduce changes to the Charter; the other two are through a three- fourths vote by all members of Congress and via a constituti­onal convention, whose members are elected.

‘No-el’ specter

But Senate leaders raised t he specter of a “No- el” scenario as a likely consequenc­e of a successful people’s initiative, as it might pave the way for amendments to the political provisions of the Constituti­on, such as the lifting of term limits for incumbent officials.

Senate Majority Leader Joel Villanueva said those behind the signature drive had been promising mayors and other local elected officials that their terms would be extended in

exchange for their support.

“Mayors and even some governors admitted that to some of my colleagues,” Villanueva told the Inquirer.

In a manifesto unanimousl­y signed by the senators on Tuesday, the Senate warned that the lifting of term limits and other political provisions might be included in “this singular and seemingly innocuous change in the Constituti­on.”

“[It] will open the floodgates to a wave of amendments and revisions that will erode the nation as we know i t ,” the senators said.

“With this change, the Senate is left powerless to stop even the most radical proposals: We cannot protect our lands from foreign ownership (and) … stop the removal of term limits, or a ‘no election scenario,’ in 2025, or worse, in 2028,” they warned.

‘We have momentum’

But Pirma’s leaders said there was no stopping the campaign with momentum on their side.

“We will file [ the initiative petition] as soon as we reached the minimum threshold that the law requires of us,” Pirma legal counsel Evaristo Gana told the same forum.

Asked how soon Pirma will be able to get the required number of signatures, Oñate replied: “I think within the next two to three months.”

This, he said, was based on the initial results of the campaign, which started on Jan. 2.

“It’s been three weeks and based on that momentum, we will be finished in a maximum of three months,” Oñate said, noting that only 70 out of the 254 legislativ­e districts had yet to reach the 3-percent threshold.

Oñate lashed back at critics who alleged that the Pirma drive was not a true people’s initiative but a “politician­s’ initiative.”

He admitted, however, that it was true that his group’s volunteers had coordinate­d with House members to get voter statistics in their respective districts.

Gana, for his part, said those claiming bribery was used to induce voters to sign the petition should just file the appropriat­e charges.

Asked about calls to halt the initiative considerin­g parallel moves in Congress, Gana replied: “That is another alternativ­e. We cannot stop. We have the momentum [and] we’re gaining ground — it’s the people’s voice.”

Ministeria­l duty

Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair George Garcia, also a guest at the forum, said the poll body would continue with its “ministeria­l duty” of receiving the signature forms as part of “due process” and in compliance with guidelines on such initiative­s issued in 2020.

He said those questionin­g the process could go to the Supreme Court and challenge the guidelines set in Comelec Resolution No. 10650.

Once the Comelec formally receives the initiative petition and finds it sufficient in form and substance, the signatures will be verified by its local offices, he said.

If the petition is filed in April, the process in the Comelec — from the determinat­ion of sufficienc­y in form and substance to the verificati­on of signatures—may be finished in five months, Garcia said. Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara said the Senate-led Cha-cha effort, through the filing of Resolution of Both Houses No. 6, would have to be “sidelined” as the people’s initiative proponents had refused to stop their activities.

“It’s clear that the people’s i nitiative i s not a genuine ‘ people’s initiative,’” Angara, who was tasked to lead the Senate deliberati­ons on the resolution, told the Inquirer.

Senate l eaders f i l ed the proposed resolution last week to prevent a political crisis between the two chambers and at the prodding of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

 ?? ?? College students at the lobby of Palma Hall at the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman, Quezon City.
College students at the lobby of Palma Hall at the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman, Quezon City.

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