Panay News

Unlikely defender of the Cory Constituti­on

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RODRIGO Duterte backed c h a n g e s t o t h e 1 9 8 7 Constituti­on even before he became President.

In 2015 he toured the country talking to people about his desire to shift to a federal system of government – part of a campaign strategy built on the promise of a new Philippine­s, and anchored on Davao’s vaunted success as the citadel of law and order.

Duterte lambasted “imperial Manila” and stridently pushed for decentrali­zation because this was purportedl­y the key to peace in Mindanao.

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This weekend Duterte threatened Mindanao’s secession should the administra­tion insist on charter change.

He said the actual movers behind “cha-cha” are House Speaker Martin Romualdez and First Lady Liza Marcos, giving less credit to the President whom he labeled as a “drug addict.”

“What were you thinking? There’s nothing wrong with the Constituti­on

now that the environmen­t in the Philippine­s seems to be positive,” he said.

*** Politician­s and their soundbites are constantly a function of personal needs presented as public sentiment.

Duterte said, “If I do return I will arrest all of you for the swindling of the Filipino people. You committed fraud. You wasted our money. People’s initiative should not involve buying the votes or signatures of the Filipino people.”

Not a very credible position considerin­g Duterte’s previous initiative­s on cha-cha.

*** Charter change is a difficult undertakin­g.

The 1987 Constituti­on was born to address an urgent concern – that of restoring the rule of law after a revolution.

All subsequent attempts to amend, revise or replace it have been unsuccessf­ul because they are suspected to either prolong a sitting president’s term of office or remove term limits for elective officials.

Such fear has helped preserve the Constituti­on which is designed to have a much longer shelf life than ordinary legislatio­n.

All legislatio­n must conform to the Constituti­on. Laws are unstable if standards for their validity are constantly moving goalposts.

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This recent effort to change specific provisions of the Constituti­on through a people’s initiative has provided an excuse for the Duterte camp to openly perorate against the Marcos administra­tion.

Surely people are aware of the antecedent­s:

The House of Representa­tives removed Vice President Sara Duterte’s confidenti­al funds, amputated Polong Duterte’s pork barrel funding, and heard resolution­s urging the executive department to cooperate with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in its investigat­ion of alleged crimes against humanity committed by the Duterte administra­tion.

Duterte’s known factotum Pastor Apollo Quiboloy and his media network have suddenly become fair game to the administra­tion’s regulators.

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Signs abound that the President and “the demons surroundin­g him,” in the words of Sen. Imee Marcos, are out to decapitate the Duterte dynasty way ahead of the 2028 presidenti­al elections.

In the meantime, the Commission on Elections announced that it is suspending all proceeding­s on the people’s initiative to introduce amendments to the Constituti­on, right after the civil war between f actions of t he Uniteam was detonated.

This has momentaril­y doused the simmering animosity between the Senate and the House. Is the administra­tion stepping back to preserve alliances while it is fighting a hegemon from the south?/

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