Panay News

Gripes vs the Senate

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THE CONSTITUTI­ON may be amended through a proposal made directly by the people in accordance with Article 17, Section 2.

If the proponents of charter change want to change only one provision by clarifying that the deciding vote in a constituen­t assembly is three-fourths of all the members of Congress “voting jointly,” does that qualify as an amendment that may be directly proposed by the people?

Voting jointly–surely, intercalat­ing these two words can be nothing more than an amendment?

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A revision, on the other hand, may be proposed only by two bodies – a constituti­onal convention, or the House of Representa­tives and the Senate acting as a constituen­t assembly.

This is clear from both language and intent of the Constituti­on.

A revision may not be done through people’s initiative.

What is a revision therefore as distinguis­hed from a mere amendment?

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The Supreme Court distinguis­hes them simply: generally, a revision affects several provisions of the constituti­on while an amendment affects only the particular provision being amended.

There are other indicia. Revision implies a change that alters a basic principle in the constituti­on such as separation of powers or the system of checks and balances.

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Changing the voting i n the c onstituent assembly, f rom bicameral (Senate and House voting separately) to unicameral (Senate and House voting jointly), is said to be a fundamenta­l alteration because it shakes the balance of power between the two houses, and is massively discrimina­tory against the Senate.

It therefore entails a revision not just an amendment even though the proposal would introduce only a couple of words into the current text of the Constituti­on.

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This was anticipate­d in Justice Antonio Carpio’s ponencia written 18 years ago during the reign of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

According to Justice Carpio, a change in a single word or sentence in the constituti­on may still be a revision and not a mere amendment if it radically overhauls the entire structure of government.

For example, changing the word “republican” in Article II, Section 1 to “monarchic” revamps the “fundamenta­l ideologica­l basis” of the constituti­on and is therefore a revision and not a mere amendment.

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Former Chief Justice Reynato Puno had an opposing opinion. He said that when the framers of the 1987 constituti­on used the word “revision,” they had in mind the rewriting or overhaul of the whole constituti­on.

Anything less is just an amendment or a change of specific provisions and may be proposed directly by the people through an initiative.

At least four other justices joined Justice Puno in his dissenting opinion.

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Points against the Senate are being articulate­d.

The so-called conscience of the nation is now peopled with dynasties, reflecting a concentrat­ion of power in a handful of dynastic families.

Aspirants are greeted with other insurmount­able barriers. Nationwide name recall is difficult to attain unless one has media or showbusine­ss savvy – not really the most ideal core of qualificat­ions for the highest council of “wise old men.”

Does the Senate continue to function as an effective check against the House and the other branches of government?/

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