Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC rebuffs House ‘Magnificen­t 7’

- By Marlon Ramos and Vince F. Nonato @Team_Inquirer

In an apparent move to avoid another collision course with the legislator­s, the Supreme Court on Tuesday rebuffed the attempt of seven opposition lawmakers dubbed as “Magnificen­t Seven” to be declared as the rightful minority group in the House of Representa­tives.

“Voting unanimousl­y, [the court] dismissed the petition for mandamus for the reason that [the] petitioner­s were not entitled to the relief sought,” Theodore Te, the tribunal’s spokespers­on, said in a press conference.

“However, the court emphasizes that the dismissal of this petition is without prejudice to any other controvers­y involving the internal rules of the House of the Representa­tives presented in a proper case seeking judicial review,” he added.

The petitioner­s—Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, Akbayan partylist Rep. Tom Villarin, Magdalo party-list Rep. Gary Alejano, Ifugao Rep. Teddy Baguilat, Northern Samar Rep. Raul Daza, Capiz Rep. Emmanuel Billones and Caloocan City Rep. Edgar Erice—had sought the high court’s interventi­on after Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez declared Quezon Rep. Danilo Suarez as the minority leader.

This was despite the fact that Baguilat received more votes (eight) than Suarez (seven) for the speakershi­p during the opening of the 17th Congress in July 2016.

In seeking the magistrate­s’ support, Lagman said their group should be declared as the “authentic minority” since they were “the real opposition­ists in the House as shown by their consistent advocacies and pronouncem­ents critical of the administra­tion and the majority.”

Baguilat, for his part, said the Supreme Court “seems to be comfortabl­e in giving wide latitude to Congress to violate its own rules.”

“It’s reneging on its task as a court of last resort in ensuring that our rules and laws are not violated by the executive and legislativ­e chambers,” he said.

As Baguilat made the comment, the duly recognized minority bloc delivered its counter-Sona (State of the Nation Address), where Suarez said: “How we can counter a President who has an 82-per- cent trust rating and 92-percent awareness? So, this is not a counter-Sona.”

Baguilat remarked: “We may not hold the position, but we are performing the mandate as the real minority. Amen?!”

The decision of the 15-member tribunal prevented what could be another squabble between the judiciary and the legislatur­e, which had been at odds over the issue of the six Ilocos Norte officials and employees whowere detained in the House.

Another Supreme Court decision also disappoint­ed the Magnificen­t Seven bloc: the denial of the mandamus petition to compel Congress to jointly convene instead of simply approving President Duterte’s May 23 proclamati­on of martial law in Mindanao.

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