Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘PRESIDENT’S REQUEST FOR TRANSITION­AL LEADER COMPLICATE­D’

- By Marlon Ramos and Julie M. Aurelio @Team_Inquirer —WITH REPORTSFRO­MDJ YAPANDAP

President Duterte’s request to be replaced by a transition­al leader before the change to federalism in 2022 may be complicate­d, the head of the consultati­ve committee tasked with proposing amendments to the 1987 Constituti­on said on Tuesday.

“Declaring that he (Mr. Duterte) is not allowed to run in 2022 is easy. But there are complicati­ons if you call ... elections after a new Constituti­on has been ratified,” former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee, told reporters.

“That’s his ( Mr. Duterte’s) special request. Hewill be barred from running because that’s what he wants,” Puno said.

Division of powers

For one, he said, the authority of the incumbent President may overlap with that of the elected leader of the transition­al government.

“That could be difficult. What’s their division of powers? That’s why we have to discuss it,” Puno said.

Puno, one of the principal figures behind the moves for a shift to federalism, presided over a special plenary session of the 22-member consultati­ve committee a day after the body sub- mitted a draft federal Charter to Mr. Duterte in Malacañang.

Following up on his oft-expressed desire to step down before his term ends in 2022, Mr. Duterte requested a provision that would bar him from running for a fresh term in the federal government and that would authorize the election of a transition­al leader.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said on Tuesday that Puno’s committee agreed to rewrite the draft to put in the provision.

Old and tired

“[T]he President is thinking of general elections for our transition leader. The new government under the new Constituti­on will take effect on June 30, 2022, and, if this is ratified, the President said he would step down in 2019,” Roque told reporters in Indang, Cavite province.

There has been speculatio­n that the proposed federal Constituti­on is designed to allow the 73-year-old Mr. Duterte, who has faced growing criticism over his bloody war on drugs and human rights record, to cling to power beyond the end of his six-year term in 2022.

Roque told reporters on Monday that Mr. Duterte had told his Cabinet that he no longer wanted to serve in the transition­al government, that he was “tired,” and that the tem- porary leader should be “someone younger.”

He said Mr. Duterte decided to step down as early as next year to defuse speculatio­n that he wanted to stay in power.

On Tuesday, Roque said cutting the term of Mr. Duterte would be legal.

“It will be constituti­onal, because it will be pursuant to the transitory provisions of the Constituti­on which the people may ratify,” Roque said.

“In other words, the new Constituti­on, if it will be ratified by the people, will be the instrument that will cut short the term of the President,” he said.

Any citizen who is qualified to run for President can run for the position of transition­al leader, he added.

“But let’s wait for the consultati­ve committee’s declaratio­n. They will redraft it to pro- vide for the specific provision that the President wants for the transitory provisions,” he said.

How about Robredo?

Asked if Vice President Leni Robredo could take Mr. Duterte’s post instead of electing a transition­al leader, Puno raised doubt about it.

“Maybe. But you should ask her if she supports federalism,” Puno said.

“They are against federalism,” he said, referring to the political opposition. “How can she be the transition head if she does not support federalism? But maybe she will change her mind now that President Duterte said he will not run.”

Puno expressed confidence that Mr. Duterte’s instructio­n would finally quell speculatio­n that the proposed shift to federalism was really geared toward extending his term beyond 2022.

‘That is a trap’

But Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV said Filipinos should not allow themselves to be fooled by Mr. Duterte’s remarks about cutting his term.

“That is a trap,” Trillanes, an unrelentin­g critic of Mr. Duterte, said in a statement on Tuesday.

“[Look at it] like his promise to resign if he failed to deliver on his promise to rid the country of corruption, crime and illegal drugs in three to six months,” Trillanes said.

He said Mr. Duterte only wanted to bait the Senate into supporting the revision of the Constituti­on for a shift to federalism.

“If he really wants to resign because he is tired, he should just do it without any drama or conditions,” he said.

 ?? —MALACAÑANG­PHOTO ?? DRAFT FEDERAL CHARTER President Duterte receives a copy of the draft federal Charter from former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee that proposed a replacemen­t for the 1987 Constituti­on, in Malacañang on Monday.
—MALACAÑANG­PHOTO DRAFT FEDERAL CHARTER President Duterte receives a copy of the draft federal Charter from former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee that proposed a replacemen­t for the 1987 Constituti­on, in Malacañang on Monday.

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