Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cha-cha lacks Senate support

- —STORY BY LEILA B. SALAVERRIA

President Duterte wants lawmakers to expedite the amendment of the Constituti­on to allow a shift to federalism, but there is not enough support for it in the Senate, according to Majority Leader Juan Miguel Zubiri. He says there can be no constituen­t assembly unless the voting on proposed amendments will be separate. Only four senators favor federalism, he says.

There is not yet enough support in the Senate for amending the Constituti­on for a shift to federalism, Senate Majority Leader Juan Miguel Zubiri said on Wednesday.

Zubiri also said the House of Representa­tives alone could not amend the Constituti­on.

Senate President Vicente Sotto III on Thursday received a copy of the draft federal Charter prepared by Malacanang’s consultati­ve committee headed by retired Chief Justice Reynato Puno.

Sotto said President Duterte indicated to lawmakers on Wednesday that he wanted the federalism proposal to be fast-tracked so that he could be replaced by a new President who would head the transition­al government.

He said the Senate was still “fluid” on a constituen­t assembly (Con-ass) that would propose amendments to the 1987 Constituti­on.

The senators will soon begin scrutinizi­ng the draft Charter and meet in a caucus to discuss their next steps, he added.

For there to be a Con-ass, as proposed by the House, the Senate would have to approve a resolution calling for it, Zubiri said.

But some senators prefer a piecemeal approach to amending the Constituti­on, he said.

Getting a three-fourths vote to propose changes to the Constituti­on will also be difficult, Zubiri said.

Only 4 favor federalism

“Right now, I’m sorry to tell the Speaker that we still don’t have the numbers because to amend the Constituti­on, you’ll need a three-fourths vote, which is 18 votes. But the majority is only 17. Who among the opposition would join us?” he said in a talk with reporters on Wednesday evening.

Even among the members of the majority, there are senators not in favor of amending the Constituti­on, Zubiri said.

So far, he said, only four are in favor of a shift to federalism.

“Definitely, we do not have the numbers,” he added.

Moreover, the House must agree to separate voting on the proposed changes for senators to be convinced to support the Con-ass idea, Zubiri said.

The senators oppose joint voting because this would effectivel­y sidetrack the Senate, given that the House has close to 300 members, while the Senate has only 23.

“Even if we would want to pass a resolution convening in- to constituen­t assembly, we can’t do that unless there’s clear parameters that it’s voting separately. There might be a chance I can sell the idea to the majority if the resolution states that the voting would be done separately,” Zubiri said.

If the House would insist on voting on proposed amendments on its own, it is up to it to pursue its agenda and the Senate would pursue its own, he added.

Don’t rush it

Sen. Francis Escudero said approval of the proposed federal Charter should not be rushed to avoid mistakes that could have long-term implicatio­ns.

He pointed out that major laws in the country underwent years of deliberati­on.

“If we do not rush ordinary laws, we should not rush it when we are dealing with amendments to Constituti­on,” Escudero said in a Senate forum on Thursday.

In the House, Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman warned that the transition­al commission proposed by Puno’s committee was a “veritable red flag.”

Lagman said the transition­al commission was a “devious innovation” by the Puno group to make President Duterte the first federal president since he would not be prohibited from running in the first federal elections set for the second Monday of May 2022.

“This transition commission is a veritable red flag that should alert us that this is a cunning innovation that can spawn a host of excesses and even more impunity,” Lagman said in a statement.

Mr. Duterte has asked the Puno committee to write a provision that would bar him from running for a fresh term under the proposed federal government.

He has also requested that the provision be made to authorize elections for the selection of the transition­al leaders that he would not contest.

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 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? DRAFT FEDERAL CHARTER Senate President Vicente Sotto III receives a copy of the draft federal Charter from former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee on constituti­onal amendments.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E DRAFT FEDERAL CHARTER Senate President Vicente Sotto III receives a copy of the draft federal Charter from former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee on constituti­onal amendments.

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