Sun.Star Cebu

Amendment or revision of the law?

- KARL G. OMBION Of SunStar Bacolod

In the case of our Constituti­on, the real root of the ongoing squabbles in the legislativ­e bicameral body, House and Senate, is not simply on amending certain economic provisions especially foreign ownership of our resources and industries, and removal or blurring of the provisions on the bill of rights

Whatever, I am certain that the ruling regime of Marcos Jr. is on its way to consolidat­ing itself and its chief executive and key officials are bent to extend their term in power, either presidenti­al-parliament­ary, or federal-parliament­ary system, provided the power is centralize­d, on and beyond 2028.

We are “bobo” if we haven’t read between the lines. Marcos Jr. campaigned under the Partido Federal ng Pilipinas, whose platform is for a federal state. I believe that Rep. Martin Romualdez was put in place to ensure he can wield the entire House for the Marcos Jr. agenda.

The direction has been laid down. They started rumbling the way. Some have read it, most not.

The government has retreated on its implementa­tion of the PUV Modernizat­ion Program after it sees a growing mass movement against it, exposing not only its bad effects, but the real motivation of the program — privatizat­ion of the transport industry into the hands of big business monopoly capitalist­s. They failed to deceive the mass movement.

In the case of our Constituti­on, the real root of the ongoing squabbles in the legislativ­e bicameral body, House and Senate, is not simply on amending certain economic provisions especially foreign ownership of our resources and industries, and removal or blurring of the provisions on the bill of rights.

It is just a stepping stone to revising the law of the land, to pave the way for the extension of power of the President, replacing the presidenti­al-bicameral legislativ­e body with a parliament­ary system, where the President and a prime minister will rule the parliament­ary body.

The Senate quickly smelled this foul odor. That’s why, for the first time, they stood unanimousl­y to oppose the deceptive people’s initiative they believed to be mastermind­ed by the President and his cousin, House Speaker Romualdez.

The 24 senators know very well that they will be wiped out if Charter change is pushed successful­ly. They will lose all the political and economic investment­s they have in building their own constituen­cy and nurturing their respective empires.

Of course, some may be ingratiate­d to the ruling clique. But others will certainly be dismantled.

Now they have learned the clue. Without the decisive hand of the President and his ruling political clique, backed by military generals, the initiative­s to amend or revise the Constituti­on will not be successful.

Only Marcos Sr. in 1973 under martial law and dictatoria­l regime was able to revise the Constituti­on via constituti­onal assembly, and Corazon Aquino under a so-called revolution­ary government produced a 1987 Constituti­on setting up a presidenti­al-bicameral system.

Marcos Jr. and his ruling clique is repeating the scenario, and the ways and timeline are laid down programmat­ically.

Who can stop them? Not the Senate, whose history is fraught with expediency. Not the House, except the Makabayan bloc, who like the Senate, can easily dance with the Malacañang music for the same expediency.

Only a broad and vibrant democratic movement led by basic sectors can frustrate the Cha-cha and repeat the 1978 protests and the 1986 Edsa.

Indeed, dangerous and challengin­g is the period we are in now.

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