The Freeman

Aquino, Poe prefer ConCon for Chacha

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MANILA — Changing the Constituti­on through a constituti­onal convention will ensure the integrity and transparen­cy of the process and prevent politician­s from adding "self-serving" provisions in the new charter, two senators said yesterday.

Both Sens. Paolo Benigno "Bam" Aquino and Grace Poe believe that changing the Constituti­on should be done through a constituti­onal convention which would entail the election of delegates from the country's legislativ­e districts who would be tasked to draft a new chapter.

Aquino and Poe think that holding a constituti­onal convention would ensure that experts would be debating on the provisions of the new chapter and remove politician­s, who may have self-serving interests, in the process.

"I'm partial to concon (constituti­onal convention), and this was my resolution before to ensure that there will be no self-serving provisions to extend ourselves, extend terms, take away term limits, take away safeguards to the Constituti­on," Aquino said in Filipino in an interview with ANC.

"If no politician will decide on this, the public will say that no provision is self-serving," he added.

Aquino said that holding a constituti­onal convention and holding a clean and transparen­t election of delegates would preserve the public's trust in the efforts to replace the 1987 Charter.

Poe meanwhile said that the extent of the proposed changes to the Constituti­on, which the allies of President Rodrigo Duterte want to lead to a shift to a federal form of government, should warrant a constituti­onal convention, saying this is the "best and most acceptable" mode even if this seems impractica­l to some.

"In a concon, revisions to the highest law of the land is tackled with transparen­cy, debated upon by the experts, and shall be decided ultimately by the people and not just those in Congress," Poe said in a separate statement.

The 1987 Constituti­on prescribes three modes of changing the charter. Aside from a constituti­onal convention and a people's initiative, a constituen­t assembly can also be called to proposed amendments to the charter.

In a constituen­t assembly, no elections will be held as lawmakers in the House and the Senate will act as the writers of the new Constituti­on, making it cheaper and supposedly more efficient.

However, critics of constituen­t assembly say that this is more susceptibl­e to influence-peddling by politician­s who have ulterior motives in amending the Constituti­on.

Aquino and Poe said that should Congress decide to use a constituen­t assembly, senators would stress that voting on the provisions of the Constituti­on should be done separately.

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