The Freeman

Motives of Cha-cha proponents questioned

- Chi/Philstar.com

MANILA --- Minority lawmakers have raised concerns about the true intentions of those behind the campaign to change the 1987 Constituti­on, questionin­g both the timing and legitimacy of the push to liberalize economic provisions of the Charter that were crafted precisely to protect the nation’s interests.

Sen. Risa Hontiveros has flagged the reported “People’s Initiative” being carried out across several provinces — which have been marred by allegation­s of vote-buying — and raised doubts over the origins of the signature drive.

Meanwhile, House Deputy Minority Leader Rep. France Castro (ACT Teachers) has questioned the need for Charter change at all and warned that the proposed economic tweaks could serve as a pretext for political amendments.

“It’s not right to call the petition a ‘People’s Initiative’ because this did not come from the people themselves,” Hontiveros said in Filipino.

“This well-funded, well-oiled campaign is not about the people - it is all about greed and the desire to act with zero accountabi­lity to the nation,” Hontiveros added.

The senator also criticized the actual demand of the People’s Initiative campaign, which is for both chambers of Congress to “vote jointly” during a Constituen­t Assembly, which would give the House an upper hand in the voting process as they outnumber the 24-member Senate.

Hontiveros stressed that the sole intention of those behind the signature drive is to sideline the upper chamber.

“Let us be clear: the reported ‘people’s initiative’ is not about any economic or political reforms in the Constituti­on. The form that is supposedly circulatin­g did not mention anything about it,” the senator added.

Hontiveros has also called on Filipinos to keep each other informed and to avoid being “deceived.”

“We will not allow their planned deceit and disrespect for our Constituti­on to be an easy, one-sided battle. We will confront their schemes with a strong fight,” Hontiveros said.

Similarly, Castro has criticized both chambers’ push to amend the Charter and stressed that relaxing the restrictio­ns on foreign ownership in the country is not necessary to revive the economy.

Citing data from economic think tank IBON Foundation, Castro said that the increasing inflow of foreign direct investment­s (FDI) since 1970 has not resulted in significan­t economic developmen­t.

“The Philippine­s actually has more foreign investment today than South Korea, Taiwan or China did in their respective periods of economic take-off – pretty much confirming that large amounts of foreign investment is neither necessary nor sufficient for developmen­t,” Castro said.

Attracting more foreign investment­s “may help, but as history demonstrat­ed, it cannot be relied upon,” Castro said. -

Cristina

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