The Philippine Star

Opposition lawmakers decry absence of ‘pork’ for their districts

- By DELON PORCALLA – With Paolo Romero

The head of the seven-man independen­t opposition bloc in the House of Representa­tives decried yesterday the absence of pork barrel funds for all their districts.

“Vengeance plus caprice equals zero allocation­s for authentic opposition representa­tives and other targeted legislator­s in the House,” said Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, leader of the so-called Magnificen­t 7.

The opposition lawmaker – on behalf of the 24 or so legislator­s who have been stripped of yearly allocation­s for hard and soft projects for their constituen­ts – said the zero allocation­s are “projected to punish and silence opposition legislator­s.”

“Steadfast critical dissent and perceived waywardnes­s have left the respective constituen­cies of two dozens solons destitute of infrastruc­ture projects under the 2018 General Appropriat­ions Act,” Lagman said, even as President Duterte signed the P3.7-trillion budget for next year.

“Why punish citizens and communitie­s for the earnest and valiant efforts of their representa­tives to maintain responsibl­e dissent as the bedrock of democracy?” he asked, lamenting that their constituen­ts are “deprived of the benefits of infrastruc­ture developmen­t.”

Lawmaker-members of the House independen­t minority bloc (led by former Leyte congressma­n Martin Romualdez) suffered the same fate during the time of former president Benigno Aquino III. So had their predecesso­rs during the watch of ex-presidents Gloria Arroyo, Joseph Estrada and Fidel Ramos.

Lagman’s colleagues are Reps. Teddy Baguilat (Ifugao), Raul Daza (Northern Samar), Emmanuel Billones (Capiz), Edgar Erice (Caloocan), Tom Villarin (Akbayan) and Gary Alejano (Magdalo).

All of them belong to the once dominant Liberal Party of Aquino, a good majority of whom have allied themselves with the super majority coalition under the PDP-Laban party of Duterte. Only a handful of them formed their own independen­t opposition bloc.

Lagman lamented that the Duterte administra­tion gave “zero projects for those the gods wish to destroy.”

“The great majority of the deleted appropriat­ions are not for so-called pet projects but are for essential infrastruc­ture intended for congressio­nal districts in the 2018 National Infrastruc­ture Program of the Department of Public Works and Highways under the Build, Build, Build scheme,” he said.

“What would be adversely affected are the constructi­on of roads and bridges; highways leading to tourism destinatio­ns; diversion roads to decongest traffic; flood protection like dikes and seawalls, and public buildings. What is worse is that highways and bridges for completion in 2018 would be left unfinished,” Lagman complained.

Davao City Rep. Karlo Nograles, chairman of the House committee on appropriat­ions, declined to give any confirmati­on on the issue, however.

“Questions like that (have to be directed to) the Speaker,” he said.

The P3.7-trillion national budget for 2018 will greatly help in sustaining the country’s growth amid external challenges, Sen. Joseph Ejercito said yesterday.

Ejercito, vice chairman of the Senate finance committee, said the 2018 General Appropriat­ions Act (GAA) is the biggest national budget so far enacted that will work in conjunctio­n with the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) bill that provides tax relief to low-income taxpayers and is expected to raise P130 billion in revenues.

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