The Philippine Star

House readies draft federalism charter

- By DELON PORCALLA

The House of Representa­tives is likely to transmit to the Senate a draft resolution paving the way for the shift to federalism in February, a key administra­tion lawmaker hinted yesterday.

Southern Leyte Rep. Roger Mercado, chair of the House committee on constituti­onal amendments, bared that only four lawmakers will interpella­te on Concurrent Resolution 09 creating a constituen­t assembly that will draft the federal constituti­on.

“We started it at the plenary last Dec. 13, I think it will end in January. So by February, it can be transmitte­d to the senators for their concurrenc­e,” Mercado said in an interview over radio dzBB.

House leaders led by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez are rushing the draft federal constituti­on so that the plebiscite on it will be incorporat­ed in the barangay and Sanggunian­g Kabataan elections in May.

Mercado said the super majority coalition in the House prefers the constituen­t assembly (con-ass) mode over the costly constituti­onal convention (con-con), which Davao Rep. Karlo Nograles said will cost P7 billion, and people’s initiative (PI).

The House and Senate will resume sessions on Jan. 15 after a month-long break.

Mercado said administra­tion lawmakers are open to House members voting separately from their Senate counterpar­ts like what they did when Congress extended martial law in Mindanao twice.

“I think Speaker and fellow lawmakers are amenable to separate voting. We are willing to vote separately. That is my personal view after I have talked to other members, they don’t have a problem with that,” he added.

But Mercado did not say if the counting of votes will be done separately or jointly.

In the case of martial law extension, the voting from the joint session of the bicameral Congress was done separately but the counting of votes was done jointly.

Mercado said the concurrent resolution will involve only a minor revision and not a total overhaul of the 1987 Constituti­on, as per the declaratio­n of Alvarez in his previous pronouncem­ents.

As far as Camarines Sur Rep. L-Ray Villafuert­e is concerned, it’s now “full steam ahead” for the process to shift to a federal system of government that should include removing the provisions that limit foreign ownership in various sectors of the economy.

“Federalism and foreign investment­s will sustain the economy’s growth momentum and enable the government to put flesh into President Duterte’s vision to disperse growth and developmen­t to the regions,” he added.

For Quezon City Rep. Winston Castelo, term limits and election postponeme­nt are side issues which should not divert the country from the greater objective of system change towards better governance and full national developmen­t.

These are “mere possibilit­ies during the transition period that may or may not be necessary,” he said.

“These are but options that Congress may consider for a smooth transition but they are not a pre-requisite since the shift can still be accomplish­ed during the last three years of the administra­tion without need of term extension or postponeme­nt of the polls,” he added.

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