The Philippine Star

Next Chief Justice by growing clamor

- JARIUS BONDOC

There’s mounting acclamatio­n for Antonio Carpio to be Chief Justice. It’s unpreceden­ted in Supreme Court history. Retired and sitting magistrate­s, statesmen, eminent citizens are urging him to accede. All extol his reputation and skill. Carpio leads five most senior SC justices automatica­lly nominated for the top post. None of the rest – Presbitero Velasco, Teresita Leonardo de Castro, Diosdado Peralta, and Lucas Bersamin – have accepted. They defer to Carpio, the longest tenured. Giving way too, SC outsiders are not applying for the CJ vacancy. The fate of the last two CJs calls for a successor most acceptable to peers in stature and expertise. Leadership of the Judiciary is Carpio’s for first crack.

He is uneager, though, as a matter of principle. He had fought the removal by quo warranto of CJ Maria Lourdes Sereno. Held as inapt for CJ since 2012 for incomplete asset declaratio­ns, the latter could only have been taken out by impeachmen­t. Carpio so stated in dissent to the majority verdict. He is averse to benefiting from what he deems an unjust CJ vacancy.

That puts the Judicial and Bar Council in a tizzy. A month since it opened applicants and nominees for vetting, none have come forward. A short list of CJ possibilit­ies must be submitted to President Rody Duterte. By JBC rule, nominees must consent to inclusion in the list, which must contain at least three names. The Constituti­on gives the President only three months – in this case till September – to fill up any SC vacancy.

Ex-CJ Hilario Davide says Carpio took no part in Sereno’s firing, so is not morally conflicted. Twice in fact did he resist the quo warranto, in first instance and on appeal. Past foreign secretary Bobby Romulo, national security adviser Joe Almonte, among esteemed leaders, echo that point. The Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s, which binds all lawyers, believes Carpio can fix the SC and the Judiciary. The JBC thus is inclined to waive its rule of prior assent, as Davide suggests. To Carpio, Davide pleads: “Personal considerat­ion must now yield to the demands of public interest and of the good of the service. He should not deprive the President the opportunit­y for a wider field of choice for the best for the (SC) in particular, and the Judiciary and the people in general.”

If Carpio relents to the growing clamor and Duterte picks him, he would be CJ till October 2019, on turning 70. From now to then, the country will face big events. A vice presidenti­al protest, mid-term elections, and federal shift are on national agenda. Constituti­onal guidance by the third leg of government can stabilize the two political ones. Beyond those, internal criminalit­y and external aggression threaten the Republic. A seasoned magistrate’s wisdom would be vital for national direction. By no design, Carpio is attracting a constituen­cy of patriots and visionarie­s.

Experience and independen­ce define Carpio. He is presently acting CJ, since Sereno’s dismissal in May. He had twice held the post before, last March when Sereno went on leave, and 2012 when CJ Renato Corona too was ousted for hidden wealth. Twice too Carpio had been bypassed, although the most senior for CJ in 2010 and 2012. The breaks in tradition partly led to today’s SC and national woes.

Carpio was chief legal counsel to President Fidel Ramos, 1992-1998. He undertook major reforms that today give Filipinos more choices in telecoms, sea and air travel. He was President Gloria Arroyo’s first SC appointee in 2001. Born in Davao City, he had taken up Economics at the Ateneo de Manila, and Law at the University of the Philippine­s. He was Law class valedictor­ian and sixth highest in the 1975 bar exams. He cofounded the Carpio Villaraza Cruz Law Firm.

Among Carpio’s notable judicial stands, in ponencia or dissent, concern state shares from mine profits, pork barrels, limits of executive privilege, libel, contempt, people’s initiative in constituti­onal revising, bigamy versus religious exercise, legal personalit­y of local water districts, equal protection in government wages, employment relations, presidenti­al appointing powers, and citizenshi­p issues of presidenti­al candidates Fernando Poe Jr. and Grace Poe in 2004 and 2016.

What Carpio began as a personal research has turned into a global assertion of Philippine maritime and territoria­l rights. In 2010 he dug up ancient maps of China and Asia that debunk Beijing’s “historic” claim to the entire South China Sea. Old Spanish, Japanese, British, and American files on Luzon in turn chart Scarboroug­h Shoal as Philippine territory. After Beijing’s 2012 grab of that seamark, Carpio helped draft Manila’s UN arbitratio­n case. He explained in 70 internatio­nal forums Manila’s entitlemen­ts under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Manila won the arbitratio­n in July 2016. Carpio urges Malacañang to use the victory to regain regional peace along with seven reefs in Manila’s maritime zone that Beijing concreted into island-fortresses. Duterte’s spokesmen avow continuing, if silent, defense of sovereignt­y. Carpio’s passion is needed to bolster national interest and survival.

*** Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/pages/Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website https://beta.philstar.com/columns/134276/gotcha

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