The Philippine Star

GMA hands off on House minority row

- By JESS DIAZ –With Rhodina Villanueva

Speaker Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo appears to be taking a hands-off stance on the squabble for the minority leadership among three groups in the House of Representa­tives.

“Let the parliament­arians (in the House) take care of that,” Arroyo told reporters when asked yesterday what she would do on the minority quarrel.

She said she would like less politickin­g and would want to focus on speeding up legislatio­n and attending to the needs of congressio­nal districts.

“Less politics. I think we can move on,” she said.

Under Arroyo’s leadership, the House passed this week more than 20 bills on third and final reading. On Thursday, the committee on ways and means endorsed the second package of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion law, one of President Duterte’s priority legislativ­e measures.

Arroyo has also offered a way out of the stalemate between the House and the Senate on Charter change by agreeing to separate voting by the two chambers.

In an interview on The Chiefs show on Cignal TV’s One News on Wednesday, Reps. Michael Romero of 1-Pacman and Ron Salo of Kabayan, both assistant minority leaders, said the majority recognized Quezon Rep. Danilo Suarez last Monday as the House minority leader.

“The committee on rules seconded such recognitio­n the next day, Tuesday, during its regular meeting. Such act has become official,” Romero said.

Two other groups – those led by Marikina Reps. Romero Quimbo of the Liberal Party and Eugene Michael de Vera of Arts, Business and Science – are both claiming they are the minority.

The De Vera group includes ousted speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and former minority leader Rodolfo Fariñas.

Quimbo and Fariñas have threatened to challenge before the Supreme Court the new majority’s recognitio­n of Suarez as minority leader.

In a television interview yesterday, De Vera claimed that committee meetings could not take place without the presence of minority representa­tives.

He was apparently unaware that the committee on appropriat­ions has been conducting hearings since Tuesday on the proposed P3.76-trillion national budget for 2019.

Suarez attended the budget hearings and Davao City Rep. Karlo Nograles, appropriat­ions committee chairman, acknowledg­ed him as minority leader.

GMA: No more zero budget for opposition

Arroyo yesterday assured all congressio­nal districts, including those represente­d by opposition lawmakers, that they would be allocated funds in the proposed P3.76-trillion 2019 national budget.

“No, no, no,” she told reporters when asked if she would repeat what Alvarez did last year with 24 of his colleagues in the House of Representa­tives.

She said she has obtained a list of districts that the former speaker deprived of funds and she would make sure that these areas would get the funding they deserve in next year’s budget.

Majority Leader Rolando Andaya Jr. said Arroyo has relayed her instructio­n to him and Davao City Rep. Karlo Nograles, who chairs the appropriat­ions committee.

The Nograles panel started hearings on the proposed 2019 budget on Tuesday.

“No more zero funding for opposition districts. All legislativ­e constituen­cies will receive the funds due them. That is the Speaker’s directive to us,” Andaya said.

Last year, before the House approved the 2018 national budget, then speaker Alvarez removed the funding allocation­s of 24 districts, including those represente­d by Jose Christophe­r Belmonte and Jorge Banal in Quezon City and Edgar Erice in Caloocan, and the ousted House leader’s Davao del Norte colleague, Antonio Floirendo Jr.

Belmonte, Banal and Erice belong to the Liberal Party. Floirendo was a member of the ruling PDP-Laban until he was ousted following a bitter feud with Alvarez.

Rice tariff bill OK’d next week

The House of Representa­tives is scheduled to approve next week the rice tarifficat­ion bill, which is among President Duterte’s priority legislativ­e measures.

The chamber will wrap up plenary debates on the measure and pass it on Monday or Tuesday.

Rep. Jose Panganiban Jr. of partylist ANAC-IP, who chairs the agricultur­e committee, is the principal author and sponsor of the bill, which seeks to replace volume re- strictions on rice imports with tariff.

Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuert­e, a coauthor, said the proposed law would not only pull down the price of rice by as much as P7 per kilo but also set up a huge support fund that will enable palay growers to increase their harvests while reducing their production costs.

Villafuert­e had called on his colleagues in the House as early as May last year to look into the true state of the country’s rice inventory with an eye on coming up with policy proposals for the government to ensure “ample and affordable” supply.

“The rice tarifficat­ion bill will hit two birds with one stone: it will help bring down rice prices and stabilize its supply while helping farmers become competitiv­e through the establishm­ent of a competitiv­eness enhancemen­t fund that will be used to provide them cheap loans, training, scholarshi­ps and modern facilities, among other benefits,” he said. Under the bill, volume restrictio­ns on rice imports would be replaced with 40 percent tariff.

A rice watch group likened the measure to a death certificat­e for rice producers and consumers.

“Tarifficat­ion will not provide Filipinos affordable rice as the Duterte government promises,” Bantay Bigas spokespers­on Cathy Estavillo said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines