The Philippine Star

In final vote, House approves Cha-cha

- By JESS DIAZ

The House of Representa­tives, by a vote of 224 to 22 with three abstention­s, yesterday approved on third and final reading its version of a federal constituti­on.

The draft charter is contained in Resolution of Both Houses No. 15, of which Speaker Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo is one of the principal authors.

Hours before the resolution was put to a vote, Arroyo told reporters that the House would not force the Charter change (Cha-cha) issue by raising it in today’s joint session with senators on President Duterte’s one-year martial law extension request.

Some senators have expressed fears that House members would spring a surprise on them by tackling Cha-cha in the joint session, saying they would walk out if the latter did so.

“No, no, no. No connection,” Arroyo said when asked if Cha-cha would be tackled.

“We took the mode of voting separately, so procedural­ly, I don’t think that can be done. It’s like passing legislatio­n, except the vote required is three-fourths (of all members), rather than majority vote. And then, just like any other legislatio­n, we take it to the Senate,” she said.

Senators have said Cha-cha would be “dead on arrival” in their chamber.

Arroyo earlier said she would try to push Cha-cha as far as she could in the hope that the next Congress “can continue the work.”

The House version of a federal charter retains the present presidenti­al system of government but with the president and vice president elected as one ticket, similar to the practice in the US.

It also scraps the term limits for House members and other local officials in the present Constituti­on.

It does not immediatel­y create federal states, leaving that power to Congress, which would be mandated to pass an enabling law upon petition by any interested region.

One of those who voted against the proposed federal constituti­on is Rep. Lito Atienza of party-list group Buhay.

“There’s absolutely no reason to rush this very important measure that will impact all of us. Let us not be like blind cows being stampeded over a cliff. We should study this issue very thoroughly. It is impossible to discuss this crucial measure in just the few session days left,” he said.

Atienza said rushing the drafting and approval of a federal charter “would not only deprive us time to tackle other important measures, but at the same time, this would sacrifice quality study on the revisions to the Constituti­on.”

He said just as important as the proposed revisions to the Constituti­on is the proposal to shift the nation from the presidenti­al to the federal system of government.

Atienza added that he has always been vocal since the first day of discussion­s on Chacha that “federalism is not the solution to the problems of the nation.”

“The public should be informed through a national debate or forum to hear the pros and cons of federalism. The number one promise of those pushing for federalism is the strengthen­ing of local autonomy. But this is already enshrined in the present Constituti­on,” Atienza stressed.

He pointed out that government should obey the mandate of the Constituti­on and the Local Government Code (LGC) in strengthen­ing local government units (LGUs).

“We will insist that the constituti­onal mandate and the provisions of the (LGC) be respected – that functions be decentrali­zed and funding be provided to LGUs to use in their developmen­t programs,” the former three-term Manila mayor said.

If local and regional governance needs to be further strengthen­ed, then Congress, instead of mangling the Constituti­on, could pass laws to achieve such goal, he said.

“You don’t burn the whole house down to correct some of its defects,” he said.

Features

The following are the salient features of the proposed federal constituti­on:

• It retains the present presidenti­al structure of government with a president, vice president and Congress with a Senate and House of Representa­tives.

• It does not automatica­lly create federal states, unlike the charter drafted by the presidenti­al consultati­ve committee on Cha-cha chaired by retired chief justice Reynato Puno. It gives such authority to Congress, which would be mandated to pass an enabling bill upon petition by any region or group of provinces wanting to convert into a federal state.

• The president and vice president are to be elected at large together. A vote for the president is a vote for the vice president to avoid a scenario where the president is at odds with the vice president.

• The president and vice president will have a term of office of four years with one reelection.

• A total of 24 senators would be voted at large and House members by districts, which Congress will determine on the basis of a population of 350,000, instead of the present 250,000.

• Like the president and vice president, senators and House members will have a term of office of four years. But the proposed new charter does not contain a reelection limit for members of Congress.

• The legislatur­e will have a Commission on Appointmen­ts that has the same powers and compositio­n (12 senators, 12 House members) as the one in the present Constituti­on. However, the speaker, instead of the Senate president, will be its ex-officio chairman.

• The draft proposes to return the country to the old two-political party system, instead of the current multiplepa­rty setup.

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