The Philippine Star

Lacson calls for ombudsman’s probe on budget insertions

- By PAOLO ROMERO With Delon Porcalla

It may be time for Ombudsman Samuel Martires to conduct a probe following various allegation­s of multibilli­onpeso insertions in the proposed P3.7-trillion national budget for 2019, Sen. Panfilo Lacson said yesterday.

Lacson said he found an unlikely ally in House Majority Leader Rolando Andaya Jr. for revealing that a single contractor hogged no less than 30 flood control projects worth billions of pesos.

Lacson and Andaya recently had a verbal tussle over the senator’s allegation­s that a certain lawmaker inserted P1.9 billion in projects in the proposed budget in violation of a 2013 Supreme Court ruling declaring the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund as unconstitu­tional.

Lacson said both the House of Representa­tives and the Office of the Ombudsman can conduct their own probes into the allegation­s.

“Expose pa more! A single contractor bagging 30 flood control projects worth billions of pesos calls for a congressio­nal inquiry/ombudsman investigat­ion. Thank God I found an unlikely ‘ally’ in (Rep). Andaya,” Lacson said in a post on his Twitter account.

He was referring to Andaya’s expose in a privilege speech on Monday that a single proprietor­ship based in Bulacan cornered the flood control projects in provinces including Sorsogon and Catanduane­s.

Lacson last week bared that a lawmaker got at least P1.9 billion worth of projects in a congressio­nal district in Camarines Sur but did not name Andaya.

When Andaya said the insertions could be a case of “misplaced generosity,” Lacson said the lawmakers concerned can show good faith by declining such amounts.

GMA: Nothing to explain

Speaker Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo, who once wanted Lacson arrested and stand trial during her presidency, has nothing to explain with regard to the latter’s expose that she got P2.4 billion in pork barrel fund allocation­s.

The former president refused to comment on Lacson’s accusation­s, saying she “cannot make allegation­s about somebody else’s motives just as it is not right for them to make allegation­s about me.”

“Why would I deprive the people of my district? I am only upper middle-class as far as the allocation­s are concerned. There are 60 to 90 more (members of the House of Representa­tives) who got bigger allocation­s than my district,” she told reporters over lunch, when she hosted a Christmas party.

Without naming names, but obviously referring to her predecesso­r Rep. Pantaleon Alvarez who was booted out by his House colleagues in July this year, the Pampanga lawmaker said the previous leadership “has bigger, multiples of the budget of my district.”

Arroyo lamented to media that she is being unfairly criticized and singled out even if she is just doing her job as the representa­tive of the second district of Pampanga, her home province.

In the House-approved 2019 General Appropriat­ions Bill, Arroyo’s district ranked 60th while the office of the majority leader ranked 110th in terms of appropriat­ions for the Department of Public Works and Highways. –

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