The Philippine Star

Settle Cha-cha mode at LEDAC

- CoMMoNsENs­E MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

Two veteran lawmakers who figured prominentl­y in past attempts to amend the country’s 1987 Constituti­on took me down memory lane amid the latest revival of Charter change (Cha-cha) moves. Specifical­ly, they are erstwhile Senate president Franklin Drilon and former Negros Occidental congressma­n Margarito Teves, who both tried to help amend the Constituti­on in the past but their efforts ended in vain.

Coming out with individual recollecti­ons, Drilon and Teves were actually reacting to the so-called “4th mode of Cha-cha” published in this corner last Jan. 17. It dwelt on the counter proposal of Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri to lift certain existing economic restrictio­ns under the country’s Constituti­on through Cha-cha by legislatio­n. As proposed, the phrase “unless otherwise provided by law” will be added to proposed amendments to these restrictiv­e economic provisions. Should the amendments be approved, Congress will still have to pass the enabling laws.

While the amendment of the Constituti­on provided three methods, a constituen­t assembly (con-ass); a constituti­onal convention (con-con) and people’s initiative, Zubiri proposed that Cha-cha can be done separately by both chambers without having to meet physically in Congress. Co-authored by Senate president pro-tempore Loren Legarda and Sen. Sonny Angara, Zubiri filed last week Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) No.6.

Zubiri argued for the Senate compromise mode that will allow Congress by mere legislatio­n to relax existing constituti­onal restrictio­ns such as the prevailing foreign ownership restrictio­ns up to 40 percent only in public services, education and advertisin­g. The Senate chief echoed the majority sentiments in favor of doing Cha-cha but limited only to these economic provisions.

The proposed economic Cha-cha legislatio­n obviously aims to deflect wholesale amendments of the Constituti­on from politics-related motives. These include the longstandi­ng wish of many Filipino politician­s to lift the existing term limits on all elected officials of the land and shift to unicameral or parliament­ary system of government that will consequent­ly abolish the Senate. Thus, the Zubiri formula was described as a “self-preservati­on” alternativ­e on the part of the senators.

As explained by Zubiri, their proposed mode of amending the Constituti­on was, in fact, attempted in the past, with Drilon as one of the prime movers at the Senate in 2011. To which Drilon confirmed through a viber message sent to this corner. Quoting Drilon verbatim:

“For the record: I was the original proponent, in 2011, of amending the Constituti­on via a Bicameral Constituen­t Assembly, but the amendment will follow the process involved in enacting ordinary law; provided, however, that the proposed constituti­onal amendment would be approved by 3/4 vote of the Senate and the House, voting separately, without being assembled as one body, and subject to the people’s ratificati­on in a plebiscite called for the purpose.”

Drilon went on to explain: “The House insisted that the Senate and the House be assembled as one body as a constituen­t assembly. The Senate disagreed because the moment Congress is jointly assembled, a joint voting can be proposed, and the Senate will be obviously outvoted. This is the safeguard that the Senate wanted: we can introduce amendments as a BICAMERAL CONSTITUEN­T ASSEMBLY, WITHOUT REQUIRING A JOINT SESSION, (underscori­ng supplied) where the Senate will be outvoted. That is the reason why no amendment was proposed.”

For his part, Teves sought to clarify that his consistent “position has always been to lift or remove outright only the restrictiv­e economic provisions in the Constituti­on.” Teves maintains “the fastest and least expensive process” to do Cha-cha is through a Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) of Congress convening as a constituen­t assembly.

“This is in line with the proposal of Senate President Zubiri who recently filed RBH No. 6 and is reportedly supported by Speaker (Martin) Romualdez,” Teves noted.

The process of approving the resolution by both Houses, Teves pointed out, includes the ratificati­on by our people through a plebiscite. Teves believes this “can be done within six months, especially if both houses of Congress can mutually agree to allocate one day a week out of their session days for legislativ­e hearings and debate on the proposed amendments of pertinent economic provisions.”

Teves was speaking from experience during his stint as delegate to the 1971-1972 Con-con. Teves later served for three consecutiv­e terms as congressma­n of the third district of Negros Oriental (1987-1998). He was then the president of the Land Bank of the Philippine­s when he got appointed as finance secretary in July 2005 until the end of the Arroyo presidency in June 2010.

Teves recalled many different studies have already been conducted by various groups and individual­s on the merits of this resolution since the late 1990s and up to the present. He cited the committee on constituti­onal amendments and other relevant committee members in the House and the Senate, as well as their legislativ­e staff, can benefit from these studies, update the same and make their recommenda­tions to the entire House and Senate members separately.

“Future congresses can impose limitation­s, regulation­s or even reimpose these restrictio­ns should circumstan­ces or conditions warrant those adjustment­s, just like what most countries in the world and our ASEAN peers have done, thru ordinary legislatio­n and not via the Constituti­on,” Teves asserted.

The Zubiri-led revival of the economic Cha-cha legislatio­n came on the heels of surreptiti­ous attempts to launch Cha-cha via people’s initiative (PI).

Zubiri disclosed no less than President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. (PBBM) strongly objected to such “divisive” mode that has even become more controvers­ial amid reported use of government funds to convince people to sign petitions calling for Cha-cha. Thus, PI has earned the monicker as “politicos’ initiative­s” over allegation­s of certain national and local politician­s bankrollin­g it.

According to Zubiri, he recently had talks with PBBM and Speaker Romualdez in very “colorful and vigorous discussion­s” on the PI controvers­ies. Whatever mode of Cha-cha, the key leaders from both chambers of the 19th Congress could take it up with PBBM in the scheduled Legislativ­e-Executive Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC) meeting on Thursday (Jan.25) at Malacañang.

The Zubiri-led revival of the economic Cha-cha legislatio­n came on the heels of surreptiti­ous attempts to launch Cha-cha via people’s initiative.

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