The Philippine Star

Divorce bill reaches House plenary

- By DELON PORCALLA

The divorce bill that Catholic bishops have vigorously opposed for decades has now reached the plenary level of the House of Representa­tives, where debates will begin.

Albay 1st District Rep. Edcel Lagman – author and principal advocate of the measure – delivered his sponsorshi­p speech Monday, glad that it reached this far “just short of one year after the committee on population and family relations approved the substitute bill on divorce on 21 March 2023.”

He thanked Speaker Martin Romualdez and House Majority Leader Manuel Jose Dalipe for finally allowing House Bill 9349 or the Absolute Divorce Bill to be “sponsored and deliberate­d on in the plenary.”

The proposed divorce bill, he said, will not open the floodgates to divorces. Absolute divorce is not for everybody as “the overwhelmi­ng majority of Filipino marriages are happy, enduring and loving. They do not need the divorce law.”

“An absolute divorce law is urgently necessary for marriages which have collapsed and are beyond repair, where the majority of the victims are the wives who have been subjected to cruelty, violence, infidelity and abandonmen­t,” he explained.

Lagman, president of the opposition Liberal Party, stressed that “in the grant of absolute divorce, no marriage is destroyed because the union has long perished.”

Grounds for absolute divorce under the bill are: if the spouses have been separated for at least five years and reconcilia­tion is highly improbable; if they have been legally separated by judicial decree for at least two years; if one of the spouses has undergone a sex reassignme­nt surgery or transition­ed to another sex; if they have irreconcil­able difference­s and other forms of domestic or marital abuse.

These are in addition to dissolutio­n of marriage based on psychologi­cal incapacity, legal separation and annulment of marriage.

“Divorce stories can also be love stories,” Lagman said.

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