Business World

ConCom mulls reelection for president and VP

- By Camille A. Aguinaldo

A SUBCOMMITT­EE of the Consultati­ve Committee (ConCom) tasked to review the 1987 Constituti­on has proposed that elective officials, including the president, the vice-president and lawmakers, serve for four years with one reelection under the proposed federal government.“The members of the committee felt that three years (for congressma­n) is too short. So it was turned to four, even for the president. This is a return to the 1935 Constituti­on, four years,” former Supreme Court justice Antonio Eduardo B. Nachura, chair of the subcommitt­ee on the structure of the federal government, said during a press briefing at the Philippine Internatio­nal Convention Center (PICC) in Pasay City. “Manuel Quezon was elected under the 1935 Constituti­on that provided for six-year term without reelection. When he ended his term, he said six years was too long for a bad president but too short for a good president. So the (1935) Constituti­on was amended where they changed it to four years with reelection,” he added.

Under the present Constituti­on, the president and the vice-president serve for six years without reelection. Senators serve for six years with one reelection. Congressme­n serve for three years with two reelection­s.

The ConCom’s proposal is similar to the terms of office under the 1935 Constituti­on.

The late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos was elected twice under that Constituti­on, but declared martial law in his seventh consecutiv­e year in office, soon after effectivel­y discarding the 1935 Constituti­on with the 1973 Constituti­on, a ratified under controvers­ial circumstan­ces by a constituen­t assembly.

The current 1987 Constituti­on, crafted by a constituti­onal commission organized by President Corazon C. Aquino and ratified in a plebiscite a year after Mr. Marcos’s fall, stipulated a six-year single term for both the president and vice-president. But in the succeeding administra­tions of Fidel V. Ramos, Joseph E. Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and now President Rodrigo R. Duterte, there have been efforts to change the present Charter, targeting the terms of office and other provisions.

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