Business World

The disappeari­ng Congress: The Philippine­s as an administra­tive state

- JEMY GATDULA

Section 12 of RA 11525 (“COVID-19 Vaccinatio­n Program Act of 2021”) makes it very clear that vaccinatio­n cards cannot be made a requiremen­t for government or business transactio­ns and declares that vaccinated individual­s shall “not be considered immune from COVID-19.” So why is it that government agencies are requiring vaccine cards for entry into hotels, restaurant­s, and businesses, including the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) for students and faculty to go to school? More pointedly: Why are unelected government bureaucrat­s able to go directly against a law made by elected legislator­s?

Because this essentiall­y is what happens when a country morphs into an “administra­tive state.”

An administra­tive state is one where Executive Branch’s administra­tive agencies exercise “the power to create, adjudicate, and enforce their own rules” (see Ballotpedi­a). There are two features at play here which, although constituti­onal, the undue over-employment of which unfortunat­ely leads to a weakening of our democratic system of government.

The first is the constant delegation of powers to the Executive Branch, whereby powers traditiona­lly in Congress’ hands are instead given to government agencies under the control and supervisio­n of the President. So long as two jurisprude­ntial conditions are met (i.e., completene­ss and the sufficient standards test), the Congress can very well abdicate its responsibi­lities to the Executive Branch.

The other feature is judicial deference, a principle of judicial review whereby the courts defer to the agency’s interpreta­tion or enforcemen­t of a law. Thus, in Remolona vs. Civil Service Commission (G.R. No. 137473), the Supreme Court said that courts will not generally interfere with purely administra­tive matters addressed to the sound discretion of government agencies unless there is a clear showing of arbitrary, capricious, or grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdicti­on. And in Nuesa vs. Court of Appeals (G.R. No. 132048), findings of administra­tive officials and agencies that have acquired expertise because their jurisdicti­on is confined to specific matters are generally accorded not only respect but at times even finality if such findings are supported by substantia­l evidence (see Antonio Nachura’s “Outline Reviewer in Political Law”).

The problem with having a civil service of expanded powers is that it upends the deliberate­ly designed tripartite form of government of equal and separate powers. Effectivel­y, substantia­l power is concentrat­ed under the Executive Branch headed by one person: the President.

Thus, this relevant point: “power and authority vested in one body is the very definition of tyranny. The US Constituti­on’s system of separated powers [from which we derive our own constituti­onal system] safeguards individual liberties by dividing legislativ­e, executive, and judicial authority across three coequal branches, ensuring that no one branch can exert absolute rule. Federalist Papers authors such as James Madison and Alexander Hamilton used the flaws of human nature to support the necessary constraint­s of government.” Hence why “ambition must be made to counteract ambition” (“How America’s Administra­tive State Undermines the Constituti­on,” American Legislativ­e and Exchange Council, October 2020).

So called “progressiv­es,” believing their cause justifies a work-around the legislativ­e process, called for ever faster means of imposing increasing government regulation­s. But this only resulted in “unelected bureaucrat­s” setting aside elected officials “in determinin­g broad ranging regulation­s, free from democratic oversight or political interferen­ce. Over time, a complete lack of accountabi­lity from the courts and further enablement by Congress have allowed federal entities with ‘quasi-legislativ­e’ and ‘quasijudic­ial’ powers to subvert constituti­onal principles and exert inordinate influence in the lives of citizens with minimal recourse.”

A profound illustrati­on of this shift can be seen in our budget system. Congress has always been touted as possessing the “power of the purse” and the reason for this is that, since tax funds are culled from citizens, then it is but fair that the spending or allocation of tax money be decided by their duly elected representa­tives — hence, Congress. Not anymore.

In 2014, then university professor, now Secretary of Education, Leonor Magtolis Briones pointed out that Congress has control of only “around 23% of the budget.” Instead, the power “now belongs to the President.” The reason is that “lump sums indicate an inherent vulnerabil­ity in the budget because of limited transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in handling these funds.” Thus, “after the budget is passed, executive power may even disregard Congress’ approved budget altogether.” (“President, not Congress, holds power of the purse,” Philippine Star, August 2014; see also “Who really holds the ‘power of the purse’?,” PIDS, December 2009).

This shift to an administra­tive state, where unelected bureaucrat­s hold sway over people’s lives without accountabi­lity is not only inherently undemocrat­ic but utterly despotic. It also encourages incompeten­ce, as we have seen in recent years’ COVID-19 measures.

Fixing the budget system to have it firmly under Congress’ power is a step in the right direction. Imposing greater public and regular congressio­nal oversight over these administra­tive agencies is another. Finally, it would be better to vastly reduce the number of national government agencies and instead devolve many of their functions to local government units, whose administra­tors have greater accountabi­lity to their constituen­ts.

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 ?? Https://www.facebook. com/jigatdula/ Twitter@jemygatdul­a ?? JEMY GATDULA is a senior fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce
Https://www.facebook. com/jigatdula/ Twitter@jemygatdul­a JEMY GATDULA is a senior fellow of the Philippine Council for Foreign Relations and a Philippine Judicial Academy law lecturer for constituti­onal philosophy and jurisprude­nce

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