BusinessMirror

Palace awaits budget bill as Senate, House trade fire

- By Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz @joveemarie Butch Fernandez @butchfBM & Bernadette D. Nicolas @BNicolasBM

THE House of Representa­tives on Monday sent to the Senate the final printed version of the P3.757-trillion budget bill for 2019, in hopes of ending a standoff arising from claims that the bicameral conference committee report reconcilin­g the two chambers’ versions was “manipulate­d” even after it was ratified on February 8.

House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Rep. Rolando G. Andaya Jr. held out hope the budget bill will be signed by Senate President Vicente L. Sotto III so it can be submitted to the Palace

for President Duterte’s signature.

In a news conference on Monday, Andaya said if the Senate refuses to sign the budget, “then we won’t have the law.” This means the 2018 reenacted budget will

remain in force at least until endJuly, when a new Congress is in place and a new leadership takes over the House.

In spelling out that scenario on Sunday, Sen. Panfilo Lacson, the most vocal in denouncing alleged “manipulati­on” by the House leadership of the post-ratificati­on budget version, had shared with media initial estimates he claimed were given by the finance department. These indicated daily losses to the economy of P500 million, and a 1.5-percentage point reduction in GDP growth, if the nation has to live with the reenacted budget until August.

“I’m still hopeful that there will be a change of heart in the Senate,” Andaya said.

Duterte won’t sign illegal doc DuTERTE signaled, however, that he would rather pay the economic price of extending the reenacted 2018 budget than sign a budget law that will be subject to legal challenge.

Duterte also said the budget is still under debate.

He lamented the possible decline in the country’s GDP growth if the 2019 budget would be further delayed, and acknowledg­ed all sectors will be hurt.

“I will not sign anything that would be an illegal document. Magkaroon tayo ng slide sa GDP niyan [We’re going to see a slide in the GDP] if we are going to reenact the budget. Everybody will suffer, including the law enforcemen­t,”he said in a speech on Friday at the awarding ceremony for the Outstandin­g Women in Law Enforcemen­t and National Security of the Philippine­s.

Malacañang earlier aired optimism that the Senate and the House will agree eventually to avert a standoff over the “last-minute changes” in the proposed budget for 2019.

Presidenti­al Spokesman Salvador S. Panelo said on Monday that the Palace still hopes the budget will be passed as soon as possible so that the government will not be operating under a reenacted budget until August. House Speaker Arroyo and Andaya will be ending their terms in July.

Asked if the Palace can wait for the passage of the new budget until August, Panelo said: “I’m sure they will agree—the House and the Senate— because they are already talking.”

“I’m sure they will be agreeing eventually on what they should do. All of them are concerned about the welfare of the country,” he added.

In an ambush interview with the BusinessMi­rror, Arroyo said on Monday that she was open to one-on-one talks with Sotto to resolve the two chambers’ difference­s once and for all, but signaled that she won’t be the first to make the call for that, “since they’re [senators] the ones attacking us in media.” Still, she said, if the opportunit­y for a one-on-one presented itself, Arroyo said she would not turn her back on a dialogue.

‘Process the same’

MEANWHILE, Andaya said the Supreme Court ruling on the post-ratificati­on version is not applicable in the 2019 budget.

He said the House has been“doing the same process all these years— after ratificati­on of the bicam report [we can still itemize the funds because

the budget contained lumpsum funds].”

The House has the record to prove the legality of the national budget, as the itemizatio­n was within the parameters of the bicameral conference committee report ratified by each chamber.

If post-bicameral itemizatio­n of lump-sum budget by the House is unconstitu­tional, Andaya said the Senate also has a post-bicameral realignmen­t worth P75 billion—a claim he first made late Sunday, and which Senate leaders strongly disputed on Monday.

According to Andaya, Senate staff delivered the documents containing budget itemizatio­n by senators on February 11—also after ratificati­on of the proposed 2019 GAA on February 8.

He said the senators have the right to suggest to the President to veto the part of the national budget that they think unconstitu­tional.

“If the contested appropriat­ions represent 2 percent of the national budget, then why should it jeopardize the unconteste­d 98 percent? Why hostage the national budget over unfounded and unreasonab­le fear?” asked Andaya.

No senator ‘touched’ ratified bill—Sotto

SOTTO maintained that none of the senators “touched” the final approved version of the budget bill.

Reacting to Lacson’s lament against the reported budget alteration­s by the House, and Andaya’s countercla­im that the senators themselves made their own changes post-ratificati­on, Sotto directed critics to the Legislativ­e Budget Research and Monitoring Office (LBRMO).

“You can ask the LBRMO; they scrutinize­d what we passed,” Sotto said. “The Senate did not touch anything [after we ratified the budget bill] per LBRMO,” Sotto told reporters, adding that reports linking senators to the P25billion Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) funding for projects were “not true.”

If reports are true that their House counterpar­ts touched the ratified budget bill, Sotto said,“they should ask the Speaker [Arroyo] to sign it,” referring to the bicameral report on the budget bill

that has to be submitted to Duterte for signing into law.

Reenacted budget

SOTTO did not rule out the possibilit­y the government may have to operate under a “reenacted budget” until the next Congress convenes.

“By July, we can pass a supplement­al budget,” Sotto told reporters in an ambush interview, clarifying that the senators “cannot transmit the budget bill [to Malacañang] if it is different from what we ratified.”

He conveyed the senators’ concern that the last-minute alteration of the budget bill could constitute “a violation of the Constituti­on ... if they changed what we ratified after the third reading.”

“They [House] should know the rules. As far as I know, it is the first time the budget bill was altered after its ratificati­on,” Sotto added. “The bottom line is that I told them: ibalik yung ni-ratify [restore the version that was ratified].”

Drilon confirms ‘realignmen­t’

IN a separate interview, Minority Leader Frank Drilon confirmed that Senate leaders were informed that P75 billion “was being realigned” in the 2019 budget bill.

“The leadership in the Senate met, Senate President Sotto, myself, Senator Legarda and Senator Lacson. We discussed this. There was indeed a report from the Senate Committee on Finance that P75 billion is being realigned. In other words, the House of Representa­tives is rearrangin­g the furniture,” said Drilon. He then suggested to the Finance committee chaired by Legarda that all senators be furnished “with the details of this supposed P75-billion realignmen­t.”

“It is not only an itemizatio­n of a lump sum, but our informatio­n is that, the items are being realigned so that those who appear to be sympatheti­c to former Speaker Alvarez and former Majority Leader Fariñas were deprived of the allocation or their allocation were reduced. Those in who are favor of the present leadership are favored with additional allocation,” Drilon said.

Drilon said he talked to two congressme­n, one from the Visayas

and one from Luzon, but withheld their names. “They asserted that 62 congressme­n are affected by these realignmen­ts, not only itemizatio­n. This is the allocation of the House of Representa­tives.”

According to Drilon, the allegation is that “these items [that] were in the National Expenditur­e Program were carried in the General Appropriat­ions Bill, were approved in bicam, and the ratified version of the bicam contained these allocation­s. So, I would request the chairman of the committee to furnish the senators of the details of this, because you cannot alter what was approved in the bicam, contained in the bicam report and ratified by each chamber.”

Drilon had a suggestion: “if the House would want to realign and change certain allocation­s in the House of Representa­tives, my suggestion is that, when we reconvene on May 20, we reconsider the ratificati­on of the bicam report on the budget and reconvene the bicam and correct the alleged revisions in the final bicam report.”

Like Sotto and Lacson, he asserted that “after the bicam report is ratified by both chambers, hindi na pwedeng palitan ito [this cannot be changed], because that would constitute unauthoriz­ed alteration­s of legislativ­e records.”

“You cannot change—even if you are the Speaker or Senate President —what was approved by the chambers,” Drilon said, adding these two officials“are not superior to their respective chambers. It is the chambers which approved this and therefore, any revision must be approved by the chambers.”

He added that even if the budget bill has been printed, “what should be printed is what was approved. If what is printed is not the one approved, we have advised Senate President Sotto not to sign it.”

Asked if the budget bill can still be tackled at the bicam level even if its been printed, Drilon replied:“Of course, as long as it has not been signed. We have done that before in the case of the coco-levy fund. We revised it after it was approved by the bicam; recalled it. Of course, ultimately, the President vetoed the bill. We can reconsider our approval of the bicam report. The printing of the budget is immaterial.”

Should the House insist that the congressme­n just tinkered with typographi­cal errors, Drilon said Sotto is not likely to sign the enrolled copy of the bill. “Then there will be no budget. I suggest the solution is, if they really want to do this and say, we are realigning our share of the pork barrel—let’s call a spade a spade— let’s reconsider the approval of the bicam report, reconvene the bicam, come up with a new ratified report, and have it printed. You cannot just revise and alter what was approved in the bicam.”

The Minority Leader played down concerns over the government operating under a reenacted budget in an election year. “Wala naman. The items that were already utilized can no longer be utilized.”

Initial numbers conveyed to senators by the DOF, according to Lacson, showed a pushback of the budget approval until August could mean losses of P500 million daily to the economy, which, in turn, will shave off at least 1.5 percent from the GDP growth targets.

The government and private economists earlier said further delays in the passage of the 2019 budget could dampen growth prospects this year. The Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee (DBCC) targets GDP growth at 7 to 8 percent in 2019 until 2022 annually.

Pressed on what will the Palace do to avoid the scenario of having further delays in infrastruc­ture projects because of a reenacted budget, Panelo surmised the President will persuade the legislator­s to finish the passage of the budget once and for all.

Panelo said he’s certain Duterte will exercise his line-item veto power to make sure that the 2019 budget is constituti­onal.

“From the very beginning, we said that he will exercise his power to veto if he feels that indeed the budget to be given to him does not conform with the Constituti­on; otherwise he will sign it into law,” he said.

Hostage

IN a separate press conference, House Senior Deputy Minority Leader Anthony Bravo of COOP Natcco said it is the Filipino people who will suffer by holding hostage the 2019 national budget.

“This budget is very much needed by this administra­tion. This budget is very much needed by our people. So I’m appealing to the Senate. Let the President exercise his discretion for the veto power,” Bravo said.

In response to the recent remarks of Lacson on the budget, Bravo said the senator may be holding the proposed budget hostage because of a“personal vendetta”against Arroyo, whom Lacson opposed when she was President.

“...I think his agenda is clear: he doesn’t want the Speaker to be successful in her leadership as the Speaker. And it’s the budget. I know the majority of the senators want to pass the budget, but I wonder why they are quiet about the remarks of their colleague,” Bravo said.

He added that Arroyo was never involved in the budget amendments. Lacson debunked Bravo’s claim he was waging a “vendetta” against Arroyo.

“Rep. Bravo’s opinion reflects his true character,” said Lacson, adding: “I am a forgiving person. I have forgiven those who have wronged me.”

He insisted that “this is not about Speaker Arroyo. This is not about any congressma­n or senator. This is about my personal crusade against the porkbarrel system. This is about the national budget, which is the lifeblood of our country.”

Responding to Andaya’s claims of Senate realignmen­ts in the 2019 budget bill, Lacson said:“The P75 billion he [Andaya] is referring to was taken up during the interpella­tion in the Senate. That was the amount inserted by then DBM Secretary Benjamin Diokno in the DPWH budget, and which was slashed after the DPWH said it was not aware of it.”

The senator clarified that “the P23 billion—not P25 billion as Rep. Andaya claimed—refers to the individual amendments of some senators, which I exposed.”

Lacson added:“I am not aware of any single senator who has made changes to the budget, after it was approved in the bicameral conference level. If Rep. Andaya can provide more details, such as the text message from a certain Ms. Salamanca, I will join him in denouncing such practice because it is not only in violation of the legislativ­e process, but in violation of the Constituti­on itself.”

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