The Manila Times

2019 polls

- WITH GLEE JALEA AND BERNADETTE E. TAMAYO

“No matter what there will be elections,” Andanar said in said in a roundtable discussion with The Manila Times editors and reporters on Friday.

House Speaker Pantaleon Alavarez, during a television interview about the proposed Charter change that would pave the way for the country’s shift to a federal system of government.

According to Alvarez, the midterm elections in 2019 may not happen if a shift in the form of government from unitary to federalism, through charter change, materializ­es.

Senate President Aquilino Pimentel 3rd however contradict­ed the House speaker, noting that the scheduled 2019 mid-term elections would still push through even if Congress managed to come up with the new constituti­on this year.

Pimentel said the 1987 Constituti­on must be followed before the government could operate under the new constituti­on.

“Hence if there are scheduled elections under the existing constituti­on then this must be followed,” the Senate chief pointed out.

election and term extension scenarios won’t help in getting public support for the proposal to shift to a federal form of government.

People are turned off when issues like term extension and the cancellati­on of polls are inserted in charter change efforts, he said.

‘Pinoys could revolt’

Andanar said doing away with elections was not a good idea because the people might revolt against the government.

As for term extensions, Andanar reiterated that President Rodrigo Duterte has no intention to stay as President beyond 2022.

In fact, the President even said he was willing to resign

During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Duterte admitted he was only forced to run for president, Andanar recalled.

“The people of the Philippine­s can rest assured, especially the opposition, that the President has no desire to extend his term,” he added.

‘2018 won’t be a happy year’—de Lima

Detained Sen. Leila de Lima warned the public that 2018 won’t be a “happy year” because of the looming constituti­onal changes under Duterte.

“With the kind of Congress that we have, especially the House of Representa­tives which is a rubberstam­p already and the supermajor­ity, they can do whatever they want to do,” de Lima told reporters before her hearing on her “disobedien­ce to summons” case on Friday.

Sen. Risa Hontiveros on Friday claimed the Duterte wealth and term extensions through federalism to measure public perception and “condition the public’s mind.”

She said sudden talk of a no-election scenario, term extension and proposals to drop all cases against the Marcoses in exchange for a cut of the Marcos wealth was “part of an elaborate political communicat­ion strategy to measure and massage public opinion.”

“It comes as no surprise that the public is being bombarded with all these political prospects and scenarios coming from the key leaders of the Executive and Legislativ­e branches of the government,” she said.

“After all, these twin political projects will determine the fate of the Duterte government,” said Hontiveros, a member of the Senate minority bloc.

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