Mindanao Times

Federalism advocate favors Con-Con as Cha-Cha mode

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ZAMBOANGA CITY (MindaNews) — Changing the Constituti­on through a Constituti­onal Convention (Con-Con) composed of individual­s who are not incumbent members of Congress will ensure the people’s involvemen­t right from the start and the primacy of the nation’s developmen­t, not personal interests, in the minds of the delegates, an advocate of federalism said in an interview.

Lawyer Nazir Ynawat, national president of the Alliance of Advocates of Federalism in the Philippine­s (AAFP), said that while Charter change may be needed, it should be “for the right reason” and should not be used by political leaders, those in Congress and in local government units, in their favor.

Ynawat’s proposal on Con-Con is to elect delegates who are not incumbent members of Congress.

Ynawat, who served as an assemblyma­n in the former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, said there are provisions in the Constituti­on that need to be amended to suit the demands of the time.

“We are very strong on our advocacy for charter change, but we want the right procedure, and the right reason for the constituti­onal change, so that the people themselves can get involved, consistent with our stand on federalism, where we will dispel powers from the national to the regions to the local,” he said.

He claimed that “there is a growing interest in federalism throughout the country, as shown in a recent survey that about 40 percent of the people now are becoming aware of federalism,”

The 1987 Constituti­on provides for three methods to amend or revise it namely, a Constituen­t Assembly (ConAss), a Con-Con, or a people’s initiative.

Article XVII, Section 3 of the Constituti­on says, “The Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of all its Members, call a constituti­onal convention, or by a majority vote of all its Members, submit to the electorate the question of calling such a convention.”

Under Con-Ass, Congress, by a vote of threefourt­hs of all its members,

may propose amendments or revisions to the Constituti­on.

Legal expert Prof Tony La Viña, in an article on law. upd.edu.ph published on Jan. 18, 2018, said, “The only way a Constituen­t Assembly can be convened is if there is a joint resolution by both Houses or, without a Senate resolution the House can convene and

tackle constituti­onal amendments — not as a Constituen­t Assembly but only as the House of Representa­tives.”

La Viña was reacting to the plan of then-House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez to convene the House of Representa­tives – without the Senate – as a Constituen­t Assembly for Cha-Cha.

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