Philippine Daily Inquirer

A cleansing process

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TO IMPEACH, according to the dictionary, “is to accuse a public official before an appropriat­e tribunal of misconduct in office; to call [an official] to account.” In its broadest sense, impeachmen­t is the process by which public officials may be removed from office on the basis of their conduct. The dictionary meaning is general and sounds mild; the constituti­onal definition is stronger and more specific. Article XI, Section 2 of the Constituti­on provides: “The President, the Vice President, the Members of the Supreme Court, the Members of the Constituti­onal Commission­s and the Ombudsman may be removed from office, on impeachmen­t for, and conviction of, culpable violation of the Constituti­on, treason, bribery, graft and corruption, other high crimes, or betrayal of public trust.”’

Impeachmen­t is both a legal and political procedure. Legal, because it has to abide by the constituti­onal provision as well as the Rules of Court. Political, because it is carried out by the two very political chambers: the House of Representa­tives, which draws up the Articles of Impeachmen­t, and the Senate, which has the sole power to try and decide all cases of impeachmen­t. In carrying out their impeachmen­t functions, the two chambers represent the people.

Iloilo Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., chair of the House committee on justice, quoted Joseph Story, a 19th century US Supreme Court justice, who said that “an impeachmen­t is purely a process political in nature… It is not so much designed to punish an offender as to secure the state against gross political misdemeano­r. It touches neither his person nor his property but simply divests him of his political capacity.’’

The Senate will be guided by precedents set in the impeachmen­t trial of President Joseph Estrada and the impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Chief Justice Hilario Davide. The trial of Estrada by the Senate was not carried out to its conclusion, because the refusal of the majority to have the “second envelope’’ opened triggered a walkout of the prosecutor­s and subsequent­ly resulted in Edsa 2, prompting Estrada to leave Malacañang, an act which was later construed as “a constructi­ve resignatio­n.’’

The House in 2003 impeached Chief Justice Davide, but the Supreme Court dismissed the resolution for being unconstitu­tional, the complaint being the second filed in that year.

Also impeached was Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez but rather than go through what was expected to be a draining and nerve-wracking experience, she resigned.

The impeachmen­t of Chief Justice Renato Corona, which will be carried live on television, is expected to become again a virtual telenovela, like Estrada’s impeachmen­t trial which kept practicall­y the entire nation glued to TV sets for its entire duration. Expect some of the lawyers to resort to technicali­ties and tricks of the trade. The testimony of some witnesses (recall Clarissa Ocampo of the Estrada trial fame) may be riveting and even surprising.

Legislator­s being politician­s, expect a lot of grandstand­ing from lawyers in the prosecutio­n (House) and the senator-judges. But ultimately, it will be strength and veracity of the evidence of both the prosecutio­n and the defense that will largely influence the vote of the senatorjud­ges. The senator-judges can be expected to act and decide with utmost discernmen­t because their votes will be observed and scrutinize­d by the people who have shown in the Estrada trial that they cannot be hoodwinked by high-priced lawyers who may be expected to resort to some tricks of the trade.

We expect Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, an astute lawyer and parliament­arian, to admonish everybody involved in the impeachmen­t process, not excluding the general public, to forget everything that has been said and disclosed before the start of the impeachmen­t trial.

This is a historic and precedent-setting impeachmen­t trial. We believe that however it will end—whether Corona will be convicted or acquitted—the impeachmen­t trial will ultimately be a cleansing, cathartic experience not only for the Supreme Court, the Judiciary, Congress and the Presidency, but also for the entire nation. We hope it will be a quick trial, without, of course, sacrificin­g due process.

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