Philippine Daily Inquirer

Freedom of informatio­n

- Artemio V. Panganiban

GOOD NEWS! Prior to its adjournmen­t for the holidays, the Senate started plenary deliberati­on on the freedom of informatio­n (FOI) bill. Buried in the legislativ­e mill for the last 14 years, the bill was resurrecte­d by Sen. Grace Poe in the Senate committee on public informatio­n, which approved it last September. Senate President Franklin Drilon expects the entire chamber to pass it by the end of March.

Sticky points. But the bad news is that theHouse committee on public informatio­n and media has yet to act on themeasure. All it did was to give its technical working group until mid-February to consolidat­e the 19 or so pending versions of the FOI bill.

It seems the House committee is stuck on several issues, like the insistence of some legislator­s to install a “rider,” the so-called “right of reply” that would require media outlets to give criticized officials the same print space or broadcast time, free of charge. Constituti­onalists view this as a violation of the right to free speech of media practition­ers.

Another sticky point is the attempt of a few House members to exempt their statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN) from the proposed FOI law. This is a sneaky effort to amend the Ethical Standards Law and Anti-Graft Law that already allow public access to SALNs. In obedience to this fundamenta­l policy, even the Supreme Court justices have released their SALNs to the Philippine Center for Investigat­ive Journalism. Why should legislator­s be exempted?

Charter provisions. In its “Declaratio­n of Principles and State Policies,” the Constituti­on provides: “Subject to reasonable conditions prescribed by law, the State adopts and implements a policy of full public disclosure of all its transactio­ns involving public interest.”

More clearly, the Charter, in its Bill of Rights, states: “The right of the people to informatio­n on matters of public concern shall be recognized. Access to official records, and to documents, and papers pertaining to official acts, transactio­ns, or decisions, as well as to government research data used as basis for policy developmen­t, shall be afforded the citizen, subject to limitation­s as may be provided by law.”

While the earlier provision is a general state policy that cannot be implemente­d without an enabling law, the latter provision—being a part of the Bill of Rights—is self-executory and needs no enabling law to be enforced by courts.

In fact, even prior to the 1987 Constituti­on, the Supreme Court recognized the people’s right to public informatio­n. Said the Court in Baldoza vs Dimaano (May 1, 1976): “There can be no realistic perception by the public of the nation’s problems, nor a meaningful democratic decision-making, if they are denied informatio­n of general interest.”

Later, in Chavez vs PCGG (July 15, 2003), the Court directed the government to inform the public of the negotiatio­ns on the alleged ill-gotten wealth of the Marcoses. However, it recognized certain restrictio­ns on the right, among them national security matters, intelligen­ce informatio­n, trade secrets, banking transactio­ns (although under the Anti-Money Laundering Laws, these are no longer sacred), criminal matters and other confidenti­al informatio­n.

More recently, in Senate vs Ermita (April 20, 2006), the Court again used the right to public informatio­n to strike down a presidenti­al order barring members of the Cabinet from testifying in legislativ­e investigat­ions, holding that citizens must have “access to informatio­n which they can use for formulatin­g their own opinion on matters pending before Congress.”

Action agad! All told, I believe it is better—even for the legislator­s themselves, not just for the citizens—to approve a well-crafted FOI Law. Otherwise, the Court will continue to enforce this constituti­onal right without regard to the inputs of Congress.

Recall that, according to the Constituti­on, the exercise of the right is “subject to limitation­s as may be provided by law.” The absence or inadequacy of the “limitation­s... provided by law” will not deter the Court from using self-executory provisions of the Constituti­on to blaze landmark jurisprude­nce.

For example, congressio­nal inaction in the face of our people’s clear demand for the abolition of the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) impelled the Court to strike down this hated scheme. Congress could have preempted the Court decision had it abolished the PDAF by legislatio­n. But it chose to be timid. Thus, the Court acted promptly and decisively, leaving the legislator­s out in the cold and damned by public opinion.

Another example of congressio­nal default is the legislativ­e failure to revise the Party-list Law. For decades, the Court did not declare any provision of this law invalid, and waited for Congress to act and make it more proportion­ately representa­tive and easier to determine thewinning candidates.

Tired of waiting, the Court, in Banat vs Comelec (April 21, 2009), struck down the Party-List Law provision limiting winners only to those garnering at least two percent of the total votes cast, thereby opening the legislativ­e floodgates even to those who gather microscopi­c votes in party-list elections.

The moral lesson is that Congress should wisely and proactivel­y use its policy-determinin­g powers, instead of waiting for the Court to strike down its ill-conceived actions, or worse, to fill up the void left by its inaction. Pass the FOI bill now!

*** Comments to chiefjusti­cepanganib­an@hotmail.com

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