Philippine Daily Inquirer

A must for SC: Explain PDAF ruling

- Bartolome C. Fernandez Jr.

I READ with keen interest Randy Peralta’s letter where he urged the Supreme Court to explain its previous decisions upholding the constituti­onality of the pork barrel system, in light of its latest ruling striking down the same as unconstitu­tional (Opinion, 12/5/13).

LAMP v Secretary of Budget and Management (GR No. 164987, April 24, 2012) was specially alluded to. That case was a petition filed by the Lawyers Against Monopoly and Poverty (LAMP), a group of lawyers (including myself) who banded together with the mission to dismantle all forms of political, economic or social monopoly in the country, assailing the constituti­onality of the pork barrel system, particular­ly the implementa­tion of the provision on the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) in the General Appropriat­ions Act (GAA) of 2004. The petitioner­s’ main argument was that the prevailing practice for individual members of Congress to propose, select and identify projects to be funded by their pork barrel allocation­s ran afoul of the principle of separation of powers because they in effect intrude into an exclusive executive function, i.e., the execution and implementa­tion of laws. The Supreme Court rejected this argument by holding that the authority granted to members of Congress to propose and select projects “was already upheld in Philconsa” that remains a “valid case law” which the Court “sees no need to review or reverse (as) standing pronouncem­ents in the said case.” For this reason, inter alia, the petition of LAMP was dismissed by a unanimous vote of the Supreme Court.

The Philconsa v Enriquez case (GR No. 113105, Aug. 19, 1994) likewise alluded to in Peralta’s letter, sought to declare unconstitu­tional and void the Countrywid­e Developmen­t Fund (CDF) provision in the GAA of 1994. The petitioner­s in that case argued that the power given to members of Congress to propose and identify the projects and activities to be funded by the CDF was an encroachme­nt by the legislativ­e on executive power since the power is in implementa­tion of a law. (This is the selfsame position of the petitioner­s in LAMP.) The Supreme Court dismissed this argument with a curt pronouncem­ent that “the proposals and identifica­tions made by the Members of Congress are merely recommenda­tory.” For this reason, inter alia, the Philconsa petition was dismissed by a unanimous vote of the Supreme Court.

With its latest ruling in the petitions filed by Grecor Belgica et al., the Supreme Court now sings a different tune, as it were, by striking down, also by a unanimous vote, the PDAF as unconstitu­tional, thereby executing a perfect about-face by slaying its previous pronouncem­ent in the LAMP and Philconsa ruling that upheld the authority of members of Congress to propose and select projects to be funded with pork barrel money. (Curiously, the ponente in the latest ruling is Justice Estela Bernabe who had voted to uphold the PDAF’s constituti­onality in the LAMP case.)

Verily, with its latest ruling in Belgica et al., the Supreme Court voids all legal provisions of past and present congressio­nal pork barrel laws, such as the PDAF and CDF articles in the GAA, for being violative of the principle of separation of powers (the very same argument of the petitioner­s in LAMP) as they “authorized legislator­s... to intervene, assume or participat­e in any of the various post-enactment identifica­tion, modificati­on and revision of project identifica­tion,” (as well as) “conferred personal lump sum allocation­s to legislator­s from which they were able to fund specific projects which they themselves determine.”

In the same ruling, the Supreme Court struck down the pork barrel system for being violative of the constituti­onal principle of the non-delegabili­ty of executive power, because it allows lawmakers to fund specific projects that they determine by themselves. (It is precisely this practice that the petitioner­s in LAMP assailed as constituti­onally impermissi­ble.)

So, after all, the Philconsa ruling upholding the authority of the members of Congress to propose and select projects for funding from the pork barrel, which was reiterated in LAMP, does not remain a “valid case law” and “a standing pronouncem­ent that needs no further review or reversal”?

Yes, indeed, I applaud and welcome the latest jurisprude­nce that finally shut down the pork barrel system as unconstitu­tional and void, thereby vindicatin­g the petitioner­s in the Philconsa and LAMP cases. Still, as I see it, given the widely divergent rulings on the same issue, as herein analyzed, the Supreme Court has a lot of explaining to do. Bartolome C. Fernandez Jr. is a former commission­er of the Commission on Audit.

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