Philippine Daily Inquirer

SPEAKER VOWS TO DEFY SC

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez said he would not honor any Supreme Court order that would require Congress to convene in a joint session to tackle the declaratio­n of martial law in Mindanao. He even vowed, in jest, that he would tear such an order to pieces.

- By DJ Yap @deejayapIN­Q

Any order from the Supreme Court for a joint session of Congress to review the declaratio­n of martial law in Mindanao will end up in shreds.

“There would really be a constituti­onal crisis—and it wouldn’t be our fault,” Speaker Pantaleon Al- varez told reporters on Thursday.

The leader of the House of Representa­tives was asked by reporters to respond to the petitions asking the high tribunal to compel Congress to jointly deliberate on President Duterte’s Proclamati­on No. 216 placing Mindanao under martial rule and suspending the privilege of the writ of habeas cor- pus after Islamist militants laid siege to Marawi City on May 23.

The petitioner­s argued that a joint session of Congress was mandated under the 1987 Constituti­on.

The House and the Senate overwhelmi­ngly approved separate resolution­s declaring their support for the martial law declaratio­n just before they adjourned their session last week.

“They should review their law books. How can the Supreme Court dictate Congress what to do? We’re a coequal body,” Alvarez said.

Asked what he would do if the court issued a directive for a joint session of Congress, Alvarez said: “I would rip it up.”

“That’s a joke, right? Like I

said, they should study again and review their law books,” said the Davao del Norte representa­tive.

Alvarez said he did not understand the logic of the petitioner­s.

“The majority of the Senate has passed a resolution supporting the declaratio­n of martial law. The House of Representa­tives has passed a resolution with the majority supporting the declaratio­n of martial law,” he said.

All about grandstand­ing

“Now, if you convene, what else will we talk about? We already know the decision. Maybe they just want to do their grandstand­ing in that joint session,” Alvarez said.

On Monday, seven opposition congressme­n who call themselves the “Magnificen­t 7” filed a petition in the Supreme Court questionin­g the constituti­onality of Mr. Duterte’s martial law proclamati­on.

The high court, moving swiftly on Tuesday, directed the government to reply to the petition and set oral arguments for three days next week.

Later on Tuesday, Florin Hilbay, former President Benigno Aquino III’s solicitor general, along with other lawyers allied with the previous administra­tion, filed a petition in the high tribunal seeking to compel Congress to hold a joint session to review Mr. Duterte’s proclamati­on, citing “the clear constituti­onal requiremen­t for Congress to convene and vote jointly.”

Separate issue

On Wednesday, another group of petitioner­s, led by former Sen. Wigberto Tañada and Catholic bishops, likewise urged the high court to direct Congress to comply with the the constituti­onal requiremen­t.

Theodore Te, the Supreme Court’s spokespers­on, on Thursday said the two mandamus petitions separately filed by the groups of Hilbay and Tañada would probably be consolidat­ed because they involved similar issues.

Unconstitu­tional

But the two petitions would be treated differentl­y from the one lodged by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman and six other opposition congressme­n, who said Mr. Duterte’s Proclamati­on No. 216 was unconstitu­tional.

“They differ from the petition challengin­g the factual basis for martial law in Mindanao and will thus not be consolidat­ed with the martial law petition,” Te said in a statement.

“[They] will not be covered by the court’s instructio­ns given last Tuesday for preliminar­y conference and oral arguments,” he added.

Te noted that the two petitions regarding the joint congressio­nal session were filed after the magistrate­s had adjourned their weekly full-court session last Tuesday.

“The petitions will most likely be consolidat­ed and will be dealt with separately,” he said.

‘Fearless guess’

Sen. Panfilo Lacson told a news forum on Thursday his “fearless guess” was that the court would not issue such a directive to a “coequal branch of government.”

“If at all, the court could resolve the other issue, which is whether there was basis for the martial law proclamati­on,” the senator said.

Lacson was one of 12 senators who voted to junk the Senate resolution, filed by Aquino allies, seeking a joint session to review the proclamati­on of martial law in Mindanao.

He also was among 17 senators who voted for another Senate resolution stating there was no need to revoke the martial law declaratio­n for now.

Lacson said the Constituti­on was clear that Congress would only hold a joint session to discuss a martial law proclamati­on if the two chambers would revoke it.

Flexibilit­y

He said that during interpella­tion of the Senate resolution seeking a joint session of Congress, it was pointed out that former Constituti­onal Commission member Christian Monsod argued in 1986 that the President should be given flexibilit­y to exercise emergency powers under martial law unless revoked by Congress.

He said Monsod was one of the petitioner­s now in the high court. “Where is the consistenc­y?” he asked.

Asked what would happen if the high court ruled that the proclamati­on had no factual basis and President Duterte refused to follow it, Lacson said there would be a constituti­onal crisis.

He said he did not think the President would disobey the court despite “all the bravado pronouncem­ents.”

“We have seen how he would say things but in the end he will take a different action and follow the law,” Lacson added.

 ??  ?? Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez
Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez
 ??  ?? PROCLAMATI­ON 216
PROCLAMATI­ON 216

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