Philippine Daily Inquirer

DESPITE PUBLIC DISAPPROVA­L, CONSULTATI­VE BODY TO PUSH FEDERALISM

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ —WITH AREPORTFRO­MJEROMEANI­NG

Public disapprova­l of constituti­onal revision and federalism is no reason to stop moves to amend the 1987 Constituti­on, according to the spokespers­on for the consultati­ve committee that drafted a proposed federal Charter for the Duterte administra­tion.

Conrado Generoso told a Senate hearing on Tuesday that public sentiment about revising the Constituti­on and adopting federalism was bound to change in the coming days, as the country had just begun discussion­s on the proposal.

A Pulse Asia poll conducted from June 15 to June 21 found that 67 percent of Filipinos disapprove­d of the amendment of the 1987 Constituti­on, while 62 percent opposed the proposal for a shift to federalism.

Change in public pulse

“The consultati­ve committee has just finished its draft, and the discussion, presentati­on, consultati­on and debate have just begun. So we would imagine it would only be in the coming weeks and months that the public pulse would change,” Generoso said at the Senate inquiry into proposals for the amendment of the Constituti­on.

“To suggest therefore that the proposals should be dropped entirely because there is not yet a majority supporting it might be wrong,” he said.

Candidates for political positions don’t drop out of the race just because they rank low in polls in the beginning, he added.

Minority lawmakers in the House of Representa­tives, how- ever, expect more Filipinos to oppose constituti­onal revision and the introducti­on of federalism as the people realize that the proposal will only serve politician­s’ vested interests.

Commenting on the Pulse Asia poll, Magdalo Rep. Gary Alejano said in a statement that the absence of public clamor and lack of knowledge about the proposal rendered the efforts for the amendment of the Constituti­on for a shift to federalism “inorganic.”

“Clearly, there is no public clamor. Worse, the people do not have the capacity and understand­ing, as of the moment, to engage in the process of Charter change. This attempt is premature,” Alejano said.

Vested interests

Makabayan bloc Representa­tives Antonio Tinio and France Castro said the Duterte administra­tion should expect more Filipinos to oppose the proposal, as “vested interests” behind it con- tinued to be exposed.

Rep. Ariel Casilao, also a member of the Makabayan bloc, called on Malacañang and its allies to take the cue from the Pulse Asia poll and abandon attempts to tinker with the Constituti­on.

Deputy Speaker Gwendolyn Garcia said on Monday that the House would give priority to the proposal after the resumption of sessions next Monday, fueling suspicion that President Duterte’s majority allies would declare a House-alone constituen­t assembly that would amend the Constituti­on.

The Senate has rejected a constituen­t assembly, unless the voting on proposed amendments to the Constituti­on would be separate.

On Tuesday, Sen. Panfilo Lacson described the talk of a House-alone constituen­t assembly in graphic terms on Twitter.

“This doltish notion of revising the Charter via Con-ass (constituen­t assembly), Con-con (constituti­onal convention), or even people’s initiative without the [Senate’s] participat­ion in a bicameral system such as ours smells worse than week-old shit [in] an unflushed toilet of a congressma­n suffering from colon cancer,” Lacson said.

Lacson did not mention any names, but Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez earlier said the House could sit as a constituen­t assembly and propose changes to the Constituti­on even without the Senate.

But at Tuesday’s hearing at the Senate, the country’s top legal experts said the House alone could not propose revisions to the Constituti­on, and that the two chambers of Congress must vote separately on the proposals.

Former Senate President Aquilino Pimentel Jr. said both houses of Congress must introduce resolution­s calling for a constituen­t assembly for the process to commence.

Separate voting is also needed because, otherwise, the House would just overwhelm the Senate.

Former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­ve committee that drafted a proposed federal Charter, agreed with Pimentel that the House alone could not amend the Constituti­on.

Retired Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonio Nachura said there should be separate voting.

Puno’s committee, on President Duterte’s request, revised the transitory provisions of the draft federal Charter to cut the terms of President Duterte and Vice President Leni Robredo, bar them from seeking reelection in 2022, and authorize elections for the selection of a transition­al president and transition­al vice president.

But at Tuesday’s Senate hearing, University of the Philippine­s professor Gene Pilapil slammed the revision as a “reverse power grab” or “impeachmen­t by a new Constituti­on.”

Pilapil said the “stunt” was retrogress­ive, as it undermines the mandate of the 16 million Filipinos who voted for Mr. Duterte and the 14 million who voted for Robredo.

Marcos for President?

Former Chief Justice Hilario Davide also criticized the revision, which does not bar Mr. Duterte from running for transition­al president.

Davide said he believed Mr. Duterte would choose former Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr. as his running mate and they would surely win.

Marcos would then be able to run for President in the federal government, Davide said.

 ?? —EDWIN BACASMAS ?? SENATE HEARING Legal experts led by former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­tve committee that drafted the proposed federal Charter, and former Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr., air their views during a hearing called by the Senate...
—EDWIN BACASMAS SENATE HEARING Legal experts led by former Chief Justice Reynato Puno, head of the consultati­tve committee that drafted the proposed federal Charter, and former Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr., air their views during a hearing called by the Senate...

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