Philippine Daily Inquirer

AND A YA QUIT S HOUSE POST AFTER IRKING PALACE

- STORY BY DJ YAP

Malacañang urges the former House majority leader to stop waging a ‘media propaganda war’ against Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno, whomhe accuses of inserting P75 billion into the proposed national budget for 2019 to favor his in-laws.

Defiant to the end, Camarines Sur Rep. Rolando Andaya Jr. on Monday relinquish­ed his post as majority leader of the House of Representa­tives, ending days of speculatio­n about his place in the administra­tion after a highly public feud with Malacañang over the 2019 spending bill.

The House leader nominated his own replacemen­t, Deputy Speaker Fredenil Castro of Capiz province, to take over the post, allowing Andaya to assume the chairmansh­ip of the appropriat­ions committee and to continue his watch over the passage of the general appropriat­ions bill.

“As chairman of the appropriat­ions committee, I intend to utilize my last few days in Congress ensuring that the 2019 General Appropriat­ions Act (GAA) is transparen­t, fair to all and responsive to the needs of our people,” said Andaya, who is running for governor of Camarines Sur in the midterm elections in May.

“If transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the GAA will be my only legacy as House leader, so be it,” he said.

Hours after Andaya announced that he was stepping down as majority leader, Malacañang urged Andaya to stop waging a “media propaganda war” against Diokno.

Andaya has accused Diokno of orchestrat­ing the “insertion” of some P75 billion in the proposed budget of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) supposedly to favor his in-laws in Sorsogon province.

Run-in with Diokno

“If he has problems with the current budget secretary, we hope that he would look for an appropriat­e venue by just filing a case against him in the court of law,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said in a statement.

Andaya made several allusions to his run-in with Diokno.

“We were confronted with two choices: Rubber-stamping the passage of a greatly flawed budget on time, or using more time to craft a better one purged of its inborn defects,” he said.

“If we choose the path of surrender and subservien­ce, then such legislativ­e haste would have surely led to budgetary waste. We cannot pass a budget marinated in flood control funds, or drowning in DBMinserte­d infrastruc­ture projects, which the DPWH remains clueless about,” Andaya said.

Public Works Secretary Mark Villar said on Jan. 14 at the resumption of the Senate hearings on the proposed national budget for 2019 that he came to know about the additional funding for the DPWHonly after he received a copy of the National Expenditur­e Program, or the executive’s proposed budget.

But Panelo said the next day that Villar was aware of the extra funds for his department as he was present at the Cabinet meeting where Diokno presented the national budget proposal.

The Senate approved the P3.8-trillion proposed budget for 2019 on Monday. The spending bill had been delayed in the House because of last-minute allocation of pork to favored lawmakers, according to Sen. Panfilo Lacson.

The Senate and the House next hold a conference to reconcile their versions of the budget bill.

Andaya said he was under orders to complete what he had started insofar as ensuring a clean budget.

Unfinished business

“The House leadership under Speaker Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo has accepted my offer to relinquish my post and lead the contingent tasked to complete one major unfinished business left in our legislativ­e calendar: the passage of the 2019 national budget,” he said.

“I have been given orders: from the GHQ (general headquarte­rs) to the front lines. I volunteere­d for this mission, knowing fully well that the place of honor is in the front lines,” Andaya said.

Castro, in succeeding An- daya, has kind words for the outgoing majority leader.

“I will try my best to [fill] his shoes. I will try my best on how to serve the House of Representa­tives within my humble capacity,” he said.

Palace role

Castro, speaking to reporters before the leadership change, said President Duterte had no hand in Andaya’s resignatio­n.

“Malacañang has nothing to do with this,” he said.

Asked how this developed, he said: “It’s part of the agreement or understand­ing between two gentlemen.”

“That was agreed long before… before Congressma­n Andaya assumed the position as majority leader,” Castro said.

The Palace distanced itself from what it called the “political intramural­s” in the House.

“We respect its independen­ce, including its internal rules and affairs,” Panelo said.

 ??  ?? Rolando Andaya Jr.
Rolando Andaya Jr.

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