Sun.Star Cebu

Please, Mr. President

- ORLANDO P. CARVAJAL carvycarva­jal@gmail.com

Iam not exaggerati­ng when I say that my disgust at the blatant and shameless way Congress inserted pork items in the country’s 2019 budget is going through the roof. Thus with this column I join all indignant citizens in emphatical­ly imploring the President to veto these items.

Pork has just recently been declared unconstitu­tional by the Supreme Court and the President’s oath of office includes the upholding of the country’s constituti­on that lawmakers are now violating. It is, therefore, the President’s sworn duty to veto these unconstitu­tional pork items. It’s not like the amount involved is insignific­ant as to be simply shrugged off. 305 billion pesos worth of pork is way over-the-top disgracefu­l and contemptib­le.

(Adding insult to injury and to hide explainabl­e-only-by-pork amounts in their bank accounts they have come out with a resolution (also unconstitu­tional for violating freedom of informatio­n) that winds heavy red tape around their Statement of Assets, Liabilitie­s and Net worth (SALN). That their SALN is a matter of national security is just so ridiculous a justificat­ion as to be anything short of a sneering insult to the nation’s collective intelligen­ce.)

Besides, pork belongs to lawmakers as mangoes to a guava tree. They originally asked for it because they needed to bring projects to their district, the reason being they have to show graphic performanc­e in their districts or their constituen­ts would have no reason to re-elect them. This is a fallacy. They were elected to enact laws and should, therefore, get re-elected for the quality of the bills they sponsor and pass into law.

Anyway, from experience we know that really the more compelling purpose of pork, a good portion or whole of which our lawmakers manage to divert to their pockets, is to finance re-election campaign expenses. Our elections are won on name recall. This costs a lot of money for ads, posters, free food and transporta­tion, etc.

Pork should, therefore, be vetoed by you, Mr. President, because it is the juiciest source of corrupt money. If you do not veto the 305-billion pesos worth of pork you will have that much more corruption to deal with, a lot more than a whiff of what you have vowed to banish.

In case you make the mistake of not vetoing it, somebody will definitely ask the Supreme Court to come in and kill it for being unconstitu­tional. In the event of that, the Supreme Court’s judgment will at the same time be an indictment on your failure to uphold the constituti­on.

So, please Mr. President, put your foot down on this disgracefu­l act of our lawmakers. They need to be told to stick to being lawmakers and not financiers or implemente­rs of projects in their constituen­cies.

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