The Philippine Star

Villafuert­es face off in Senate hearing on Camarines Sur bill

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ

Rep. Luis Villafuert­e and his son, lastterm Camarines Sur Gov. L-ray Villafuert­e, faced off yesterday during the hearing of the Senate committee on local government on the proposed creation of Nueva Camarines, which would technicall­y divide Camarines Sur province.

“Our rebuttal to this argument of the oppositor is misleading… that denigrates the intelligen­ce of the people of Camarines who will evaluate the merits or demerits of the division of the province. This argument is a gross misreprese­ntation of the poor,” Rep. Villafuert­e said.

“Who is the poor? (There is a) high percentage of incidence of poverty even in so-called rich provinces?” he added.

The congressma­n was explaining his position on the counterpar­t measure of House Bill 4820 on the creation of Nueva Camarines, providing for a new congressio­nal district once Congress passes it into law.

His own son, Gov. Villafuert­e, though is the proposal’s main critic.

“In deliberate­ly making false complaint, the oppositors can’t cite a single province that went kaput or went bankrupt, or did not survive for lack of financial viability. We have yet to hear of a province created by a plebiscite that complains of their division,” Rep. Villafuert­e said.

He cited the example of Rizal province that was divided into several units based on a decree of the late President Ferdinand Marcos, whose son, Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr., now heads of the Senate committee on local government.

The congressma­n said Rizal was then a huge, highly populated province, and the cities of Las Piñas, Pasig and Mandaluyon­g that were carved out of it, among other local government units, have become progressiv­e.

“Yet the province, did (it) become economical­ly depressed? No. Did it lose financial viability? No,” he said.

When he was given time to rebut his father ’ s statements, Gov. Villafuert­e said many of his constituen­ts as well as barangay captains and majority of the board members are against the proposal.

He even challenged the proponents of Nueva Camarines to just bring the issue before the people in next year’s local elections. Father and son and Rep. Arnulfo Fuentebell­a, who is also pushing for the new province, are on their last terms.

He went on to say that he learned so much from his father. “This is a contentiou­s issue, I can’t explain any further…,” he said, then asked his supporters in the gallery to stand up one by one and manifest their support a single Camarines Sur province.

At one point, Rep. Villafuert­e even accused his own son of being a lame-duck governor. “The trouble is, he does not fight me. He’s a lame duck,” he said.

Gov. Villafuert­e told reporters after the hearing that he continues to respect his father even if they have differed on various issues in their political careers. “The family remains a family,” he said, expressing hope that he and his father would settle their gap in the end.

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