The Philippine Star

Congress pressured to pass landmark bills

- By PAOLO ROMERO

Congress is under pressure to pass landmark bills and other urgent measures, including the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), before the end of the year as the Senate and the House of Representa­tives resume session tomorrow.

part from the BBL, which seeks to create a new autonomous region in Mindanao, lawmakers from both chambers need to ratify the proposed P2.606-trillion national budget for 2015 next month so it can be signed into law before the end of the year.

The House also aims to approve in plenary in the next two weeks the proposed Joint Resolution 21, which seeks to grant President Aquino emergency powers to ensure stable power supply in Luzon this summer.

Majority Leader and Mandaluyon­g City Rep. Neptali Gonzales Jr. said the House is awaiting the document from Aquino certifying the resolution as urgent so the chamber could approve the measure by the end of the month.

The special ad hoc panel on the BBL, chaired by Cagayan de Oro City Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, has been conducting public hearings in Tawi- Tawi, Sulu, Zamboanga, Basilan and other parts of Mindanao in the last two weeks to speed up its approval amid questions on the constituti­onality of some of its key provisions.

The Aquino administra­tion aims to enact the BBL into law by the end of the year or early next year so that it could conduct a plebiscite in affected areas in Mindanao and prepare for the elections of its officials for 2016.

The proposed 2015 General Appropriat­ions Act is now pending in the Senate and is expected to return to the House for ratificati­on by mid-December after the two chambers have reconciled conflictin­g provisions in the bicameral conference committee.

The chamber is also expected to continue plenary deliberati­ons on the Anti- Political Dynasty Bill and the proposed Resolution of Both Houses No. 1, which seeks to boost foreign direct investment­s by amending the restrictiv­e economic provisions of the Constituti­on.

“If there are no more interpella­tors, we can proceed to amendments for the Anti- Political Dynasty Bill,” Gonzales said.

Also expected to be referred to the plenary in the coming days is the antitrust bill or the proposed Philippine Competitio­n Act, which seeks to penalize anti- competitiv­eness agreements, abuse of dominant position and anticompet­itive mergers.

It also proposes the establishm­ent of the Philippine Fair Competitio­n Commission, the government agency that shall be primarily responsibl­e for enforcing and carrying out the competitio­n law.

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