The Philippine Star

House to designate 12 deputy speakers for federalism dry run

- By DELON PORCALLA – With Marvin Sy, Jess Diaz

To practice the federal system of government, the House of Representa­tives will implement a dry run by designatin­g 12 deputy speakers representi­ng the regions of the country.

House Majority Leader Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Fariñas said this is in line with President Duterte’s concept of federalism, where provinces and regions may be lumped together and/ or subdivided into federal states for purposes of fiscal autonomy.

“Since the Duterte administra­tion is into federalism, we looked at the possible creation of the states, our federal states and they (his House colleagues) came up with 12,” Fariñas told reporters.

“This will also be a trial balloon to see how we can work with it,” he said.

Fariñas was referring to the caucus held Tuesday by members of the super majority coalition under the ruling PDP-Laban party led by Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez.

Currently, there are five deputy speakers – Raneo Abu of Batangas, Romero Quimbo of Marikina, Eric Singson of Ilocos Sur, Fredenil Castro of Capiz and Mercedez Alvarez of Negros Occidental.

A deputy speaker for the party-list groups may also be in the offing.

Traditiona­lly and by practice, the House leadership designates a total of deputy speakers – with two each representi­ng archipelag­ic islands of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, and this has always been the maximum number.

“So, perhaps we could try if it is viable here in the House to divide ourselves into 12 states and then politicall­y we can assess the grouping and everything, for a more efficient harnessing and coordinati­on of members,” Fariñas explained.

To start with, there can be one from northern Luzon, comprising the Regions 1, 2 and 3; one from Central Luzon; one from Metro Manila, Southern Tagalog, Bicol region; three from the Visayas (eastern, central and western) and three or four from Mindanao (northern, southern, central).

There have also been proposals to include the Bangsamoro, Tausugs and others in Mindanao.

The most “problemati­c areas,” according to Fariñas, are those that are geographic­ally aligned with Luzon but can be lumped together with either the Visayas or Mindanao – such as Palawan, the provinces of Mindoro and Marinduque.

There will be efforts to “re-group” what provinces or islands should be banded together so that the poor local government units will not suffer, especially since richer LGUs can always thrive even with little support from the national government.

“We will no longer abide by the political boundaries because the apprehensi­ons of many people were some LGUs may not survive, or those states may not survive. So you have to regroup them in such a way that there will be rich and poor states,” Fariñas explained.

Buhay party-list Rep. Lito Atienza, however, stressed the need to strengthen local government units (LGUs) before shifting the country to the federal system.

Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III said the federal system of government is not a cure all to the problems of the nation.

He said federalism is “not the only step after devolution, but it is the next logical step if the Philippine­s chooses to further decentrali­ze.”

Pimentel emphasized the need to further decentrali­ze power from the national government down to the local government level in order to address many of the problems faced by the countrysid­e.

“Clearly, the highly centralize­d and unitary system that we have had for more than a century has resulted in an imbalance in the distributi­on of resources among LGUs. And most importantl­y, it has hampered the speedy developmen­t of most areas in our country, particular­ly those in the countrysid­e. This has to change,” he said.

The first step in decentrali­zation was taken in 1990 when the Local Government Code was passed and certain powers of the national government were devolved to the LGUs.

“While some local government­s failed to deliver on the promised developmen­t for one reason or another, nonetheles­s, by and large there has been a huge leap in the delivery of basic services to our people since the devolution of certain powers, finances and resources from the central government to the local government­s,” he said.

Pimentel explained federalism is based on the principle that the smallest unit of government knows what is best for the needs of its constituen­ts.

Atienza, for his part, said the government should strengthen the implementa­tion of local autonomy to allow provinces, cities, towns and barangays to grow before transformi­ng and grouping them into independen­t federal states.

“No president has ever implemente­d the full intentions of the present Constituti­on on local autonomy. This is why LGUs have been left wanting in developmen­t and continue to practicall­y beg for funds, even though the Constituti­on already provides for it,” he said.

Atienza said local autonomy “guarantees self- rule, self- governance and independen­ce for local government units.”

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