The Philippine Star

With Leni threatened, Bongbong to push protest

- By EDU PUNAY

As the House leadership threatens Vice President Leni Robredo with impeachmen­t, the late dictator’s son Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. might take her place.

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said that if Robredo is removed from office after impeachmen­t in the House of Representa­tives and finding of guilt by the Senate, Marcos could claim the post.

But a resolution of the Presidenti­al Electoral Tribunal favoring the protest filed by Marcos in the 2016 vice presidenti­al race would be necessary even if Robredo is successful­ly removed from office.

“Under our law, it is the third highest official that shall immediatel­y succeed the vacancy in the vice president post,” Aguirre explained to The STAR yesterday, referring to Senate President Aquilino Pimentel III.

Aguirre cited the order of succession in the top elective posts under Article VII, Section 7 of the Constituti­on, where the Senate president is second in line of succession to the vice president. Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, who announced last week the plan to impeach Robredo, is the next in line, followed by Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno.

The Constituti­on, however, also gives the President the power to nominate a replacemen­t for a vacant vice presidenti­al post from among members of the Senate and House, subject to approval of a majority of Congress voting separately.

This was the case when former senator Teofisto Guingona Jr. was appointed vice president in 2001 when Gloria MacapagalA­rroyo assumed the presidency after the EDSA 2 people power revolution ousted former president Joseph Estrada on plunder charges.

Aguirre opined that the immediate succession by Pimentel is without prejudice to the ruling of the PET in the pending protest of Marcos.

“If the PET rules later on in favor of the protest, then Bongbong will take over the post,” he added.

He also said that the possible removal from office of Robredo via impeachmen­t is without prejudice or without effect to the PET protest of Marcos.

The PET case, however, is still in the preliminar­y stage nine months after it was filed by Marcos.

Earlier this month, Marcos asked the PET to now hear his election protest against Robredo and set the case for preliminar­y conference by dismissing the alleged dilatory pleadings of the Vice President.

Marcos filed the protest on June 29, 2016, claiming that the camp of Robredo cheated in the automated polls in May 2016. He sought annulment of about a million votes cast in the provinces of Lanao del Sur, Basilan and Maguindana­o.

Robredo filed her answer in August and sought the dismissal of the protest for lack of merit and jurisdicti­on of PET.

Robredo won the vice presidenti­al race with 14,418,817 votes or 263,473 more than Marcos who got 14,155,344 votes.

Duterte’s lawmakers back Leni impeachmen­t

Asked for his opinion on the plan of Alvarez to initiate an impeachmen­t complaint against Robredo, Aguirre said the burden would be on the accuser.

“She could be impeached if they could prove that her claim has no factual bases and it greatly damaged the country’s image and economy,” he suggested.

Solicitor General Jose Calida, for his part, has supported the impeachmen­t plan against Robredo for betraying the government by slandering President Duterte and his administra­tion before the United Nations commission on narcotic drugs.

Calida branded as a “treasonous act” the Vice President’s video message to the UN where she criticized President Duterte’s war on drugs and said that over 7,000 fell prey to extrajudic­ial killings of policemen and vigilantes.

Robredo’s video message, posted by the DRCNet Foundation on YouTube last March 13, was played at the “Human Rights Challenge: Responding to Extrajudic­ial Killings in the Drug War,” a side session for the 60th United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs annual meeting last March 16 at the Vienna Internatio­nal Center.

Calida said he agreed with Alvarez that Robredo “should be rightfully condemned for slandering and selling out our country and its leaders before the UN.”

He vowed to lend the legal services of his office as “tribune of the people” to help in the proposed impeachmen­t of the Vice President, saying it is “unfortunat­e” that Robredo “will reap the people’s wrath and contempt.”

Alvarez announced his plan after linking Robredo to the impeachmen­t complaint filed last Thursday by Rep. Gary Alejano of party-list group Magdalo against Duterte.

Robredo and Alejano denied this allegation.

The super majority coalition of Duterte’s allies in the House is expected to throw out Alejano’s complaint. But the coalition has the numbers to impeach Robredo.

Duterte’s allies also enjoy a majority in the Senate, which will try Robredo in case she is impeached by the House.

Alvarez believed that the Vice President might have betrayed public trust in her video message to the UN that destroyed the country before the internatio­nal community.

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