The Philippine Star

House to tackle federalism next

- By DELON PORCALLA

Federalism will be the next order of business at the House of Representa­tives after tackling the death penalty.

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez hopes President Duterte will soon appoint the members of the constituti­onal commission – which may be led by retired chief justice Reynato Puno – for purposes of shifting to a federal system of government.

The 25-man body will be tasked to revise the 1987 Constituti­on leading to replacemen­t of a highly centralize­d presidenti­al government with that of a federal and parliament­ary system where Congress will be converted into a unicameral body.

“After we passed the death penalty bill, I’m just awaiting the appointmen­t of the commission­ers who will be tasked to draft a revised constituti­on,” Alvarez said, following his submission of a draft executive order creating the body composed of legal luminaries.

The Speaker said Congress – the House of Representa­tives and the Senate – will be convening into a constituen­t assembly (con-ass) that will study and scrutinize the draft charter the con-com will submit to the lawmakers.

Among the proponents of con-ass were Reps. Albee Benitez of Negros Occidental and Robert Ace Barbers of Surigao del Norte, whose pending resolution­s have been incorporat­ed into one.

“Once they (con-com members) finish the draft constituti­on, we can convene Congress into a constituen­t assembly so that we can begin the debates,” Alvarez said on the proposed shift to a presidenti­al-unitary form of government to a parliament­ary-federal system.

Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuert­e shared Alvarez’s sentiment, saying it is about time Congress intensifie­s its deliberati­ons on Charter change to propel the country’s economic growth by ensuring equal distributi­on of government resources nationwide.

“The shift to a federal system will spell inclusive growth, which means spreading from imperial Manila to the countrysid­e the benefits of being one of Asia’s fastest growing economies,” the former threetime governor stressed.

Villafuert­e sits as vice chairperso­n of the House committee on local government.

He said the 2017 national budget signed into law by Duterte in December provides the government with an “auspicious start in realizing its inclusive growth agenda, with federalism providing the guarantee to sustain it.”

Republic Act 10924, the first General Appropriat­ions Act under the Duterte administra­tion, has “the hallmarks of a budget for real change that would help the government transform the economy into a truly inclusive one that could be felt by Filipinos.”

He said the benefits of the nearly P500billio­n internal revenue allotment for 2017 and the additional P24.6-billion local infrastruc­ture under the Local Government Support Fund would spread not just to the capital, but to other urban centers across the country.

This year’s GAA allocation of P486.9 billion for IRA – which correspond­s to the 40 percent share of local government units of the national internal revenue taxes – represents a 13.6 percent increase in the previous fiscal year’s IRA share of P428.62 billion.

He said the IRA’s increase is much higher than the growth of the 2017 GAA of 11.6 percent.

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