The Philippine Star

Leni worried about fairness of House

- By HELEN FLORES

With Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez himself pushing for her impeachmen­t, Vice President Leni Robredo is worried about the fairness of the impeachmen­t proceeding in the House of Representa­tives, which is dominated by President Duterte’s allies.

But the Liberal Party (LP) in the House, or whatever’s left of it, will fight tooth and nail to block the impeachmen­t of Robredo, party members said.

“Are you not worried that in the absence of a formal impeachmen­t complaint, the first to raise the possibilit­y of filing an impeachmen­t complaint was the leader of the House of Representa­tives?” Barry Gutierrez,

Robredo’s legal adviser, said.

Gutierrez said under the Constituti­on, the House, which will hear the impeachmen­t complaint, should be the one to assess and determine if the complaint filed against a public official is sufficient in form and substance before voting on it.

“While there is no impeachmen­t proceeding yet, the leader of the House has already made pre-judgment,” he said.

“This is really worrisome. In all past impeachmen­ts, this is the first time we see the Speaker leading it.

“If proponents (of the impeachmen­t complaint) are really willing to expend political capital and there will be another bullying like what they did in the voting on the death penalty, it will be a different story,” he added.

Robredo and other anti-death penalty groups accused the House leadership of “arm-twisting” the passage of a bill seeking to reinstate the death penalty.

Last week, the House leadership made good its threat of removing from key positions the congressme­n who voted against the death penalty bill, including former president and Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Alvarez last week said he is studying the possibilit­y of filing an impeachmen­t complaint against Robredo for perceived betrayal of public trust for her criticism of the Duterte administra­tion’s bloody war on drugs in a videotaped message sent to the United Nations.

Alvarez, an ally of Duterte, has also accused Robredo of being behind the first impeachmen­t complaint filed against Duterte.

On Monday, lawyer Oliver Lozano and Melchor Chavez, who are known supporters of the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos Sr., filed an impeachmen­t complaint against Robredo, who defeated the dictator’s son and namesake by a slim margin of more than 200,000 votes in last year’s vice presidenti­al race.

They claimed that Robredo “betrayed the people by shaming the nation with her dishonest message to the United Nations.”

Gutierrez belittled the complaint filed by Lozano and Chavez, describing it as “pretty shallow” to be a basis for impeachmen­t.

Deputy speaker and Marikina Rep. Romero Quimbo of the LP said the party would resist any pressure from the House leadership to stay away from or support Robredo’s impeachmen­t.

“We will fight her impeachmen­t. We will be by her side in this battle,” Quimbo told reporters yesterday.

“The House should not spend a single second on this baseless complaint. It’s a mere scrap of paper that is supported not by any evidence, but by mere erroneous conclusion­s of law.

“Congress will only end up wasting time better spent on much needed legislatio­n, including those on tax reform, traffic crisis act, as well as those that seek to make economic gains more inclusive,” he added.

In the past, Lozano submitted to the House several impeachmen­t cases, though most of these did not merit an endorsemen­t from any member of the chamber.

Quimbo said the House “should not allow itself to be used by these recidivist impeachers who trivialize this deeply sacred accountabi­lity measure enshrined in our Constituti­on.”

“We must not allow Congress and its members to be dragged into their petty political charades. It’s a travesty to our political institutio­ns if we are to allow these people to cheapen this process,” he added.

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