The Philippine Star

Senate, House agree to prioritize Cha-cha

- By JESS DIAZ

Leaders of the Senate and the House of Representa­tives have agreed on a 35-item legislativ­e agenda, which includes the amendment of the Constituti­on.

“We will prioritize the revision of the Constituti­on,” House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas told reporters yesterday after a two-hour meeting of congressio­nal leaders.

He said an amendment of the Charter would have two purposes: to shift the nation to the federal system and to accommodat­e the proposed new Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).

He said the Senate and the House would create a technical working group (TWG) of six or 12 members from each chamber to identify provisions of the Constituti­on that need to be rewritten to achieve the two objectives.

He said the group would work on the BBL-required changes ahead of those related to federalism.

Once the revised BBL-connected provisions are ready, the two chambers would convene as a constituen­t assembly (con-ass) and approve them, he added.

“The amendments could be submitted to the people in a plebiscite that could be held together with the barangay elections that we could postpone for a year,” Fariñas said.

He said all federalism-related proposals pending in the House would be referred to the TWG.

“We agreed on the federal system. As to what model, we did not discuss that,” he said.

Proponents of federalism in the House are Reps. Alfredo Benitez of Negros Occidental, Maximo Rodriguez Jr. of Cagayan de Oro City and Luis Raymund Villafuert­e of Camarines Sur.

Benitez is proposing a mix of federal-presidenti­al system with a two-chamber Congress but with senators elected by region instead of at large nationally.

Rodriguez, on the other hand, is pushing for the classic federal-parliament­ary form with a unicameral or singlecham­ber legislatur­e.

Quezon City Rep. Feliciano Belmonte Jr. is advocating the revision of the Charter’s economic provisions only. Belmonte wants restrictio­ns on the ownership of land and business lifted.

Fariñas said economic provisions would be tackled as well as those relating to the country’s political structure when Congress convenes as a con-ass.

He said plenary work on most of the bills in the agreed common legislativ­e agenda is in its advanced state or already finished in either chamber of Congress.

“We are already finished on many of those measures, like the tax reform bill, death penalty, national land use, free irrigation. Those are pending with the Senate,” he said.

He said among the proposed laws in the common list are bills on national identifica­tion, procuremen­t reform, creation of a disaster response agency and lessen traffic congestion.

“It’s no longer emergency powers, it’s a traffic congestion crisis bill. We intend to repeal all local ordinances making streets as parking areas,” he added.

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