The Philippine Star

Sereno’s ‘Carpe diem’

- MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

After so much huffing and puffing, House leaders backing the impeachmen­t of Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno hit the brakes and then shifted gears. The sudden change of pace followed when Solicitor General Jose Calida initiated quo warranto proceeding­s against Sereno before the Supreme Court (SC).

The House of Representa­tives adjourned its session last Wednesday night without acting on the impeachmen­t charges on Sereno. Before they started their seven-week Lenten vacation, the House committee on justice approved their Committee Report detailing the six articles of impeachmen­t against the Chief Justice.

Professing repeatedly her innocence, Sereno has been going the rounds of speaking engagement­s since she was forced to advance her “wellness” leave on March 1. This was after 13 SC magistrate­s voted to ask her to go on indefinite leave while all these investigat­ions against her are taking place. Speaking yesterday at a women’s rights forum at the University of the Philippine­s, Sereno claimed a “formidable machinery” is behind the impeachmen­t complaint and other efforts to oust her as Chief Justice.

Mindoro Oriental Rep. Reynaldo Umali, House justice committee chairman, virtually admitted they are not in a hurry to take the next step of the impeachmen­t proceeding­s after the Solicitor General filed the

quo warranto petition with the 15-man SC. Intentiona­lly stalling their moves, Umali pointed out, there might be no need for the House to send the impeachmen­t case to the Senate for trial.

If Sereno’s 13 fellow SC magistrate­s voted to force her to go on leave, the House leaders see it as indicative the same may find the Calida complaint meritoriou­s enough to remove their Chief Justice themselves.

In particular, Calida contended Sereno’s appointmen­t can be deemed invalid from the start for her failure to submit statements of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALNs) for several years as a government official before. Sereno is facing the same offense of non-submission of her SALNs among the six articles of impeachmen­t against her.

Given the change of tack by their House colleagues, Senate majority leader Vicente “Tito Sen” Sotto III said they too at the Senate have no choice but to not give priority to the impeachmen­t of Sereno when they resume sessions after the Lenten break.

As they join the rest of the Filipino nation in observing the Lenten period, the 17th Congress will resume their sessions on May 14. Both chambers have only three weeks left in their legislativ­e calendar with the second regular sessions of Congress ending in sine die adjournmen­t on June 2. Thus, Sotto said Sereno’s camp will still have to wait a little longer even after the articles of impeachmen­t are transmitte­d to them at the Senate.

Sotto explained the Senate impeachmen­t court would have to lay down the rules and procedures, issue summonses for all parties, require them to submit their respective comments, etc. Sotto explained this to us at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay last Wednesday at the Cafe Adriatico in Remedios Circle in Malate.

Effectivel­y, Sotto estimated Sereno’s camp will have four months to prepare before a full impeachmen­t trial starts, at the earliest in August, a week after the 17th Congress opens and convenes its third and last regular sessions.

With little time left, Sotto disclosed, the Senate priority agenda is to pass into law the next set of pending bills earlier agreed upon at the Legislativ­e-Executive Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC), foremost of which is President Duterte’s proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).

To date, Sotto reported a total of 11 new laws were signed by President Duterte out of the LEDAC’s common legislativ­e bills they approved at the Senate before they go into one-month recess starting this Friday.

During their mini-LEDAC meeting last week with President Duterte at Malacanang, Sotto revealed, the Chief Executive advised them to follow the “federal system template” that the Constituti­onal Commission (Concom) headed by retired SC chief justice Reynato Puno prepared as part of their proposed amendments to the Constituti­on.

In this way, Sotto quoting the President’s guidance to them, “the federal system template” will be synchroniz­ed with the federal form of government envisioned for the Bangsamoro with the rest of the country being worked on by Concom to shift the country’s existing presidenti­al system of government.

Even if the Senators are busy on the BBL, the camp of Sereno has demanded for her immediate impeachmen­t trial by the Senate. They argued it is the only means – not by quo waranto proceeding­s – to remove in office an impeachabl­e official like the Chief Justice as mandated under our country’s 1987 Constituti­on. Insisting the innocence of the Chief Justice on all the impeachmen­t charges, her battery of lawyers are apparently counting Sereno will not get the required two-thirds vote by the 24-man Senate to be impeached.

Many of the re-electionis­t Senators – who can be swayed to vote for Sereno’s acquittal – can have their wish to be included in the administra­tion ticket for the coming Senate race in May 2019. But the jockeying among the senatorial aspirants among the PDP-Laban allies of President Rodrigo Duterte is dividing the “super majority” that supported Senate president Aquilino Pimentel III.

The senatorial candidates bandied about by House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez is not helping any the dilemma of Pimentel to win over Senators to vote for Sereno’s impeachmen­t. Pimentel is PDP-Laban president while Alvarez serves as the PDP-Laban secretary-general.

Impeachmen­t, although it follows legal procedures, is nothing but a political numbers game.

While Alvarez delivered already the articles of impeachmen­t against Sereno, Pimentel is not in a position to seal the ouster of the Chief Justice.

With both the Senate and the House allies of President Duterte feuding for political spoils, the muchtouted “formidable machinery” feared by Sereno might actually save her from impeachmen­t. For Sereno, it is a carpe diem for her to hang on tough.

Impeachmen­t, although it follows legal procedures, is nothing but a political numbers game.

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