The Philippine Star

Appreciati­ng the work of the Concom

- BOBIT S. AVILA

Ihave always been wary of reports coming from the surveys of Pulse Asia because as have always said in more ways than one, the survey questions can be tailor-made to suit the group that has paid for the survey. The latest Pulse Asia survey on Charter Changes was out a week ago when they reported that 44 percent of Filipinos opposed the move to amend the Constituti­on. That survey, conducted last July 2 to 8 with 1,200 respondent­s, also showed that 39 percent of Filipinos support the proposal to shift to a federal form of government, compared to 33 percent who are against it.

In truth, only the intellectu­als know what is good for the nation, especially when it comes to amending the Constituti­on. It is a fact that a great majority of the Filipino people have not even read the contents of the Philippine Constituti­on… so whether they oppose its amendments or not is totally irrelevant. What this nation need is a fresh start with a fresh constituti­on devoid of political patronage and with strong institutio­ns that do not tolerate abuses by government officials, especially corruption.

I understand that the constituti­onal committee (concom) headed by former Chief Justice Reynato Puno has proposed to return our political way of life to a two-party system. Indeed, if the Philippine political system was dubbed as “dysfunctio­nal” it is due to the reality that we have a parliament­ary like multi-party system but with a presidenti­al form of government. This is the system that Filipinos have been living with since the start of the 1987 Cory Constituti­on that former Chief Justice Hilario Davide, Jr. declared as “the best” Constituti­on we ever had, which is why he is against Cha-cha.

Another earth shattering issue that the concom has tackled was the proposal to ban political dynasties. But after due deliberati­on, the decision by 10-9 of the concom members was to “regulate” political dynasties, where the panel decided to prohibit an incumbent official’s relatives from the first and second degrees of consanguin­ity and affinity from running for public office. Included in a person’s first degree of consanguin­ity, or relationsh­ip by blood, are his parents and children, while grandparen­ts, brothers or sisters, and grandchild­ren are within the second degree.

Finally, the concom tackled one of the most sensitive political issues that has plagued our political way of life for many decades…it is called “turncoatis­m” a.k.a. political butterflie­s. This is the changing of political parties like one changing his underwear. This is why politician are always in power for decades and decades because all they need to do is switch allegiance to the powersthat-be and to the dismay of their political rivals, they are still inside the proverbial, “kulambo!”

Concom proposes to prohibit switching of political parties while in office. Another suggestion is to prohibit switching of political parties two years before elections and two years after the election. Any

violation of these rules, will ban the turncoat from running in the next elections. These may just be mere suggestion­s, but if the Concom is serious and this gets voted when we have Charter changes, then it would certainly change the political landscape of the Philippine­s.

Least you have forgotten, party-switching has created monolith political parties that have dominated past and present administra­tions – from the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL) under then Pres. Ferdinand Marcos, to the Laban ng Demokratik­ong Pilipino (LDP) during the term of Pres. Corazon Aquino, followed by the Lakas-NUCD-UMDP founded by Pres. Fidel Ramos, the Laban ng Makabayang Masang Pilipino (LAMMP) of Pres. Joseph “Erap” Estrada, and the Liberal Party (LP) under Benigno Aquino III, and most recently the PDP-Laban under President Rodrigo Duterte.

I would like to believe that if all that we have written today about the work of the Concom would be included in the up and coming changes to the Constituti­on, I’m sure that the ordinary Filipino would embrace these honest-to-goodness changes in our political way of life… for the betterment of Filipino society.

* * * With Tourism Secretary Wanda Tulfo Teo out of the Tourism Department (whether she was fired or asked to resign, find this out yourself), because of the P60 million in advertisem­ents that the DOT placed in a television program produced and hosted by her brothers, Ben and Erwin Tulfo, and broadcaste­r Alex Santos, this fiasco is finally over and hopefully lessons are learned from this incident. Meanwhile, Sec. Teo was replaced by Agricultur­e Undersecre­tary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat, whom we know so little of. I do know that she is the daughter of a good friend, former Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo, so she has good genes at the very least. * * * Email: vsbobita@gmail.com

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