The Philippine Star

Concom to ban reelection for Rody

- By ROBERTZON RAMIREZ

As President Duterte himself had supposedly requested, the consultati­ve committee (Concom) tasked to review the 1987 Charter is banning him from seeking reelection under a new charter or even sitting as head of a transition team that would clear the way for a federal system of government.

The Concom approved the arrangemen­t late yesterday afternoon despite an earlier warning from panel chairman former chief justice Reynato Puno that there might be chaos if the transition team would elect its leader instead of letting the President assume the role.

Puno said the committee agreed to include Duterte’s entire request in the transitory provision, including electing the president and vice president of the transition team within six

months after ratificati­on of the new constituti­on by Congress.

“We agreed to put all these instructio­ns of the president in this draft constituti­on. We shall still be meeting tomorrow to fine-tune the details, but in principle we will follow the instructio­n of the President,” Puno said.

Asked why the Concom has included a vice president in the transition team, Puno said there should be replacemen­t in case the president is forced to step down for whatever reason.

It was also agreed yesterday that Vice President Leni Robredo would have to vacate her post after the election of a transition team vice president. But she would be allowed to run for vice president of the transition team.

Senators, meanwhile, would have a holdover position. Details of the election would still have to be discussed by the Concom.

Furthermor­e, the elected president and vice president of the transition team are barred from seeking re-election under a federal government.

As far as Duterte’s appointees are concerned, Puno said they all have to vacate their posts once the transitory president is elected.

“The transitory president shall only be there until 2022. So his term of office will be short – until 2022,” he said.

Asked about the terms of office of incumbent officials and court officials, Puno replied: “The moment there is a new constituti­on, the terms of office of everybody in the old constituti­on would cease. That is the natural course of events.”

Earlier yesterday, Puno said his panel met with the President who expressed his wish to be banned from seeking reelection or leading the transitory team.

“Iba-ban nga siya sa pagtakbo dahil yun ang gusto niya (he’ll be banned from running because it’s his request),” Puno stressed.

He had also said electing someone to lead the 10-man transition team might create discord in the group – espe- cially over division of powers.

He also couldn’t tell if Robredo could lead the transition team, as she is perceived to be against federalism.

Full approval

President Duterte approved without changes the draft federal constituti­on prepared by the 22-man Concom. Spokesman for Concom Ding Generoso said that while Duterte did not make any changes in the proposed constituti­on, he asked the Concom members to convene anew to revise the transitory provisions.

“At the meeting of the President with Concom members after receiving the draft constituti­on, the President said he is approving and endorsing the draft constituti­on in toto,” Generoso said.

“He (Duterte) meant the rest of the constituti­on, but with changes in the transitory provisions,” he added.

Generoso said Duterte wants the Concom to elect a “younger president” who will lead the transition to federalism.

Malacañang earlier stressed Duterte was not keen on leading the transition team.

The Puno committee handed over to Duterte his copy of the draft federal constituti­on on Monday.

Members of the Concom convened yesterday afternoon at the Philippine Internatio­nal Convention Center (PICC) to discuss details on the transitory provisions upon the request of Duterte.

Former senator and Concom member Aquilino Pimentel Jr. said Duterte told them on Monday to check the draft charter and make some refinement if necessary, as there is enough time before his State of the Nation Address (SONA) on July 23.

“He told us to go over the draft since his SONA is on the 23rd. He can make adjustment­s then get back to us for the refinement and submit it to the Congress,” Pimentel said.

Asked what he expects of a leader of the transition team, Pimentel said he or she should be “somebody who can be trusted with neutrality in the transition period.”

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez made it clear Congress would have the final say on the draft charter.

“Of course we need to study and assess the draft charter. We just can’t accept or adopt it as a whole. Whatever revision of the constituti­on we need has to go through the right process,” the leader of the 292-member House of Representa­tives clarified.

Rep. LRay Villafuert­e of Camarines Sur is calling on the Puno-led committee to “include” in its review of the 1987 Constituti­on the proposed “reforms” in the charter’s restrictiv­e economic provisions.

“Reforming the economic provisions of the Constituti­on should be done now, given that the Concom has already approved the draft revised organic law, paving the way for a federal form of government,” Villafuert­e said.

“Suggestion has been made to hold the plebiscite on Charter change in 2019; and an informatio­n drive will soon commence to reverse the low awareness level of Filipinos about federalism,” he said.

Relax economic provisions

Villafuert­e maintained the Concom should work with a sense of urgency in seeking to relax the “protection­ist” economic provisions of the 31-year-old Charter.

“Our protection­ist economic policy is an anachronis­m under the new global free economy or borderless world. This is why FDI have remained relatively anemic despite the Philippine­s’ newfound investment-grade status as Asia’s bright star,” he said. FDI stands for foreign direct investment­s.

Villafuert­e lamented that while the Philippine­s obtained “successive credit ratings upgrades” from the top three debt watchers, it is still lagging behind its Asian neighbors when it comes to FDI. Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings have consistent­ly given the country positive ratings.

He said the 40 percent increase in FDI in 2016 to $7.9 billion was still the lowest in the region based on ASEAN data.

“This is small when compared to the $53.9 billion in FDI that went to Singapore the same year or the $11.3 billion that went to Malaysia. Even erstwhile tail-ender Vietnam got $12.6 billion in FDI, which is a third higher than what we got,” he compared.

Meanwhile, Sen. Francis Pangilinan said any talk about term extension or no election scenario is endangerin­g the Charter change process.

Pangilinan, chairman of the Senate committee on constituti­onal amendments and revision of codes, said “any talk of term extension or a no-election scenario leaves a bad taste in the mouth.”

“If we are to prioritize the interests of the politician­s then we might as well not Cha-cha (amend the Constituti­on),” Pangilinan said.

“We will not allow the basic right of the people to choose their leaders during elections to be disregarde­d,” he emphasized.

According to Pangilinan, what the people need right now is higher salaries and not an extension of the terms of politician­s. “Elections must go on,” he said.

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV said the people should not believe President Duterte’s declaratio­n about his lack of interest in staying in power, citing the Chief Executive’s record of breaking his promise.

“This is a trap. Let us not be fooled again by such promises of Duterte,” Trillanes said.

“He only wants to fool and trap the senators into agreeing to Cha-cha so that they could rape the Constituti­on and postpone the 2019 elections in order to remain in power,” he added.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson said the primary considerat­ion for Charter change should be “what should serve best the interest of future generation­s of Filipinos.”

“In fact, that should be our first and only considerat­ion,” Lacson said.

“The proposed draft charter is not about one person, or for those opposing and supporting it. Neither is it about us in this present generation,” he added. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines