The Philippine Star

‘House SALN restrictio­ns may be unconstitu­tional’

- By ALEXIS ROMERO – With Helen Flores

The House of Representa­tives’ new rules on accessing its members’ statements of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN) may violate the Constituti­on and are not in line with efforts to promote transparen­cy, Malacañang said yesterday.

The chamber recently adopted House Resolution 2467, which states that plenary approval is needed to access a lawmaker’s SALN. Under the resolution, requesting parties need to pay P300 for each copy of the SALN and disclose the purpose for making the request.

“Such procedure may be perceived as a transgress­ion of Article XI of the Constituti­on, requiring any public official to submit a SALN in relation to Article II thereof, which guarantees the right of the people to informatio­n on matters of public concern,” presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said.

“Any stringent measure, which burdens the people in obtaining public informatio­n may not be consistent with transparen­cy and accountabi­lity of public officials,” he added.

Panelo noted that under the Constituti­on, the SALNs of people in government should be open to the public. He noted that the Charter contains a provision highlighti­ng the accountabi­lity of public officials.

“We hope the House deliberate­s more on this because it may be running the risk of being questioned later on,” he said.

Despite Malacañang reservatio­ns about the SALN rules of the House, Panelo said the executive branch would not stop the chamber from implementi­ng them. He said taxpayers may question the legality of the procedures before the court.

Panelo noted that President Duterte issued Executive Order 2 on the freedom of informatio­n (FOI) to make the SALNs of officials in the executive branch available to the public and to promote transparen­cy.

The move of the House of Representa­tives to impose stricter rules on the disclosure of lawmakers’ SALN is a step backward in the fight for transparen­cy in government, Vice President Leni Robredo said.

Robredo emphasized that the SALN allows the public to know public officials better.

“For them to make an exemption, where stricter rules will apply in the release of SALN of House members is unfair,” she said.

“Does that mean that congressme­n should be more protected compared to ordinary public servants? Why do they have to hide it,” she said.

The House recently adopted a resolution that requires plenary approval before a lawmaker’s SALN may be accessed by the public, including the media.

“I hope they will change it because this is a major setback in our efforts to have transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in government,” the Vice President said.

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