The Philippine Star

House leaders vow to pass 2020 budget in October

- – Jess Diaz

Incoming leaders of the House of Representa­tives vowed yesterday to have the proposed P1.4trillion national budget for 2020 approved in October.

“We should be able to pass the budget bill, under TaguigPate­ros Rep. Alan Peter Cayetano as speaker, before Congress takes its traditiona­l break in late October,” Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuert­e said before the weekend.

Yesterday, Cayetano said he met with President Duterte’s son and newly elected Davao City Rep. Paolo Duterte, whom he

thanked for “our talk on what the country needs and how we can put together a very responsive Congress.”

In a Facebook post, Cayetano also praised Duterte for “accepting the challenge for being the next deputy speaker for political affairs.” Cayetano’s staff said the meeting was held at Bonifacio Global City and that it took more than an hour and a half. No other details were given.

Villafuert­e, meanwhile, said it is the consensus of House members “to avoid the kind of protracted and acrimoniou­s deliberati­ons that led to the four-month delay in the passage of the 2019 General Appropriat­ions Act.”

Early approval of the budget would also give the Senate enough time to pass its own version by December, allowing both chambers to come up with a common version for submission to President Duterte before yearend, he said.

This would not lead to a reenactmen­t of the previous year’s spending law, as what happened this year, he added.

Villafuert­e is a partymate of Cayetano in the Nacionalis­ta Party. He was an appropriat­ions committee vice chairman in the last Congress. He will most likely be nominated for the vice chairmansh­ip or given another key position.

Enactment of the 2019 budget was delayed by wrangling over pork barrel insertions initially between then budget secretary Benjamin Diokno and House members, and later between congressme­n and senators.

The budget reached the President’s desk in April. He signed it, but not after deleting more than P95 billion worth of last-minute pork barrel fund realignmen­ts made by House leaders.

The Senate recommende­d the deletion, which was supported by the Department of Budget and Management under acting Secretary Janet Abuel.

The administra­tion’s economic managers blamed the lower-than-expected economic growth in the first quarter to the budget delay.

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