The Philippine Star

Senators urged: Be open to Cha-cha

- – Jess Diaz

Senators should be open to proposals to change certain economic and political provisions of the three-decade-old Constituti­on, according to the House of Representa­tives said.

Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano made this appeal over the weekend, saying that the key to moving the Charter change (Cha-cha) initiative­s of several congressme­n forward “will be the relationsh­ip of the House of Representa­tives with the Senate.”

“If senators say we don’t want it, that would be the end for Cha-cha. But we are hoping senators will be open-minded to it,” he said.

Noting that the United States Constituti­on has been amended several times, Cayetano said the country’s Charter is not a document that cannot be changed.

“So there are things that can change, and we’re just not putting it in front and center because we don’t want controvers­y while we’re passing the budget and other priority measures,” he said.

He added that at the “risk of being bashed,” he would propose that one amendment lawmakers should consider is lengthenin­g the three-year term of office for local officials.

“Local government units lack planning, so you need at least four years or possibly five years. Senators have six years, that’s why they can have a longer view,” Cayetano stressed.

He pointed out that after his chamber has finally passed the final version of the proposed P4.1-trillion national budget for 2020, some revenue bills and other priority measures, he would like to see the recommenda­tions of the House committee on constituti­onal amendments.

The committee chaired by Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez, has been conducting hearings on resolution­s to amend the economic provisions of the Constituti­on to relax restrictio­ns on foreign ownership of land and businesses, and on the term of office of lawmakers and local officials.

Among the authors of the resolution­s are Rodriguez and Deputy Speaker Aurelio Gonzales Jr. of Pampanga.

After his initial consultati­ons, Rodriguez said there was “consensus among our resource persons and our colleagues in the House to push for economic Cha-cha.”

“It was felt that allowing more foreign equity participat­ion could lead to more investment­s, and more investment­s would mean more income and jobs for our people,” he said.

Various business groups, including the Joint Foreign Chambers, Makati Business Club and the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, have supported the proposed relaxation of lifting of foreign ownership limitation­s.

Rodriguez said there was also consensus on the proposal to lengthen the term of office of House members and local officials from the present three years to four years or five years.

Gonzales said the prevailing sentiment among lawmakers and LGU officials is that the three-year tenure is too short for them to institute meaningful reforms and projects in their districts, provinces, cities and towns.

He said the present threeterm limit would be retained.

If the House recommends a five-year tenure for congressme­n and local officials, it would most likely propose that senators would have a term of office of five years as well, instead of six years, because of the constituti­onal mandate of synchroniz­ing elections.

In the past, Cha-cha did not move forward in Congress because the House was insisting that it could do it alone without the participat­ion of the Senate as long as it obtained the required threefourt­hs vote “of all members of Congress” for any amendment, even if those members were all congressme­n.

There was even a suggestion to convince even just one senator to vote with House members so they could claim Senate participat­ion on Chacha.

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