This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 31, September 11-17, 2005
Congress after the
Impeachment: Half-Empty, Half-Full With
the impeachment proceedings against President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in
Congress now over, public perception of the House of Representatives has been
likened to a half-full, half-empty glass. BY
DABET CASTAÑEDA Neophytes and veterans at
the House of Representatives (HoR) who voted “No” to Committee Report No. 1012,
which sealed the death sentence to the impeachment case lodged against President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, agree that Congress is both half-empty and half-full. With the reports that the
158 representatives who “murdered” the impeachment complaint received bribes and
succumbed to pressures from the Palace, pro-impeachment congressmen believe
these have worsened the public’s negative perception on the House as a
government institution. Many of the pro-impeachment
congressmen, one of them confirmed, will be joining mass protests in the next
few weeks to force the removal of Macapagal-Arroyo from the presidency for at
least four constitutional violations. Among other crimes, she has been accused
of stealing the presidency in the 2004 elections. The 51 pro-impeachment
representatives who resisted the perks and pressures by the president to
withdraw the impeachment believe that there are still some who would stand up
not just for what is right and just but more so for what their constituents
expected them to be. In the second inter-faith
gathering of various groups that support the ouster campaign against Macapagal-Arroyo
in De La Salle Greenhills, San Juan City the 51 pro-impeachment congressmen were
given tribute by former President Corazon Aquino and the Bukluran sa Katotohanan
(solidarity for truth)-Youth. In a brief presentation,
the legislators were called at the stage to each receive a certificate, a white
rose and a cap with the words Bayani ng Katotohanan (a hero for the
truth). Disappointing For Deputy Minority Leader
Rodolfo “Ompong” Plaza (lone district, Agusan del Sur), a second-term solon who,
in the middle of one of the House debates screamed “What kind of Congress is
this?”, the House could have used the impeachment proceedings as an opportunity
to redeem itself. Plaza said, “But with the
result there’s only one conclusion: all government institutions have already
been bastardized and destroyed.” For someone who considers
himself a “new” politician since he entered politics only in 2001, Plaza said it
has been an “unfortunately disappointing experience.” Theoretically, neophyte
lady representative Darlene Antonino-Custodio (first district, South Cotabato
and General Santos City) believes in the essence of congress being the voice of
each Filipino. However, she said in a separate Bulatlat interview, it is
regrettable that this representation has been compromised by many of their
colleagues. “Dapat maisip nila na
hindi lamang sariling paninindigan ang ikinompromiso nila ngunit pati ang
kapakanan ng kanilang kinakatawan”
(They should realized that they compromised not just themselves but also the
welfare of their constituents), she said. Terribly painful For another young House
member, it was “terribly painful” that such a significant issue as the
impeachment of the highest leader of the land was decided just by using numbers.
“They wanted us to forget the case and neglect the pieces of evidences we wanted
to present,” said Joel Villanueva (party-list, CIBAC). Just hearing their
colleagues explain their votes gave Villanueva, who shed tears after the
committee decision was read on Sept. 6, “some sort of hopelessness.” Villanueva also blamed the
Commission on Elections (Comelec) for his one-and-a-half-term. His evangelical
party won a seat in the House in the 2001 elections but was proclaimed only nine
months after the 13th Congress has convened because it was only then
that the canvassing for party-list representations were done. He said it is the
same thing now with other party-list groups because the final tally is not yet
over. Most critical “I’ve seen other battles
but I think this is the most critical one apart from the Estrada impeachment,”
said third-term congressman Romeo Acosta (first district, Bukidnon). He said the integrity of
the House could sink deeper if reports of bribes would be proven. “There’s been
lot of manipulation and maneuvering,” he said. “Akusado ang presidente,
gagawin nya lahat. They had to make
sure na ang 79 ay hindi maaabot” (The president was being accused. They
had to make sure the 79 will not be reached), Acosta said. Acosta, who also
participated in the impeachment case against Estrada in 2001, added that the pay
offs during that time are not as large as today. “Maybe because Estrada was
over-confident he probably did not think he would be impeached. And now, GMA had
learned that this early, all things should be done to keep the impeachment from
reaching the Senate,” he said. Pay offs He cited as an example how
the brother of Rep. Aurelio Umali (third district, Nueva Ecija) was promoted as
Customs official in exchange for his “yes” vote to the Justice Committee report.
Rep. Reynaldo Uy (first
district, Western Samar) on the other hand was reportedly persuaded by the
president not to attend the crucial voting day in exchange for the removal of
Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan as commanding officer of the 8th Infantry
Division (ID) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) in Eastern Visayas.
Uy was one of the first
congressmen who signed the amended impeachment complaint based on gross human
rights violations. Many of such cases, he said, were perpetrated by the military
in his region under Palparan’s command. At the early stages of the
impeachment proceedings, Rep. Catalino Figueroa (second district, Western Samar)
also warned that he would support the impeachment case against the president if
Palparan would not be redeployed to another area. A week before the voting day,
Palparan was reassigned as commanding officer of the 7ID based in Fort Magsaysay,
Nueva Ecija. The congressman did not sign the complaint and was a no-show on the
voting day. But while those who
supported the president allegedly received good deals from Malacañang, some
pro-impeachment members of the majority block stand to lose their positions. “While the president is
extending the hand for reconciliation, no less than the majority floor leader
already made an announcement that there will be a reorganization in Congress and
that all members or chairs who joined the impeachment will have to resign,” said
Plaza. Acosta said he knows he
would be among those affected, being chair of the committee on ecology and
environment. “But that’s the risk I took,” said Acosta. “The chairmanship is a
small price to pay. At the end of the day what is a chairmanship for if you
really would see that what is at stake is the (country’s) future?” Jueteng money In a separate interview,
Boy Mayor, a self-confessed jueteng operator in the Bicol region who testified
in the jueteng scandal hearing at the Senate, insinuated that it may have been
jueteng money that made three congresmen from his region support the president.
Mayor said he personally
delivered the jueteng protection money to the three representatives until he
stopped manning the operations in December 2003. But the jueteng payoffs could
still be part of the deals even at this time because the illegal numbers game
had not stopped in the region regardless of government claims that it had
stopped. Reawakening Veteran politician Rep.
Arnulfo Fuentebella (third district, Camaries Sur) said the failed impeachment
process should be a “reawakening” for the members of the House. He believes all is not lost
because there are 51 members of Congress who stood up to restore its
credibility. Fuentebella, a member of the majority bloc, unexpectedly voted
against Committee Report No. 1012. Plaza, on the other hand,
said that what the country needs now is a leader who is honest and who puts
value in integrity. It is for this reason that
the pro-impeachment congressmen are joining protest actions and other activities
that are geared toward the ouster of Macapagal-Arroyo. “It’s hard to predict that
the president will step down. Pero ang katotohanan ay hindi pwede pagtakpan”
(the truth cannot be hidden), said Acosta. But the real vindication,
he said, is when people’s revolts will cease to be a necessity for change, he
said as the crowd in front of La Salle Greenhills sang Bayan Ko, the
signature song of the two people power uprisings in 1986 and 2001. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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