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Senator Pimentel’s Book “Junketing: Senatorial Style” Launched Thursday
| Senator Pimentel’s Book “Junketing: Senatorial Style” Launched Thursday |
Are foreign trips undertaken by members of Congress worth the money of taxpayers or sponsors that is spent on such expensive activity? The answer to this common question is found in a new book entitled “Junketing: Senatorial Style,” authored by Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Q. Pimentel, Jr. (PDP-Laban), which is now off the press.
The 278-page
book will be launched at 3 p.m. Thursday, May 22, 2008, at the Pecson Room, second floor of the
Senate-GSIS Building on Roxas Boulevard, Pasay City, under the sponsorship of the
Senate Library and the Senate Book Club.
The book is a compilation of the reports on 37 overseas trips that Mr. Pimentel
undertook as a senator – mostly at the expense of the organizations or
countries that invited him – from 2001 to 2007. Aside from faithfully
performing his role as the leader of the Senate minority bloc and critic of the
administration and party in power, Senator Pimentel has the distinction of
being the only lawmaker who has presented without fail, a written report on
every conference or mission abroad that he attended.Attending foreign conferences, according to Mr. Pimentel, is part of a
legislator’s job. “It’s broadens his or her legislative horizons and makes the
lawmaker less parochial. It is abused when the legislator concerned simply goes
abroad and uses the occasion and conferences supposed to be attended as an
excuse for going on a junket at the expense of the public till.”
In one chapter of his book, Senator Pimentel narrates that as a current member
of the five-man Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians of the
Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), he and other committee members
worked seven to eight hours a day or longer in week-long sessions. “And if
anyone thinks we do a junket, he should guess again.”
Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo, a former senator himself, will grace
the launching of “Junketing: Senatorial Style” as guest-of-honor and speaker.
Senate President Manuel Villar will speak for the Senate and Speaker Prospero
“Boy” Nograles will speak for the House of Representatives at the book
launching. Former Senate President Franklin Drilon and Senators Juan Ponce
Enrile, Panfilo Lacson and Jamby Madrigal will also say a few words.
Congressman Antonio Cuenco, chair of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
will introduce the guest speaker.
Secretary Romulo said the book “is sure to leave a great impression on those
who will read it and is certain to demand a reexamination of the value of
travel for the committed public official.”
“As each page of Senator Pimentel’s book will show, a journey’s value is
limited only by the objective of the traveler. For Senator Pimentel, every official
trip affords an opportunity to learn new things about the world, to reexamine
one’s values and to renew one’s beliefs that our world can change for the
better,” Secretary Romulo said in his foreword to the book.
In his preface of the book Senator Sharon Carstairs, of Canada, remarked: “They may be called junkets
but they are opportunities to reach out to others. They are opportunities to
share our experiences with other parliamentarians, experiences which are often
very different from our own and to learn from them. Opportunities to learn from
those who are trying to enrich the world through the sharing of ideas and
values. Opportunities to work, to meet and to know genuine heroes like Nene
Pimentel.”Sen. Carstairs is the chairman of the IPU Committee on Human Rights of
Parliamentarians.
Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile wrote on Mr. Pimentel’s book: “It is fascinating
reading. It is clear from his account that his participation in the conferences
he writes of entailed a lot of work and provides useful insights.”
Senator Pimentel, who served as the 19th Senate President, also penned the following
books: Local Government Code Revisited (2007), The Making of Human Security Act
of 2007 (The Philippine Anti-Terrorism Law: Perceptions and Reality), Martial
Law in the Philippines: My Story (2006), and the Cooperative
Code of the Philippines: Theory and Practice with Atty. Mordino
Cua as co-author (1994). # # #








