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Senator Pimentel
Senator Pimentel Explains Why Constituent Assembly Is Better Than Con-Con
| Senator Pimentel Explains Why Constituent Assembly Is Better Than Con-Con |
Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Q. Pimentel, Jr. (PDP-Laban) today explained
why he believes it would be much better to convene Congress into a Constituent
Assembly than to call a Constitutional Convention (Con-Con) or launch a people’s
initiative to amend the 1987 Constitution and lay the groundwork for a federal
system in the country.
Joint
Resolution 10, filed by Senator Pimentel and supported by 15 other senators,
entrusts the task of amending the 21-year old Constitution to Congress, sitting
as a Constituent Assembly.
Mr. Pimentel said a Constituent Assembly is more advantageous in the sense that
it is a faster and less expensive process aside from being easier to manage and
control.
“Out of the three methods of amending the Constitution, considering all the
factors and circumstances, a Constituent Assembly may yet prove to be the most
expedient way of doing it,” he said.
Senator Pimentel says some lawmakers have estimated that it would cost the
government up to P6 billion if a Con-Con is formed to revise the Charter and
adopt a new system of government.He said that while it will probably take years for a Con-Con to do its job, the
whole process may be undertaken and completed in a matter of months if it is
done by Constituent Assembly.
Senator Pimentel said the Charter amendments that a Constituent Assembly can
pursue are limited to those specified in the joint resolution approved by both
the Senate and House of Representatives.
He pointed out Joint Resolution 10 identifies the articles and provisions in
the Constitution that should be revised or amended. In this way, he said the
people will have no reason to suspect that “there is a hidden agenda” behind
Charter Change.
In contrast, he said that a Con-Con can tackle practically all sorts of
amendments that may be introduced by the elected delegates.
“Conventional wisdom tell us that when you go through the Con-Con route of
amending the Constitution, the moment it begins to work, it becomes a sovereign
entity,” said Pimentel, who served as a delegate to the 1971 Con-Con which
drafted the 1973 Constitution.
Senator Pimentel says that one handicap that senators and congressmen should overcome as members of a Constituent Assembly is the fact that Congress suffers from a credibility problem.
“You cannot stop a Con-Con from what it is doing. You cannot dictate what items
it will take up. In other words, anything goes under a Con-Con. And, therefore,
if you think you can limit a Con-Con to a certain time-frame, that will not
happen.”
Senator Pimentel said some lawmakers have estimated that it would cost the
government up to P6 billion if a Con-Con is formed to revise the Charter and
adopt a new system of government.
“And, therefore, a Con-Con may prove to be a very costly way of doing things.
Number one, you need to hold elections for delegates. After the elections, you
have to pay for the salaries and allowances of the delegates and members of
their staff. Also, they are entitled to a place where they can hold sessions
and hold office. And all of these entail funding,” he explained.
On the other hand, if it through a Constituent Assembly, Mr. Pimentel said the
government will practically not incur additional expenses because the 23
senators and 230 or so congressmen who will compose it will use the same
session halls and meeting rooms and rely on their present staff members in
discharging their amendatory role.
He said one handicap that senators and congressmen should overcome as members
of a Constituent Assembly is the fact that Congress suffers from a credibility
problem.
Senator Pimentel noted that majority of the senators who used to favor a Con-Con
have realized the wisdom of switching their preference to a Constituent
Assembly, which has long been the favored mode of amendments among members of
the House of Representatives. # # #








