Padilla: Bid to amend charter’s economic provisions now dead, ‘Political naman’

Sen. Robinhood Padilla seeks clarification from the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) during the hearing of the Committee on Ways and Means on bills seeking to extend the availment of estate tax amnesty, if the proposals would benefit the family of President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. Padilla was referring to the decision of the Supreme Court on the unpaid estate taxes of the Marcoses since 1991 that ballooned to an estimated P203 billion. “Will the family of President Marcos benefit from this bill, as critics have been claiming?” Padilla asked in Filipino Friday, May 19, 2023. Assistant Commissioner Larry Barcelo of the BIR Legal Service, in response, noted that the current bill carries the same restrictions and limitations provided under Republic Act (RA) 11213 or the Tax Amnesty Act and RA 11568 or an Act extending the Estate Tax Amnesty including the basis for availment. (Voltaire F. Domingo/Senate PRIB)

Sen. Robin Padilla’s file photo during a Senate hearing. (Voltaire F. Domingo/Senate PRIB)

MANILA,  Philippines—The proposed  amendments to economic provisions in the 1987 Constitution  is now “dead,” Senator Robin Padilla declared on Thursday.

According to Padilla,  only four senators — all belonging to PDP-Laban— backed the draft report  earlier released by the Senate  committee on constitutional  amendments and revision which he chairs.

The four include him, Senators Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa, Christopher “Bong” Go and Francis Tolentino.

“Ang malungkot po, talaga pong ang yung apat lang na PDP-Laban ang sumasang-ayon po dun sa committee report. Yung iba pong mga kasama natin na mga ginagalang natin, wala po silang sagot o pirma sa pinadala natin,” Padilla said in a press briefing.

(It’s sad that only four members of PDP-Laban agree with the committee report. Some of our colleagues whom we respect did not provide any response or signature to our submission.)

But he said he is no longer surprised since his colleagues had been saying all along that  the proposed amendments had no future in the Senate.

“Kung (dati) naghihingalo siya, ngayon namatay na,” the  senator later said.

(If it was in critical condition before, now it’s dead.)

Padilla clarified only the push for amendments to economic provisions is dead, and not the entire charter change bid.

There are other measures pending in the Senate seeking to amend the Constitution, particularly its political provisions.

“Kung ayaw nila ng economic provisions, political naman,” he said.

(If they don’t like economic provisions, then let’s talk about political [provisions.])

One of these proposals would allow a sitting president to seek another term, according to the senator, noting that the current six-year term is not enough for a good leader.

“Sa akin po? Six years, kulang sya para sa isang magaling na presidente. Pero para sa isang engot na presidente, yung six years sobra, sobra yun,” Padilla said.

(For me? Six years is not enough for a good president. But for a stupid president, those six years are excessive. Way too much.

“So sana maging four years na lang to — four years, four years — dahil yan naman ay hindi bago. Dating nasa Constitution na yan at na-practice na yan, so bakit hindi natin balikan yun?”

(So hopefully, it will be reduced to just four years— four years, four years — because that is not new. It used to be in the Constitution and has been practiced before. So why don’t we revisit that?)

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