Lakas will rise again after split–De Venecia | Inquirer News

Lakas will rise again after split–De Venecia

By: - Correspondent / @yzsoteloINQ
/ 04:35 AM January 22, 2012

DAGUPAN CITY—One of the original leaders of erstwhile administration party Lakas said its members planned to rebuild the organization, which had been “decimated” by its merger with former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (Kampi).

Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman resigned as House minority leader last week owing to a leadership dispute with Kampi members in Congress who remained loyal to Arroyo.

“It is unfortunate that the minority is now hopelessly split, further weakening the [merger of] the Lakas-Kampi-Christian Muslim Democrats,” said former Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. here on Friday.

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“(But) that’s just for the moment. The party needs new leaders, a new political structure, so that it can regain its old glory. We will wait until those controlling the party will make their exit, then we will consider reviving it,” he said.

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De Venecia said Lakas-CMD could disengage from Kampi to make the party “pure again.”

It was Lakas-CMD that propelled its founder, Fidel V. Ramos, to the presidency in 1992.

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In 2008, Arroyo merged the party with Kampi. Ramos and De Venecia objected to the merger.

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Ramos declined the offer to be the merged parties’ chair emeritus.

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Merger’s nullification

De Venecia sought the merger’s nullification before the Commission on Elections, but had lost the bid before the poll body and before the Supreme Court.

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“I resigned as president of Lakas-Kampi because President Ramos and I agreed that we would exit from Lakas while Arroyo was the principal force. [I also left the party] because they illegally effected a merger which was not ratified by the general assembly of Lakas,” he said.

The five-time Speaker said he had kept himself busy as chair of the International Environmental Safety Cooperation Organization, a global climate change group with offices in Beijing, China.

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“The threat of climate change has become more serious than the threats of an atomic bomb,” he said.

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