Philippine Daily Inquirer

JBC is a farce

- Manuel F. Almario

THE INVITATION by the Judicial and Bar Council for all nominees for chief justice to a job “interview” is demeaning to both the nominees and the Supreme Court itself.

Justices of the Supreme Court are chosen; they do not apply for the job. In the United States, from which we borrowed many of our democratic concepts and practices, the President nominates the justice, and the nomination is confirmed by the Senate after a proper hearing by a bipartisan judiciary committee. When a vacancy occurs, the President conducts a search for a nominee, aided by his staff and advisors. The potential nominee is not even aware that he or she is being vetted until notificati­on by the Office of the President.

The nominee’s background is examined by the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, which submits a report to the Senate judiciary record to determine suitabilit­y for office, then holds a hearing to question him or her about judicial record, political philosophy, ideology, and anything else deemed appropriat­e. The committee then makes a recommenda­tion to the Senate, which approves or disapprove­s the nomination by majority vote.

Under the Philippine­s’ 1935 Constituti­on, the procedure was for the President to make the nomination. It is then submitted to the Commission on Appointmen­ts (CA), which is composed of 24 members (12 each from the House of Representa­tives and the Senate). If the CA disapprove­s by majority vote, the President makes another selection.

Thus, there was a real check and balance, as the CA is a body independen­t of the Office of the President. This provision of the 1935 Charter may be considered an improvemen­t over the US procedure, because it allowed both chambers of Congress to participat­e in the appointmen­t of a justice.

Under the 1972 Philippine Constituti­on, only the President had the power to appoint the justices of the Supreme Court and judges of the lower courts. No check and balance, in accord with the dictatorsh­ip imposed by Ferdinand Marcos. But under the 1987 Cory Constituti­on, a Judicial and Bar Council was establishe­d to make a list of at least three nominees from which the President selects the justice.

The JBC has eight members, who serve for a term of four years. They are the Chief Justice, who presides as ex officio chair, the justice secretary, a representa­tive of the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s (IBP), a professor of law, a retired member of the Supreme Court, a representa­tive of the private sector, and one representa­tive each of the House and the Senate.

Except for the two Congress representa­tives, all are appointed by the President and are normally expected to follow what he/she dictates. Hence, the check and balance over appointmen­ts to the judiciary was abolished. It is a dictatorsh­ip in disguise.

Moreover, legal practition­ers from the IBP and the “private sector” (whatever that means) are included in the JBC as presidenti­al appointees, injecting private and profession­al interest in the selection of justices and judges. Legal practition­ers may expect to gain some advantage if appointed to the JBC because of influentia­l connection­s to the anointed one. (That is why the IBP tended to favor then Chief Justice Renato Corona in the impeachmen­t case.)

The JBC is a farce, making possible the appointmen­t of mediocre and self-serving justices, and habitually kowtowing to the appointing power. We should go back to the system establishe­d by the 1935 Constituti­on in which a real check and balance was maintained in appointmen­ts to the judiciary.

The US system in appointing justices has worked effectivel­y. The US Senate has rejected certain nominees not just for their lack of personal integrity but also for their positions on civil liberties, human rights, and social and political issues. One noteworthy case involved former Attorney General and Yale law professor Robert Bork, who was nominated to the Supreme Court in 1987 by President Ronald Reagan. His nomination was strongly opposed by civil rights and women’s groups for his “stated desire to roll back civil rights decisions” by previous courts.

The late Sen. Ted Kennedy took the Senate floor to oppose Bork’s nomination, declaring: “Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchil­dren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists could be censored at the whim of the government, and the doors of the federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens for whom the judiciary is—and often the only—protector of the individual rights that are the heart of our democracy...”

As solicitor general under President Richard Nixon, Bork was responsibl­e for the “Saturday Night Massacre”—Nixon’s firing of special prosecutor Archibald Cox and his deputies for requesting the submission of the White House tapes that implicated Nixon in the Watergate scandal. He was considered a loyal political operator of the disgraced President. (Corona was impeached by the Senate for, among other things, showing partiality to former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in her attempt to leave the country despite pending court cases.)

On the other hand, President Barack Obama’s nomination of Sonia Maria Sotomayor in 2009 as associate justice of the Supreme Court—its first Hispanic justice and its third female justice—was approved by the US Senate by a 68-31 vote despite opposition from the Republican­s. Public opinion was sharply divided over her nomination because of her Latino background, with US Rep. Newt Gingrich at one time calling her a “racist”.

Sotomayor also refused to answer when asked what her stand would be if the decision in Roe vs. Wade, which legalized abortion in the United States, were brought before her. But her integrity and prudent decisions as a judge in the district and appellate courts won her the support of the Senate and much of the American public.

One would not expect the eight members of the JBC, most of whom are presidenti­al appointees, to publicly debate over their choices for the Supreme Court. They operate as a semisecret chamber. Since the JBC was establishe­d, there has been no public debate over the qualificat­ions, opinions and judicial records of the nominees.

In the past under the 1935 Constituti­on, when the President took full responsibi­lity for the nomination of a justice, and Congress, through the CA, shared in the responsibi­lity, the Philippine­s had great justices like Jose Abad Santos, Jose P. Laurel, Claro M. Recto and JBL Reyes, whose integrity and erudite decisions resonate through the years.

We should return to the CA or the Senate the power to confirm or ratify presidenti­al appointmen­ts to the Supreme Court and the lower courts. With elected people’s representa­tives, and not only a cabal of eight, participat­ing in the selection, perhaps we will get a more effective, wiser and more righteous judiciary.

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