Philippine Daily Inquirer

Where to find answers ‘in aid of legislatio­n’

-

“INQUIRIES IN aid of legislatio­n” form part of our lawmakers’ constituti­onal powers. During the investigat­ions, resource persons are invited to get their inputs on how a proposed law could be crafted or an existing law amended.

But if these resource persons are either cajoled, intimidate­d, shouted at, embarrasse­d, or practicall­y threatened with imprisonme­nt, what relevant inputs could be derived from them in the investigat­ions? We have been witnesses to about a hundred inquiries in aid of legislatio­n, but we still have to hear from our legislator­s about a particular law enacted or existing laws amended on the basis of such investigat­ions.

In his Nov. 11, 1995, column in the INQUIRER, former Supreme Court associate justice Isagani A. Cruz decried a Senate investigat­ion where he said “I thought some of the senators were grandstand­ing and that some of the witnesses were unfairly treated, also for public consumptio­n.” He lamented how legislator­s could “conjure all kinds of excuses to hold legislativ­e investigat­ions where they can project their profiles on television while competing for the limelight with the witnesses.”

While the article was written in 1995, it’s practicall­y the same situation we have at present, where such congressio­nal inquiries are conducted, without passing specific laws resulting from such investigat­ions. Like the lamentatio­n of Justice Cruz, what we only see “is a reprise of the old-time zarzuela, with a few glamorous actresses, some discomfite­d victims, and plenty of swaggering villains in the cast.”

Perhaps there is a need to stop, in the meantime, all these investigat­ions in aid of legislatio­n. If our lawmakers want to know the loopholes or problems in an existing law, they or their staff could attend court trials to observe cases in court where an existing law intended to be amended is at issue.

On the basis of the arguments and examinatio­n of witnesses conducted by the lawyers in these cases, as well as the commentari­es of the judges or justices, the lawmakers could properly assess what specific changes should be made on existing laws or the need to enact new ones. Inside the courts, these legislator­s would hear both sides and not only those they want to hear in a biased and politicall­y motivated investigat­ion in Congress. —ROMULOB. MACALINTAL,

Las Piñas City

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines