Philippine Daily Inquirer

Proposed federaliza­tion is a fixed deal

- HERMENEGIL­DO C. CRUZ

The move to amend the Constituti­on through a constituen­t assembly (Conass) is an effort to ram down the nation’s collective throat the shift to federaliza­tion even while obscuring the key issue of dynastic rule in the country.

The advantage of amending the Charter through another method was demonstrat­ed in the proceeding­s of the 1971 Constituti­onal Convention (Con-con). The key issue then was the choice between the presidenti­al and the parliament­ary form of government, and the candidates to the convention presented their stand as to which form was worthy of support. Filipinos elected in overwhelmi­ng numbers those delegates who would vote to maintain the presidenti­al form of government.

(A number of us still remember the sordid developmen­ts as exposed by the delegate from the first district of Leyte, Eduardo Quintero. A retired ambassador, Quintero revealed at an assembly of the Con-con delegates in May 1972 that he had been receiving money in envelopes intended to sway him to favor the parliament­ary form of government that then President Ferdinand Marcos had been pushing in order to perpetuate himself in power. Quintero said he believed the envelopes had come from Imelda Marcos.)

If weuse the Con-con approach today, the people, as in the early 1970s, will be given an opportunit­y to decide firsthand the issue of the unitary vs. the federal system of government. The people will be enabled to make their preference known based on the platforms of the delegates they will elect to the Con-con. As shown by the Quintero case, we are capable of electing delegates with integrity, who will honor their commitment­s to the people. There will be exhaustive discussion­s on federaliza­tion, with the Con-con candidates debating the merits of the choices. At present, there are no such discussion­s; the informatio­n provided to the public is one-sided, all citing the supposed advantages of federaliza­tion while overlookin­g its disadvanta­ges.

As Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman pointed out recently, a Con-ass would become “a virtual rubber stamp” of President Duterte. Indeed, a Con-ass approach ensures a fixed deal: The proposed constituti­on that will be presented to the people is a finished product; they will be asked outright to choose between a federal and a unitary system of government without being fully informed of the issues.

Omitted in the whole process is the allimporta­nt issue of political dynasties. A constituti­on drafted by the present dynast-dominated Congress will have a predictabl­e outcome. It will, like our present Constituti­on, make a showcase effort to abolish dynasties—an effort without substance. A convention made up of delegates elected by the peo- ple can better address this issue. As in the proposed shift to federaliza­tion, the prospectiv­e delegates will also present to the public their platforms on political dynasties. In fact, the issue of political dynasties underpins the initiative­s to change our form of government.

In 1969, I was a recipient of a training grant from the Unctad (United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t) in Geneva, on the promotion of foreign trade. A part of our orientatio­n training was a lecture by a Swiss professor who discussed the features of the Swiss government. He fielded many questions as to why Switzerlan­d seems to be the only successful federal system of government in the world. To paraphrase his remarks: “We are a well-discipline­d people. We know what to expect from each other; we also know what our government can do and cannot do in our behalf. Thus, any system of government will work in Switzerlan­d.”

The question we should ask is: Given that we will have a Con-ass-initiated constituti­on that will be prepared by members of political dynasties, can whatever form of government we adopt that is dominated by dynasties be run efficientl­y? Filipinos should not be hoodwinked; they should consider the issue of political dynasties when they vote on the proposed new constituti­on.

Hermenegil­do C. Cruz was accredited as Philippine ambassador to the United Nations in 1984-86 and to Moscow in 19861990.

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