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Impeachment complaints tabled for discussion as House resumes session

Manila, Philippines – House lawmakers returned to work on Monday, Jan. 26, from a month-long break with two impeachment complaints tabled for discussion.

The session resumed at 3 p.m. today, hours after legislators from the Makabayan bloc endorsed a second impeachment complaint lodged against President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr.

That filing secured the go signal from House Speaker Faustino Dy III for inclusion in the day’s order of business after an appeal by the progressive party-list group.

“We were informed by the Speaker himself this afternoon that he has received our complaint from the Secretary General and that he has asked that it be included in the Order of Business,” ACT Teachers Rep. Antonio Tinio from the minority bloc said in a Viber group message.

The Makabayan bloc-endorsed impeachment complaint is the second in a string of suits against Marcos in a span of one week.

Private lawyer Andre de Jesus last Jan. 19 sought to remove Marcos from office on several grounds, including the latter’s alleged involvement in the arrest of former President Rodrigo Duterte and subsequent turnover to the International Criminal Court at The Hague in Netherlands.

But that first suit, endorsed by a House deputy minority leader, was viewed by critics as a weak bid to oust Marcos, fanning speculation from the Duterte camp that it was a smokescreen meant to undermine successive impeachment complaints and shield the president from more suits given the one-year ban on the impeachment proceedings.

Both complaints are included in the day’s agenda according to a document given to journalists.

Earlier on Monday, House Secretary General Cheloy Garafil personally received the second impeachment complaint this time after her staff last week rejected the submission citing lack of authority.

But Tinio said the group faced a new hurdle: The absence of a guarantee from Garafil that their suit will be referred to the House leadership.

Wala nang duda rito, filed and received by the Office of the Secretary General,” Tinio told journalists at the Batasang Pambansa on Monday morning.

Inaasahan natin ngayong natanggap na niya immediate referral to the Speaker. However, hindi tayo nakakuha ng definite commitment kay Secretary General na ire-refer niya kaagad kay Speaker ang complaint. So hindi natin malaman kung bakit,” he added.

[TRANSLATION:

There is no doubt now that this has been filed and received by the Office of the Secretary General.

We expect that there will be an immediate referral to the Speaker.

However, we did not get a definite commitment from the Secretary General that she will immediately refer this complaint to the Speaker. We do not understand why.]

Garafil’s office has yet to respond to a request for comment.

Missing today’s plenary referral could mean shelving the second suit, and being outcompeted by a first impeachment complaint in the race to be tackled by the House committee on justice – a crucial tipping point where the one-year ban against more suits against the president will be triggered.

Sabi namin paano ho yan baka magkaron ng referral mamaya hindi na kami makasama mamadaliin nyo yung referral to trigger the one-year ban, sabi niya labas na sa kanya yun,” BAYAN president Renato Reyes, Jr. told reporters.

[TRANSLATION: We asked how can this be we fear that there could be another referral later and we will be excluded – the referral of another complaint will be railroaded to trigger the one-year ban. She said that is out of her control.]

Lawmakers Tinio and Gabriela Women’s Party Rep. Sarah Jane Elago then wrote a separate letter seeking the intervention of the House Speaker.

Makabayan’s impeachment bid to remove Marcos from office was anchored on a single ground which, they said, was “the most expansive and flexible”: Betrayal of public trust.

The complainants alleged the president betrayed public trust because of his purported involvement in the corruption scheme that concentrated billions of pesos worth of flood control contracts to a few companies linked to congressmen and public works officials.

PRESIDENT’S SON INHIBITS

Meanwhile, presidential son and House majority leader Ferdinand Alexander “Sandro” A. Marcos inhibited himself from all discussions, deliberations, and proceedings of the House Committee on Rules involving the impeachment complaints filed against his father.

“In view of the impeachment complaints filed against President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., who is my father, I have decided to formally recuse myself from all discussions, deliberations, and proceedings of the House Committee on Rules insofar as these complaints are concerned,” said Marcos, who is also the chairman of the House Committee on Rules.

The Ilocos Norte legislator said the move was not mandated by House rules, but “was guided by a broader responsibility to protect institutional integrity and public trust.”

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