Saturday, September 20, 2008

Next Napocor chief not Defensor - Palace exec

Not defeated senatorial candidate Michael Defensor but an official of the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management (PSALM) Corp will likely become the next head of the government-run National Power Corporation (Napocor).

According to Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, Froilan Tampinco, vice president of PSALM Asset Management and Electricity Trading, appears to be the logical choice to replace Cyril del Callar, Napocor president and chief executive officer.

"Ang palagay ko ay isang taga loob din, isang senior official ... ah Tampinco, parang ganoon, I know taga-loob (I know an insider will replace del Callar ... ah, yes, Tampinco. I know it's an insider who will replace del Callar)," Ermita said on government-run dzRB radio on Saturday.

Earlier, press secretary and presidential spokesman Jesus Dureza denied knowledge about reports that Tampinco would succeed del Callar.

Cerge Remonde, head of the Presidential Management Staff, earlier belied speculations that Defensor would take the top Napocor post, saying Defensor “now wants to be private citizen Mike."

Palace mum on Defensor taking over Napocor top post

Malacañang remained mum Saturday on speculations that defeated administration senatorial bet Michael Defensor will take over as president of the National Power Corp. after the resignation of Cyril del Callar.

Presidential Management Staff (PMS) head Cerge Remonde said that the last time they talked, Defensor had said he wanted to remain in the private sector.

"I am not in a position right now to comment on that issue," he said on government-run dzRB radio, when asked who will replace del Callar.

Del Callar resigned from his post, citing health reasons.

On the other hand, Remonde noted Defensor's name surfaces when there is a vacant government position. Defensor's last government post was head of a task force on the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3.

Palace mum on Defensor taking over Napocor top post

Malacañang remained mum Saturday on speculations that defeated administration senatorial bet Michael Defensor will take over as president of the National Power Corp. after the resignation of Cyril del Callar.

Presidential Management Staff (PMS) head Cerge Remonde said that the last time they talked, Defensor had said he wanted to remain in the private sector.

"I am not in a position right now to comment on that issue," he said on government-run dzRB radio, when asked who will replace del Callar.

Del Callar resigned from his post, citing health reasons.

On the other hand, Remonde noted Defensor's name surfaces when there is a vacant government position. Defensor's last government post was head of a task force on the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3.

"(The last time we talked, he said) he wants to be Private Citizen Mike," Remonde said.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Pork barrel row at boiling point

If you happen to visit the Senate one of these days, chances are you will read a common sign on the front door of the offices of some senators which reads: “No requests for projects, monetary donations or medical assistance being entertained.” Whether you’re there to seek assistance or not, you are bound to be dismayed, as you get the feeling that visitors like you are unwelcome. And you are tempted to ask this question: Aren’t the honorable senators duty-bound to lend a helping hand to their constituents in times of need?

If you’re in the shoes of the senators, you have no choice but to resort to such an unpleasant act even at the risk of becoming the butt of criticisms. For how can you extend help, in cash or in kind, to the people coming in droves to your office when you do not have the means to do so? Of course, not all the senators have this predicament. And they trace this predicament to the non-release of their pork barrel allocations.

Would you believe that almost all senators who are not allied with the administration are complaining that they have not been receiving their share of the pork barrel—officially called Priority Development Assistance Fund— amounting to P200 million each a year— for a long time now? Many of them, like Senators Rodolfo Biazon, Aquilino Pimentel Jr., Francis Pangilinan and Pia Cayetano, say their pork barrel releases have been withheld since 2005 or 2006. Neophyte Senators Alan Peter Cayetano and Francis Escudero grumble that they have not gotten any funds for their pet projects since their election to the Upper Chamber. Even Senator Loren Legarda, a kumadre of President Arroyo, says that she has been unsuccessful in securing the release of her PDAF despite numerous requests and followups with the Budget Department.

Senate President Manuel Villar Jr. confirms the indefinite freeze on pork barrel projects of opposition senators. And this includes his own funding allocation. Villar says he has to dip from his own pocket to grant the requests for assistance by needy persons who troop to his office. He says he and his aides could not just tell the assistance seekers to find help elsewhere and leave empty-handed. No problem if you’re a billionaire like Villar.

Strictly speaking, it’s not the job of lawmakers to extend help to the people, especially in terms of projects like schools, farm-to-market roads and health clinics. That’s the job of the executive branch. But since this has been a practice in Congress since time immemorial, it is not that simple to tell the public to stop pestering the senators and congressmen with their requests for help. Villar says he sympathizes with his colleagues who are helpless in responding to requests for assistance for lack of resources. They rely on him to persuade Malacañang to do something about the problem. Apparently, he has done what is expected of him—with no tangible results.

Last week, the Palace announced that the President had ordered Budget Secretary Rolando Andaya, Jr. to speed up the release of the PDAF allocations of the legislators. Naturally, this piece of news was greeted with surprise and excitement by the opposition senators because they thought that this meant that the freeze on their pork barrel would be lifted.

Some senators instantly speculated that there was a move on the part of Malacañang to improve the strained relations with the Senate in view of the urgency of ratifying the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement. The fate of this controversial trade treaty remains uncertain because of the resistance of senators who doubt if it will be advantageous to the country. Then, there is the initiative to amend the Constitution to pave the way for the adoption of a federal system of government which the Palace is fully supporting.

In a situation where there is a lot of hostility and animosity between Malacañang and the Senate, how can the administration succeed in pushing these important initiatives?

When Secretary Andaya went to the Senate last Monday to present the proposed P1.4-trillion national budget for fiscal year 2009, he was asked to clarify the recent presidential directive on the release of pork barrel funds of lawmakers. He told newsmen that the release of the PDAF was not automatic but was dependent on whether it meets certain criteria and conditions set by Congress and Malacanang. “The PDAF is a source of funding for projects. It does not pertain to any particular public official, senator or congressman,” he explained.

Andaya did not deny that there are PDAF requests for lawmakers being rejected or withheld, but that is not because they are being discriminated against. Rather, it is because they did not qualify under those guidelines and did not fall among the government’s list of priorities. Simply speaking, the budget czar insisted that there was no intentional move to deprive the opposition lawmakers their right to identify and recommend projects requested and needed by their constituents.

If so, how come the complaints about the non-release of pork barrel funds are coming only from the ranks of the opposition senators and congressmen? How come their counterparts from the administration do not have to wrestle with this problem? Although the Palace refuses to admit this, the truth of the matter the pork barrel is being used by the Palace to get back at lawmakers who have been very vociferous in criticizing the ways she is running the country and who have actively supported moves to topple the Arroyo presidency. When he was the presidential chief-of-staff, Michael Defensor, in an apparent slip of the tongue, told a caucus of administration politicians and supporters that those who were involved in undermining and destabilizing the administration did not deserve to get their pork barrel share.

The tug-of-war over the pork barrel issue also stems from the conflicting views between Malacañang and Congress over the nature of this fund. The Palace insists that the President has the discretion and final say on the release of pork barrel funds. In contrast, lawmakers think that these funds are part and parcel of their rights and privileges and it is mandatory on the part of the executive branch to release them to intended beneficiaries after they were put in the annual general appropriations.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Theres The Rub Lawmaker

Truly, the hardest people to wake up are those pretending to be asleep. One is tempted to say that Chief Justice Reynato Puno, Consuelo Ynares-Santiago, Ma. Alicia Austria-Martinez, Adolfo Azcuna, Antonio Carpio and Conchita Carpio Morales are surrounded by fools. But Teresita Leonardo de Castro, Leonardo Qusumbing, Renato Corona, Dante Tinga, Minita Chico-Nazario, Presbitero Velasco Jr., Antonio Eduardo Nachura, Ruben Reyes and Arturo Brion are not fools. They are worse than fools. They are fairly intelligent people (though I could be wrong) who are dedicated to spreading ignorance. They are people the world presumes to be sane, which is why they are in the Supreme Court (though being in Gloria’s Supreme Court is not necessarily a sign of it), who are dedicated to fomenting an insanity.

They are of course the nine who, against the sterling opposition of the first six, upheld their decision on executive privilege. Most of the legal luminaries of this country, including the former Supreme Court chief justices, have already fulminated at the idiocy of the earlier decision, which merely took away with the left hand what the right hand gave. The Supreme Court took away EO 464 but gave back executive privilege. Henceforth, public officials may not be prevented from being summoned by the Senate to shed light on shenanigans in the highest places. But they may be prevented after being summoned from shedding light on the darkest places in the highest places. It adds whole new meanings to “supreme.”

We need not repeat here what the legal luminaries said, which in any case common sense easily supplants. What national interest is breached by Romulo Neri telling the world whether or not his boss approved, abetted and ultimately rammed through a shady deal? Unless we grant that GMA is the state “l’état, c’est moi” and that her survival is the supreme national interest, then revealing it does completely the opposite. It protects the national interest by exposing, and stopping, a horrendous threat to it. What the Supreme Court has just upheld is not executive privilege, it’s aristocratic privilege, the kind that put kings and nobles above the law. For whom? Queen Gloria? The one crowned by Garci?

We need only bring up here that mantra of the Nine that the Senate is not an investigative body, it is a legislative one. “The role of the legislature is to make laws, not to determine anyone’s guilt of a crime or wrongdoing.”

At the very least, the NBN is no Brunei-beauties investigation, it involves the highest officials of the land in a conspiracy not just to defraud the public but pretty much sell off the country, parcel by parcel, if not lock, stock and barrel, to another one. A conspiracy that boils to this day and is near to cooking the goose after the Supreme Court agreed to scotch-tape Neri’s mouth. Mike Defensor, GMA’s favorite abductor, has gotten his lion’s share of it. Pray, who is to investigate that? Who is to unearth that? Who is to stop that? Raul Gonzalez? Merceditas Gutierrez? Avelino Razon? Malacañang Internal Affairs? GMA herself? By sheer default, the Senate is bound by the most compelling and sacred of duties to do it.

Far more than that, why should ferreting out the truth and making laws be separate and mutually exclusive? Why should aiding legislation not take the form of stopping wrongdoing? In fact stopping wrongdoing, particularly of this scale is the only guarantee the legislature can ever make laws. Where’s the sense of producing laws you know will not be followed? Where’s the sense of trotting out bill upon bill, law upon law, that decrees this and that decrees that, when daily you see it being trashed by the very people sworn to implement it? First, stop the trashing, then make laws. Otherwise we’ll just be exacerbating deforestation and the garbage problem at the same time, using tons of pulp to print laws and hauling truckloads of the same to Payatas.

Last year, I was on one of the panels that interviewed the senatorial candidates, and was amused by the amount of paper that came my way. This was in the form of the voluminous resumés many of the candidates had to show how many bills they had authored. I doubt any one of them seriously meant for their offerings to be read. They just meant them in all their corpulent glory to impress. In fact, I was impressed only with the words, “Big deal!” What a crass, mechanical and petty idea of lawmaker this was.

That is the kind of “making laws” that has made this country teem with laws but reek of lawlessness. The legislature is not just there to makes laws, it is there to make law. That is the one thing it shares with the Executive and Judiciary, to make law in the most resplendent meaning of the word, the kind that springs from justice and not from the endless expenditure of spit, the kind that springs from the human need for betterment and not from inhuman need to proliferate “whereas-es.”

“Teach law in the grand manner,” the law school says, not least UP’s. If so, then make law in the grand manner too. The kind that, springing as it does from justice as clean water from a pure source, will not brook wrongdoing, will not suffer felony, will not tolerate malefaction. The kind that, mindful as it is of right and wrong, will set out to punish wrong and reward evil nowhere more so than at a time of hate and cholera, where good is damned and evil exalted. The kind that, branded as it is in the human heart and not just in the congressional records, will compel obedience with the force of instinct, the need for preservation, or of a truth we know, or recognize, as self-evident.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Alan and Mike square off

mike_defensor_10 Several days ago, Senator Alan Peter Cayetano, chairman of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee, told media that he was contemplating initiating a Senate inquiry into the agreement for joint nickel exploration in Zambales province between the Geograce Resources, a local firm, and the Nihao Mineral Resources International of China. The signing of the agreement in Beijing early last month raised eyebrows because it was former presidential chief-of-staff Michael Defensor who signed the agreement on behalf of Geograce Resources where he was chairman. No less than President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was on hand to witness the signing.

The planned probe seemed to have generated skepticism among Senate watchers because of the penchant of Cayetano and his colleagues for proposing investigation of government deals where they smell something fishy. The move would have sounded credible and welcomed by the public were it not for the fact that the Blue Ribbon committee had dragged its feet in terminating its inquiry into the national broadband network-ZTE contract, and that it was very much preoccupied with probing other cases of controversies rocking the Arroyo administration. In fact, the committee has not issued a report for any of the cases it has investigated since the opening of the 14 th Congress in July last year.

The possible inquiry into the mining agreement stemmed from insinuations that it is “similarly situated as the botched ZTE-NBN deal.” But before Cayetano pursues this move, he should consider the following: First, Geograce Resources is a private company that has all the rights to enter into partnerships with companies in countries where the Philippines has trade and commercial relations. The joint exploration agreement does not involve any funding or guarantee from the government. If the Cayetano committee opts to put Defensor on the Senate hot seat based on this transaction, it could be perceived as an anti-private business move by the chamber.

Second, contrary to the supposed basis for the probe, the joint agreement does not come close to the NBN-ZTE deal. This transaction does not have room for payoffs and buyoffs. It is a direct invitation for the moneyed Chinese firms to come in and invest in mining exploration in the country.

The public recalls that the Senate probe on the NBN-ZTE deal provided colorful personalities with a media stage in which they threw dramatic accusations, tantrums and memorable sound bytes. But it would also be naïve to just disregard the claim that the effort to nail down the “culprits” behind the transaction had weakened after it was cancelled by President Arroyo.

Cayetano bared his intention to look into the propriety of the President’s presence in the signing of the joint exploration agreement. Unfortunately, “propriety” is a relative term. For rabid Arroyo bashers, almost any project that is approved or supported by the unpopular Chief Executive is looked upon with suspicion. And to them, her gesture of witnessing the signing of the new business deal in Beijing smacks of “impropriety.”

What could be the objective of such a probe? Legislation defining the occasions where the President could be present as witness? Or is such a probe meant to merely embarrass her by constant references to the NBN-ZTE deal? Who would be the judge of propriety? Whom would Cayetano summon to shed light on the propriety or impropriety of the President’s presence at the signing?

Instead of opening a new front for hostilities between the legislature and Malacañang, Cayetano should concentrate on winding up the investigation into the NBN-ZTE deal and in putting out a final report. He should not wait anymore for the testimony promised by former Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. because, judging from his latest pronouncement, it is not forthcoming. Anyway, the Blue Ribbon committee has conducted 11 hearings on the controversial deal. Any testimony from the former speaker would merely be a repetition of everything that his son and namesake, businessman Joey de Venecia III, has dished out before the probe panel.

Some quarters probably think that a televised Cayetano-Defensor clash through a Senate probe of the mining agreement would be a blockbuster. Probably. But Cayetano must also resist that temptation. He runs the risk of being perceived as using his Blue Ribbon powers to put one over an erstwhile friend who is officially no longer in power.

For all intents and purposes, Cayetano’s friend is just a typical businessman wanting to do good in his enterprise. Cayetano is doing well in his Senate post. Unless he has in his possession information that the joint exploration agreement is inimical to the country’s interest and violative of our laws, Cayetano will just have to drop Defensor’s business project in his lineup of investigation-worthy cases. Otherwise, he would be perceived as begrudging a fellow member of the former brat pack of Congress over his zeal to be successful in his newfound endeavor.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Pichay accepts LWUA post after Defensor

mike_defensor_11 Former Surigao del Sur Rep. Prospero A. Pichay, Jr. has accepted his appointment as member of the Local Water Utilities Administration (LWUA), Executive Secretary Eduardo R. Ermita said Wednesday.

"Former congressman Prospero Pichay has decided to accept the offer and he is now member of board of LWUA, and there is a desire letter by members of the board to elect him as acting chairman of board," he said.

Earlier, reports said Mr. Pichay was not inclined to accept the position as he is eyeing the post of Overseas Workers Welfare Administration administrator.

Mr. Pichay was one of the losing senatorial bets of the administration coalition Team Unity during the 2007 midterm elections.

The appointment makes Mr. Pichay the fourth losing senatorial bet to be given an official post after Michael T. Defensor, who was named head of the task force mandated to ensure the smooth opening of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3; Vicente Sotto III, who is now chairman of the Dangerous Drugs Board; and Ralph G. Recto who is now National Economic and Development Authority director-general.

In the same briefing, Mr. Ermita announced the appointment of Jennifer J. Manalili as administrator of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.

She replaced former Rosalinda D. Baldoz, who has been named Labor undersecretary.

Ms. Manalili, 45, is currently court attorney VI under the Office of Supreme Court Associate Justice Conchita C. Morales and was judicial staff head of then Chief Justice Artemio V. Panganiban in 2006.