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House, Senate eye budget deal

Three House leaders will meet with their Senate counterparts next week in a last-ditch attempt at a compromise in the much-delayed enactment of the P3.8-trillion budget for 2019, according to Rep. Edcel Lagman of Albay.

鈥淧ossibly Monday,鈥 Lagman said in a text message when asked for a date of the meeting.

Lagman, House appropriations committee chair Rolando Andaya Jr. and Rep. Ronaldo Zamora of San Juan City have been tasked by Speaker Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to negotiate with senators on the budget, which, despite its ratification on Feb. 8, has not been transmitted to Malaca帽ang for the President鈥檚 signing.

5 days to complete task

鈥淲e are giving ourselves five days to complete this task,鈥 Andaya said on Tuesday.

In a chance interview on Friday, Arroyo said she was leaving it to Andaya, Lagman and House Majority Leader Fredenil Castro to issue statements on the budget fracas.

鈥淭hey are more accurate in setting the record straight than me,鈥 she said.

No hand in delay

But the former President denied she had a hand in the House leadership鈥檚 actions on the budget, which led to the delay.

鈥淣o. And Nonoy (Andaya) has been saying that over and over again. The budget is the work of the appropriations committee and the bicameral panel,鈥 Arroyo said.

The delay was caused by disagreements between the two chambers over the post-ratification changes made by the House leadership to the General Appropriations Bill.

No legal infirmities

Senators alleged that the House had unlawfully realigned budgetary items to the districts of favored lawmakers, while House members insisted they only itemized unconstitutional lump-sum appropriations in the spending bill.

Lagman, an opposition leader at the House, had expressed support for the House amendments, stressing that the House version was 鈥渇ree from any constitutional or legal infirmities.鈥

鈥淭he House version did not breach the approved ceilings鈥 in the expenditure requirement of departments and agencies, he added.

To show good faith

Lagman said the House leadership鈥檚 withdrawal of its budget version was to show good faith for the holding of 鈥渋mmediate meaningful and sober dialogues to finally resolve the impasse and spare the economy and the people of the detrimental and adverse effects of a prolonged reenacted budget.鈥

The feud had led to more than a month-long delay in the passage of the budget measure into law.

The government is currently operating on a reenacted 2018 budget, which means that no new projects can be funded this year until the spending bill is passed into law.

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