Labor groups on Thursday urged Filipinos to reject renewed efforts to amend the Constitution through a people鈥檚 initiative, saying proponents were diverting attention away from pressing gut issues.
鈥淥ur primary concerns are higher wages, job security and the freedom to organize for collective bargaining,鈥 said Nagkaisa chair Sonny Matula.
鈥淚nstead of focusing on these pressing issues, the Charter change initiative diverts attention and resources to a cause that does not serve the majority,鈥 he said.
搁贰础顿:听Group denies 鈥榖uying鈥 signatures for Cha-cha petition
The paid television advertisement aired on Jan. 9 which blamed the country鈥檚 problems on the supposed shortcomings of the 1987 Constitution 鈥渄oes not resonate with the day-to-day challenges faced by our workforce,鈥 he said.
Mockery
Partido Manggagawa chair Renato Magtubo cited a recent survey that showed that the top concerns of Filipinos were inflation, pay increase, jobs creation, poverty and corruption.
鈥淣owhere did we hear a clamor for Charter change from the grassroots to address these issues. What we are certain about is that the initiative is an organized campaign orchestrated from the higher echelons of power,鈥 said Magtubo.
He accused the Charter change (Cha-cha) advocates of 鈥渕aking a mockery of the people鈥檚 initiative鈥 to push amendments to the Constitution.
鈥淚f they can easily purchase a new Constitution via people鈥檚 initiative, then what will prevent them from making another purchase to perpetuate themselves in power,鈥 Magtubo added, referring to reports that each of those who would sign a petition for a people鈥檚 initiative would allegedly be paid a certain sum.
Alleged payoffs
Sen. Imee Marcos on Thursday called for an investigation of the alleged payoffs and 鈥渕isrepresentations鈥 being used for the signature campaign.
Marcos, chair of the Senate committee on electoral reforms and people鈥檚 participation, on Thursday filed Senate Resolution No. 902 to trigger the probe.
鈥淭here is a need to put a stop to these corrupt activities and ensure that any petition for a people鈥檚 initiative to amend the Constitution is filed with the full consent and free will of the people,鈥 she said.
READ: Bishop campaigns against Cha-Cha petition
She earlier denounced the reported signature campaign being waged by local officials in exchange for cash doleouts supposedly using money from the government鈥檚 propoor programs, particularly in Region 1, Region 7, Leyte and other areas.
鈥淭here reported payoffs in the signature campaign for a people鈥檚 initiative to amend the Constitution and the blatant manner by which ordinary citizens, particularly those in need of government aid, are being misled and exploited, are unconscionable acts of corruption which are inimical to the very concept of democracy,鈥 she said.
She referred to an earlier statement by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, who had resisted Cha-cha for years, and who said that signatories to the people鈥檚 initiative petition were promised to receive P100 each.
1997 SC ruling
Former Sen. Leila de Lima, spokesperson for the Liberal Party, said the ongoing signature campaign for Cha-cha through people鈥檚 initiative was both unconstitutional and fraudulent.
De Lima told the Inquirer that the people鈥檚 initiative for Cha-cha violated a 1997 Supreme Court ruling, reaffirmed in 2006, which declared that there was no law governing such a method for amending the Constitution.
鈥淭he ongoing process of signature gathering is thus unconstitutional,鈥 De Lima said.
鈥淚n any case, by way of an academic discussion, a people鈥檚 initiative presupposes a fully informed citizenry, and not just signing up for a free sack of rice or what have you,鈥 she said.
Bishop鈥檚 call
Bishop Broderick Pabillo, the apostolic vicar in Palawan, appealed to the public not to sign the people鈥檚 initiative petition.
鈥淭his will sideline the Senate [since] there are 315 House representatives and only 24 senators. There is even an offer of payment to get people to sign. They might use the hastily called barangay assembly for this,鈥 Pabillo said in a statement in Filipino.
鈥淭ell people not to sign! This is not an initiative from the people but from a few politicians,鈥 he added.
Pabillo is the first ranking Catholic Church official to speak out against the latest campaign for constitutional amendments. The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines had opposed such a move in the past. 鈥擶ITH a REPORT FROM RUSSEL P. LORETO聽