Things to know about Federalism: Para naman di Tayo Eengot-engot at Basta lang "Mayma" sa Social Media
(Heads-up, bi-lingual ang artikulo TagLish, parang "Coño" lang ang dating, pasenisya na)
Federalism as a form of
government for the Philippines was endorsed as early as Emilio Aguinaldo and
Apolinario Mabini. The initial goal was to make the Philippines politically
divided into three federal states, i.e. Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.
Fast-forward. Unang pinanggigilan ni propesor Jose Abueva ng University of the
Philippines ang konsepto ng Federalism na nagsabing ang federal form of
government ay kailangan para matugunan ang mga pangangailangan ng mamamayan sa
gitna ng pagkakaiba-iba ng mga Filipino sa kultura, paniniwala at kaugalian.
Bukod kay Abueva, si Senator Aquilino Pimentel,
Jr. ay isa ring prominent supporter ng federalism simula pa
nung 2001. He sees the proposed system as a key component in alleviating the
Mindanao crisis at mapapa-amo ang mga Moro insurgents. Kumbaga, may matinding
pangangailangan na pahupain ang nagngangalit na mga aktuwalidad ng mga kapatid
na Moro para sa kanilang “pagsasarili”. Pero teka, when I say pagsasarili,
hindi ito ung pwede mong maisip na gawin kapag nag-iisa lang tayo sa kubeta.
Ang Layunin ng Federalism
Malaking aspeto ng pederalismo
ang pagpapababa ng kapangyarihang makapamahala ang mga lungsod at siyudad
natin, kasama na rin ang pagsasarili sa decision-making pagdating sa pag-gamit
at pag-maximize sa mga natural na resources o yaman ng isang lungsod, nang
walang masyadong panghihimasok ng national government, sa madaling salita....
ng Malacanang……
Kung hindi lalagyan ng malisya at masamang intensiyon, nakikita na may malaking
potensiyal ang pagtatatag ng isang pederalistang gobyerno lalo na sa
pagpapabilis ng paglago ng ekonomiya ng isang lungsod o probinsiya. Federalism
is believed to facilitate economic development, considering that resources and
finance will be under the discretion of each state or province, without too
much intervention or constraint from the central government. Well, provided
that our provincial and state leaders are genuinely free from corruption
practices!
Subukan nating balikan kung
sino-sino nga ba ang mga unang nagpakana at nag-isip na i-eksperimento ang
konsepto ng pederalismo sa ating bansa. Isa-isahin natin.
Sino-sino ang nagpakana ng Federalism sa Pipinas? Lakbayin natin....
2008. Isinulong ni Senator Aquilino Pimentel,
Jr. ang Joint Resolution No. 10, na magbabago sa 1987
constitution. Sa nasabing joint resolution, hahatiin ang bansa sa 11
na “autonomous regions” na magiging mga sento ng finance and development sa
kapuluan. Sa ilalim ng naturng inisyatiba, ang bansa ay mahahati sa 11 na estado,
at isang federal administrative region. (Wikipedia)
Hind sa akin ang litrato, mula sa internet |
Sinasabi sa joint resolution ang ilang mga mungkahi sa pagpili
ng pinuno gaya election of senators na nakabase sa state, pagkakaroon ng mga
senators na-nagrere-present sa overseas voters at ang pagkakaroon ng state
governor and vice-governor bilang isang team.
Sa panukala ding ito, tatanggalin
ang Judicial and Bar
Council na pumipili ng mga nominees para sa judiciary. Na naturang proposal, ang legislative
department ay malilipat sa State
of Central Visayas habang ang judiciary ay malilipat naman sa of
Northern Luzon. Mananatiling nasa Federal Administrative Region of Metro Manila ang Executive Department.
Ang Pag-ayuda sa House Concurrent
Resolution No. 15
Sa parehas ding taon, naglapag
ng baraha si Rep. Monico O. Puentevella noong May 7, 2008.
Isinusulong ni Puentebella ang House Concurrent Resolution No. 15, na
sinusuportahan ang Senate Resolution No. 10 na kinatigan ng 16
na senators.
Hindi katulad ng Senate
Resolution ni Senator Nene Pimentel, ang "Puentevella resolution" ay nagsusulong ng option na magsagawa ng isang constitutional
convention, pero ii-etsapwera People's Initiative na
pamamaraan. (kanya-kanya na lang google sa Constitutional Convention at
People's Initiative, hahaba na masyado tong discussion).
Inaasahan na ang joint
Senate resolution ay magiging daan para sa paglikha ng labing-isa (11) na
federal states, sa pamamagitan ng pag-convene sa Congress bilang
isang constituent assembly,
para sa layuning i-revise ang 1987 Constitution patungo sa pagtatatag ng
isang federal na gobyerno.
2009. Halos 15,000 katao ang nagtipon sa Makati para tutulan ang proposed charter amendment suggested by then President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo. Tutol sila sa anila'y pag-endorso ni Arroyo sa naturang charter amendment, dahil maaaring maabuso nito ang ilang probisyon ng naturang batas para palawigin ang kanyang termino. Sad. Sa hiwalay na datos ng Pulse Asia (2006-2009), 42% ng mga respondents ay ayaw sa CHACHA ni GMA.
Eh sumingit ang Joint
Resolution No. 10........
Samantala, plano naman Joint Resolution No.
10 na baguhin o rebisahin ang Articles 14 at 18 ng 1987 Philippine
Constitution at ang pagdadagdag ng dalawa pang bagong articles para pagtibayin ang federal presidential bicameral form of government.
The above resolution was supported by Senators Aquilino Q.
Pimentel, Jr., Edgardo Angara, Rodolfo Biazon, Pia Cayetano, Juan Ponce Enrile,
Francis "Chiz" Escudero, Jinggoy Estrada, Gregorio Honasan, Panfilo
Lacson, Francis Pangilinan, Ramon "Bong" Revilla, Manuel
"Manny" Villar). Hala ka.
2014. Mayor pa lang si Presidente Rodrigo Duterte ay nagka-kampanya na para sa federalism, na ayon sa kanya ay magpa-"facilitate better delivery of
services to the people." He also argued that the "distribution of
public funds is disproportionately biased in favor of Manila". And being a
son of Mindanao himself, Duterte added that Federalism may be a key solution to
address the problems in Mindanao, particularly ethno-religious conflicts.
It was also in this year that the Bangsamoro Basic Law was
submitted by then President Benigno Aquino III to Congress in September 10,
2014. This further intensified various calls for Federalism, considering that
this law, and its structure would prove for a better and more decentralized
system of governance for the rest of the country. Hanggang sa sandaling ito,
isina-alang-alang pa rin ang magiging kabutihan ng naturang batas, hindi lang
sa "sangkatagalugan", kundi maging sa ating mga kapatid na Muslim sa
Mindanao, lalung-lalo na sa usapin ng kapayapaan.
Eto na, dito na umarangkada......
2016. President-elect Rodrigo
Duterte revealed his plan of initiating a national plebiscite for Federalism, which he is vying to implement in 2 years time, so that would be this
current year, 2018. Consistent din naman pala minsan ang Pangulo. Kaya noong
December 2016, Duterte signed E.O. No. 10, creating a consultative
committee to review the 1987 Constitution. Tanong: sino-sino ba ang napili para
pag-aralan ang 1987 Constitution, tingin ko may pangalan yan, paki-google na
lang. Paki-kilatis na din kung kanino sila alyado at sinu-sino naka-kabit na mga pangalan.
Na sinundutan nito ......
2017. The Alvarez proposal (Ang Mr. "S" ng Kongreso
In 2017, House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez's vision for a federal
Philippines called for 14 states: 7 in Luzon, 2 in Visayas and 5 in Mindanao.
He also proposed that the capital of the Philippines under a federal government
should be somewhere in Negros island saying that it would be
accessible to all people from the three island groups. Pero sabi ng ilang
kritiko...weh, di nga?
Proposed states by House
Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez (2017) ayon sa interpretasyon ng wikkipedia
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Luzon
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Visayas
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Mindanao
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Bicol
Ilocos
Metro Manila
Mimaropa
Central Luzon
Southern Tagalog
Unnamed I.P. State (Igorot)
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Eastern Visayas
Western Visayas
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Eastern Mindanao
Western Mindanao
Unnamed Moro State (Sulu Archipelago)
Unnamed Moro State (Maguindanao / Lanao del Sur)
Unnamed I.P. State (Lumads)
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2018. Bersiyon ng House Sub-Committee 1
Just recently, the Sub-Committee 1 of the House of Representatives
Committee on Constitutional Amendments proposed that a federal Philippines
would comprise of five states. Each states to be led by a premiere as its
executive head will have a State Assembly according to the proposal. (Wikkipedia)
The proposal has been hit by massive criticism due to general
lumping and a lack of representation. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federalism_in_the_Philippines#cite_note-27)
Samantala, nagsalita na rin ang 11 members ng Commission na gumawa ng 1987 Constitution, at sinasabing maraming mga katananungan ang dapat munang sagutin sa konteksto ng isinusulong na Federalism ng administrasyon.
Sinasabi ng mga gumawa ng 1987 Constitution ay makaka-gambala lamang para mag-concentrate tayo sa mga mas mahahalagang isyu ng lipunan, halimbawa, ang EJK, malawakang kahirapan, political dynasties at ang pagsasa-walang bahala sa rule of law.
Naninindigan ang mga miyembro ng Komisyon na ang present Constitution is not actually the real problem, sa halip ay part siya ng solution. Idinagdag pa nilang sapat na ang Local Government Code of the Philippines, para matiyak na maparating sa baba ang kapanyarihan at resources ng sentralisadong pamahalaan, amyendahan lanag ang ilang mga probisyon ng naturang batas.
Isa pang mahalagan isyu sa panukalang Pderalismo ay kung papaano magiging transparent ang buong proseso ng transition mula sa kasalukuyang kaayusan ng gobyerno. Mahalaga na dapat makuha ang tiwala ng mga Filipino sa mangunguna sa pagbabalangas ng Pederalismo upang maiwasan ang sinasabing "terra incognita" o isang paglalakbay na walang mapa.
Sa isang statement na ipinalabas sinasabi ng mga gumawa ng 1987 Constitution na ang kailangan ng bansa sa ngayon ay an pagpapalalim sa ating demokrasya, gawing mas makatarungan at para sa lahat ang ating ekonomiya, at mapanatiling narerespeto ang karapatan at kapayapaan ng nakararami.
Sama-samang pinirmahan ng mga arkitekto ng 1987 Constitution ang mga pahayag na ito; kasama sila Felicitas Aquino-Arroyo, Adolfo Azcuna, Teodoro Bacani,
Florangel Rosario Braid, Hilario Davide Jr, Edmundo Garcia, Jose Luis Martin
Gascon, Christian Monsod, Ricardo Romulo, Jaime Tadeo, and Bernardo Villegas.
Tumagos ba ang Pederalismo sa utak at puso Juan dela Cruz?
A Pulse Asia Survey for March 2018 would give us a hint on this. The said findings were part of
Pulse Asia’s Ulat ng Bayan survey.
According to Pulse Asia, this
survey was based on a sample of 1,200 representative adults 18 years old and older.
The survey has a 3% margin of error at a 95% confidence level.
FEDERALISM, HUH?
Sa nasabing survey, pinakita na 71% ng respondents ay kakaunti o walang nalalaman sa isinusulong na federal
form of government.
Sa 71% na ito, 43% have little knowledge while 27% have almost
no knowledge or knew nothing at all about the proposed system of government.
“Lack or absence of awareness is
reported by most Filipinos across geographic areas and socio-economic classes
(62% to 79% and 64% to 75%, respectively),” the Pulse Asia survey said.
“Big pluralities in most
geographic areas and all socio-economic groupings (41% to 45% and 42% to 50%,
respectively) have little knowledge while nearly the same percentages in the
rest of Luzon have either little knowledge or almost no/no knowledge at all
about the proposed federal system (45% versus 34%),” survey found. The survey also showed that
about a third of its respondents believed they have a “great deal or sufficient
amount of knowledge about the issue.” Another 22% told Pulse Asia that they had
enough knowledge about the subject while only 7% claim “to know a great deal
about the proposed federal system.
Based on geographic areas and
socio-economic groupings, “sufficient knowledge levels vary from 14% to 34% and
21% and 32%, respectively.”
Those survey respondents who
claimed to know a great deal about federalism ranged from as low as 1% to 18%
and 4% and 8% respectively.
Based from the data above, it is obvious that a great deal of population needs a lot of explaining when it comes to federalism. Sure enough.
RESISTANCE
The Pulse Asia March 2018 Ulat
ng Bayan Survey on Charter Change also showed that a sizable number of
Filipinos were not in favor of changing the present system of government to a
federal form.
The survey found that the
“prevailing sentiment among Filipinos is one of opposition to replacing the
present unitary system of government with a federal one.” About 66% of the
survey respondents supported this view.
“Majority levels of opposition
are posted in each geographic area and socio-economic class (54% to 75% and 60%
to 71%, respectively),” the survey reported.
More than a third of survey
respondents in Metro Manila and 40% of those in Mindanao were against the
change of government “whether now or in the future.”
A similar percentage was
reported for the rest of Luzon and the Visayas region.
IN FAVOR OR AMBIVALENT?
The survey found that those
supportive of federalism accounted for 27% while 6% were ambivalent. “Levels of support range from
17% to 42% across geographic areas and from 25% to 36% in the different
socio-economic classes,” the survey reported.
More survey respondents in Metro
Manila, the Visayas region and Mindanao (33% to 42%) were found to be
supportive of federalism “than in the rest of Luzon (17%).”
Those ambivalent or undecided
were found to range from 25% to 9% and from 4% to 7% across geographic areas and
socio-economic groupings, the Pulse Asia survey on the matter said.
CHARTER CHANGE
The same survey also found that
almost half (49%) of Filipinos who answered the survey were aware of proposals
to change the 1987 Constitution while about one out of four survey respondents
were in favor of changing the charter now.
The survey also reported that
“majority levels of awareness” were posted in Metro Manila (52%), the rest of
Luzon (56%), Class ABC (60%) and Class D (51%).
“In contrast, most of those in
the Visayas (66%), Mindanao (53%), and Class E (65%) have not read, or watched
anything about the recent charter change proposals in the country,” the Pulse
Asia survey said. (See Table 1)
Pulse Asia found this
significant because it showed that more Filipinos were more aware of the issue
of charter change compared to a similar Pulse Asia survey which was conduced in
July 2016. The 2016 survey reported only 41% of survey respondents were aware
of what charter change was all about.
However, Pulse Asia added in its
analysis, its survey for September and November 2014 on the charter change
issue showed the highest level of awareness on the said issue was at 61%.
According to Pulse Asia, public
support for charter change had declined during the period from July 2016 to March
2018 (minus 14 percentage points) while opposition became more pronounced (plus
20 percentage points).
CONSTITUTIONAL KNOWLEDGE
Another significant finding of
the survey was that three out of every four Filipinos or 75% of the survey
respondents have little or no knowledge at all about the Philippine
Constitution. Pulse Asia found that these numbers have remained constant since
July 2016 to March 2018.
“Sizable to big majority figures
are registered across geographic areas and economic classes (70% to 82% and 63%
to 82%, respectively),” the survey reported.
“Of the total figure (75%), 42%
report having little knowledge and 34% have almost none or no knowledge at all.
Nearly to exactly half of Metro Manila (50%), Mindanawons (49%), and those in
Class D (44%) have little knowledge while about the same percentages of those
in the rest of Luzon, the Visayas, and Classes ABC and D have either little or
almost none/no knowledge at all (31% to 44% versus 31% to 39%),” the survey
said. (See Table 4).
PUBLIC SUPPORT
As for the level of support for
changing the Constitution, the Pulse Asia survey found that “public support for
charter change now eases during the period July 2016 to March 2018 (minus 14
percentage points) while opposition becomes more pronounced (plus 20 percentage
points).”
Pusle Asia said in its analysis
that “similar movements occur in Metro Manila (minus 13 percentage points), the
rest of Luzon (minus 15 percentage points), Mindanao (minus 23 percentage
points), Class D (minus 15 percentage points), and Class E (minus 11 percentage
points).”
“Opposition to charter change
becomes more notable during tis period not only at the national level (plus 20
percentage points) but also in Metro Manila (plus 17 percentage points), the
rest of Luzon (plus 29 percentage points), Mindanao (plus 22 percentage
points), and Class D (plus 24 percentage points),” the survey added.
“In particular the percentage of
Filipinos who are absolutely opposed to charter change (i.e., those against
charter change now or at any other time), increases by 17 percentage points with
similar movements occurring in Metro Manila (plus 17 percentage points), the
rest of Luzon (plus 27 percentage point), Mindanao (plus 14 percentage points),
Class D (plus 19 percentage points), and Class E (plus 16 percentage points).
With respect to indecision, the only notable change between July 2016 to March
2018 occurs in the rest of Luzon (minus 13 percentage points).
Photo not mine, compliments to owner |