14th Congress adjourns on a discordant  note
| By Gerry Baldo 06/05/2010 The Senate adjourned sine die yesterday with farewell  speeches and goodwill, but the House of Representatives adjourned sine  die on a discordant note with even the  supporters of the Freedom of  Information Bill were arrested amid protests in the gallery following  the failure of the House to pass the proposed law. Manila  Rep. Bienvenido Abante said it was a “sad and painful day for the  House” to end without passing the bill that has been in the making for  nine years. “I declare that this Congress has  faulted the Filipino people,” Abante said in dismay. He walked out of  the session hall. Speaker Prospero Nograles, who  presided over the last session day of the 14th Congress, stressed that   he could not bend the rules of the House to accommodate members who  wanted the bill passed. “But there is nothing I  can do. Under  the rules, when there is no quorum, the Speaker has to  bang the gavel and adjourn. Those are the rules,” Nograles said. “I am  at a loss.” Earlier, Nograles was about to bang  the gavel to approve the proposed Freedom of Information Act when  Camiguin Rep. Pedro Romualdo stood up to object and question the quorum. “I object,” Romualdo said even as supporters that  filled the gallery hissed in dismay. Nograles suspended the session and tried to talk   Romualdo into withdrawing his motion but the Camiguin representative  refused.  Romualdo said  he had wanted all  transactions in government to be “very transparent” but that “should be  based on a law that has been properly, legitimately, legally inactive.” He said that he is refusing to withdraw his motion amid  a perceived backlash from the media who would “paint me with whatever  they say badly against me.” He accused the House  of succumbing to pressure and for taking a shortcut to pass the bill. “The House is practically being pressured for this FoI  bill to be passed, in short, trying to make a short cut,” he said. “For  the record I would say that this did not pass any debate, because this  did not pass any debate, all our courts, especially the Supreme Court,  is now always  rendering decisions which we sometimes call judicial  legislation, because the laws we enacted lacked debates, our intention,  spirit of the law cannot be found in our records because it did not pass  any debate,” he said..... MORE      Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100605hed2.html | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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