Noynoy dodges Cha-cha issue; to create body to study change
| By Aytch S. de la Cruz and Angie M. Rosales 07/03/2010 Former President Arroyo, today a bonafide congressman  representing Pampanga’s second district, has caused a political stir in  her recent move of filing a resolution in the House of Representatives  calling for a constitutional change through a constitutional convention  (con-con), succeeding in getting her political foes and allies to react  and take her seriously in her new role. She even  succeeded in getting her successor, President Aquino, to announce that  he will form a commission to study Charter change (Cha-cha), but also  saying that this is not a priority in his government. His stand today is seen as a way of dodging and delaying  the issue of changing the Charter now that he and his allies are in  power and position. Aquino yesterday said he will  form another commission to deal with the Cha-cha resolution filed the  other day by Arroyo. He explained that the  commission he will form is a part of the campaign promise he declared  publicly before he was sworn to presidency but stressed that  this body  would likely take shape after he is done building the structure for the  Truth Commission. “As I told you, we’ll form that  commission to study the need for it (Cha-cha) and whether or not the  people are requesting it,” Aquino said during the first ambush interview  he granted to the media  during the turnover rites between the new Armed Forces  chief of Staff and the acting AFP chief of staff in Camp Aguinaldo. Charter change, however, is not a function of the   executive department but a function of Congress which has the power to  amend, revise, abrogate the Charter through a constituent assembly with a  required number sought, or to call for a constitutional convention  (con-con). The recommendations that the body to be  created by Aquino for this study purpose, may prove worthless. But the Chief Executive claimed that there is a need to  scrutinize the reasons that necessitate government to amend the present  Constitution given the weight of this issue which has long been a  subject of many political debates in and outside the legislative  chambers. “We will have to analyze if there is  really a need  to change the Constitution because this is not an easy  thing to do. There are negative consequences guaranteed in the short  term so you really have to prove that the gains are better than the  risks,” Aquino said. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100703hed1.html | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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