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Speaker: House to push for Cha-cha next year

MANILA, Philippines — Lawmakers will make another pitch for constitutional amendments next year, focusing on economic provisions deemed “very prohibitive,” Speaker Ferdinand Martin Romualdez said yesterday.

“I believe 2024 will allow us again to revisit the whole issue of the Constitution because I think it’s timely that we revisit,s and I’d say we’d like to focus very much on the economic provisions,” Romualdez told reporters at a Christmas luncheon he hosted.

“We will be studying this during our Christmas break. And perhaps there might be some initiatives even during the break that would prepare us for the ensuing year, and perhaps what would be our legacy in the 19th Congress (2022-2025),” the Speaker said.

Congress goes on Christmas break on Friday. The renewed Charter change (Cha-cha) initiative being eyed by Romualdez will come a year before the mid-term elections.

The leader of the 310-member House of Representatives explained that 2024 would be a good time to review the 1987 Constitution since the chamber has already passed all priority measures outlined by President Marcos in his July 2022 State of the Nation Address and endorsed by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council.

With the development, the chamber’s focus would now be on “reviewing and revisiting” the Constitution to “make it more attuned, sensitive and responsive to the times,” Romualdez said.

On Monday, during an economic briefing in the Visayas, Romualdez said their preferred mode of amending the Constitution is through people’s initiative wherein it would be decided whether the Senate and the House should vote as one or separately.

“We will highly recommend that we embark on the people’s initiative to cure this impasse, so to speak, on how we vote,” he told delegates to the Philippine Economic Briefing held at the Marriott hotel in Iloilo City.

“I hope that we can undertake this ASAP so we could have some clarity on the procedures. So we would like to amend the Constitution vis-à-vis: How we procedurally amend the same and that’s either we vote jointly or separately,” Romualdez, a lawyer by profession, explained.

“We’d like to have that resolved by and through a people’s

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