logo
Makabayan bloc refiled anti-political dynasty bill

Makabayan bloc refiled anti-political dynasty bill

GMA Network02-07-2025
A bill seeking to define and prohibit political dynasties in the country has been filed in the House of Representatives.
Under House Bill 209 filed by ACT Teachers Party-list Representative Antonio Tinio and Kabataan Party-list Representative, a political dynasty is defined as a family or clan that concentrates, consolidates, or perpetuates their political power by holding public office simultaneously or successively.
The bill states that no person shall hold or run for any elective national or local office simultaneously with another within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, whether legitimate or illegitimate, full or half blood.
It adds that no person within the prohibited civil degree of relationship to an incumbent elected official shall immediately succeed to the position of the latter.
Under the bill, any person running for any elective public office shall file a sworn statement with the Commission on Elections stating that they do not fall under the prohibition.
It states the Comelec, motu proprio or upon verified petition, shall disqualify the candidates found violating the Act and their votes, if any, shall not be counted. The violator shall not be proclaimed and allowed to assume office.—Tina Panganiban-Perez/AOL, GMA Integrated News
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sara Duterte's lawyers file comment on House impeachment MR
Sara Duterte's lawyers file comment on House impeachment MR

GMA Network

time8 hours ago

  • GMA Network

Sara Duterte's lawyers file comment on House impeachment MR

The defense team of Vice President Sara Duterte has submitted a comment regarding the motion for reconsideration filed by the House of Representatives before the Supreme Court (SC) to reverse its decision junking the impeachment case. This was confirmed by Atty. Michael Poa, noting that the comment or opposition of Duterte's defense team was filed before the SC on Monday afternoon. 'In deference to the sub judice rule and out of respect for the judicial process, we will not be granting media interviews or issuing further statements at this time,' Poa told reporters. GMA News Online is trying to secure a copy of the defense's comment/opposition and will update this story once available. To recall, the high court declared the articles of impeachment against Duterte unconstitutional, stressing that it is barred by the one-year rule under the Constitution and that it violates her right to due process. The SC, however, said it is not absolving Duterte from any of the charges against her and that any subsequent impeachment complaint may be filed starting February 6, 2026. The House of Representatives, through the Office of the Solicitor General, filed a motion for reconsideration seeking to reverse the SC decision. The House argued it should be allowed to perform its exclusive duty to prosecute an impeachable official, and the Senate's to try the case. Other motions for reconsideration have also been filed with the SC against its ruling. On August 6, the Senate voted 19-4-1 to transfer to the archives the articles of impeachment against Duterte. The House of Representatives impeached Duterte on February 5, with over 200 lawmakers endorsing the complaint. The Vice President was accused of betrayal of public trust, culpable violation of the constitution, graft and corruption, and other high crimes. Duterte, in return, had entered a 'not guilty' plea in the verified impeachment complaint filed against her, which she called merely a 'scrap of paper.' —KG, GMA Integrated News

P373-billion amendment in 2025 budget questioned
P373-billion amendment in 2025 budget questioned

GMA Network

time19 hours ago

  • GMA Network

P373-billion amendment in 2025 budget questioned

At the start of the deliberations of the House of Representatives on the proposed P6.793 trillion for next year, a lawmaker raised questions on the P373-billion amendment by Congress in the 2025 budget. "To be specific about it, it was cut and diverted to other items, either augmenting existing items or new ones," Caloocan Rep. Edgard Erice said in a "24 Oras" report by Tina Panganiban-Perez. "After reviewing, the President vetoed only P26 billion, a small amount compared to the huge amendment," he added. In response, Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said, "At any given time during budget execution, the President can withhold releases of the budget if it is not consistent with the priorities of this administration." Navotas Rep. Toby Tiangco, meanwhile, raised questions on the small committee, which was created after the budget's passage, to finalize the appropriations bill. "The initiative and errata come from Congress, that's why Secretary Recto seemed to have a hard time responding to our query as to how some items were reduced. It's Congress that knows about that," he said. Tiangco asked the House appropriations committee for records of the two meetings of the small committee last year on the 2025 budget. "The request will be under consideration," House appropriations panel chairperson Rep. Mika Suansing said. However, Tiangco was not satisfied. "This is not acceptable; these are public records, and there were too many violations. There were no records; now you're saying it's not readily available. Is this a secret?" he said. In retort, Suansing said, "The small committee is subsumed within the committee on appropriations. It is not required to render a separate report. The rule you are citing pertained to the standing committees." For the 2026 budget, the small committee will be replaced by a budget amendments subcommittee to be composed of select House members from the majority and the minority blocs. This panel will be organized at the start of the budget deliberations. The House leadership also said the budget deliberations will be open to civil society observers. "The House has opened its doors wider than ever before," Speaker Martin Romualdez said. In their presentation, economic managers discussed addressing inflation, the rise in the per capita gross national income, economic growth, and job creation. Department of Economy, Planning, and Development Secretary Arsenio Balisacan raised hopes that the country would achieve the upper middle income status this year. "Per capita gross national income continues to rise, bringing us closer to World Bank's upper middle income threshold. We are poised to reach this milestone, possibly even this year," Balisacan said. However, he said the government should continue to address the economic challenges to continuously spur growth. "The agriculture industry continues to face structural challenges, which we must address to reinforce our economic drivers and generate higher-quality jobs. Another challenge is the concentration of economic activities in Mega Manila," Balisacan said. "To address this, infrastructure development remains a cornerstone of our strategy," he added. Recto said the Marcos government has inherited a huge national debt from borrowings during the COVID-19 pandemic. To address this, the Finance chief said tax collection must be boosted and idle government assets must be disposed of to generate additional revenues. He also said borrowings will be inevitable. "Let us all together carefully choose projects in the budget that deliver the biggest growth and economic benefits for our people," Recto said. —LDF, GMA Integrated News

House to ‘yield' probe on a flood control project if name of solon comes up
House to ‘yield' probe on a flood control project if name of solon comes up

GMA Network

time3 days ago

  • GMA Network

House to ‘yield' probe on a flood control project if name of solon comes up

A drone view shows a village in Calumpit, Bulacan inundated by high tide and flooding brought by heavy rains from the Habagat enhanced by Tropical Depression Emong. REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez The House of Representatives will "yield" its probe on an allegedly anomalous project if, during the course of its investigation, a member of the lower chamber is found to be involved, according to Bicol Saro party-list Rep. Terry Ridon. At a news forum on Saturday in Quezon City, Ridon said that if a member of the House is named during the probe, they 'will immediately recuse [the investigation] and yield it to, whether to an independent third party probe, if it will be formed, or to an executive led probe to make sure that there will be no conflict of interest or cover-up in the course of the tri-committee [hearings].' The House panel on Public Accounts chairman, however, clarified that the tri-com will not suspend its entire probe but will only 'recuse on a particular inquiry on a particular project if a name of a legislator came up.' 'For example, in project A, in the course of it there will be a whistleblower who will say, 'Congressman A took kickbacks from that project.' Obviously we will ask him [congressman] to explain and as soon as he gets to explain we will recuse and then endorse to the third party probe if it gets to be created or to the executive led probe,' explained Ridon. Ridon, who chairs the House Committee on Public Accounts which was tasked to investigate the anomalies on flood control projects, said his panel along with the committees on Public Works and Good Government are now awaiting the plenary's green light to begin the inquiry. 'This is not a personality led investigation, it is a project led investigation… We are going to do it on a project by project basis,' the lawmaker said at a news forum on Saturday in Quezon City. 'It's not a witch hunt, we have to be able to afford due process to anyone… Again, it should be on a project to project inquiry,' he said. With this, The lawmaker also said Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong is welcome to submit his information on anomalous projects once the tri-com hearings commence. Magalong earlier said he was waiting to be called to Congress after he said there were lawmakers receiving payoffs from infrastructure projects, including flood control programs. The mayor's statement came after Ridon challenged him to show proof, which will back up his claims that some congressmen are supposedly receiving 30% to 40% kickbacks in government projects. President Ferdinand ''Bongbong'' Marcos Jr. earlier disclosed that 20% of the total P545 billion budget of flood control projects was awarded to only 15 contractors. 'This is another disturbing assessment, statistic: 20% of the entire P545 billion budget napunta lang sa 15 na contractor. Sa 15 na contractor na 'yan, lima sa kanila ay may kontrata sa buong Pilipinas. Keep going. Ayan. Ito na 'yung listahan,'' Marcos said on Monday as he launched the website on flood control projects. Asked if these contractors have links to sitting government executives and officials, Marcos said the administration is still looking into it. In his last State of the Nation Address, the President vowed to ensure that those involved in anomalous flood control projects would be held accountable. —VAL, GMA Integrated News

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store