Saturday, October 11, 2014

Ilonggo advocates renew calls for federalism

“Minority peoples must never be treated as tolerated guests but as fully equal partners in a Federal Society.” Swiss Federalism

By Alex P. Vidal

ILONGGO lawyer Leopoldo “Pol” Causing, a political science professor from the West Visayas State University (WVSU) in La Paz, Iloilo City, has been an avid advocate of federalism since time immemorial.
In public market coffee shops, hotels, schools, media symposia, Causing, a brilliant analyst of political and social events in the country, speaks passionately about the need for our system to shift to federalism.
Causing believes that graft and corruption in the legislature will be nipped in the bud once our government structure has been federalized.
“We no longer need to suffer from the rapacity of our over-fed senators,” bewailed Causing, one of the original pillars of the Iloilo Press Club.
The renewed interest on federalism snowballed mostly outside Metro Manila where strong sentiments can be felt in the heels of the “pork barrel” imbroglio involving mostly members of the House of Representatives and the Senate.
“That is to be expected,” Dr. Jose Palu-ay Dacudao, an Ilonggo brain surgeon now based in Butuan City and advocate of federalism, told us on several occasions.

INTEREST

“Interest in federalism has been waxing and waning intermittently perhaps for the past three or four decades, especially among the educated and the learned who sincerely would like to see permanent structural changes in Philippine society for the better,” explained Dacudao.
“And why not? After all is said and done, any honest intelligent educated person will have to agree that the only possible governmental system overhaul that can provide lasting improvement for Philippine society is federalism.”
In fact, the single biggest move for federalism in post Spanish Philippines has occurred relatively recently, Dacudao reminded us.
Last December 2005, a Presidential Constitutional Commission, that was expected to recommend federalism, submitted its draft to the congress.
To the most severe disappointment and frustration of pro-federal people in the Philippines, the ConCom draft contained not a single federal provision; and worse, it was actually anti-federal, said Dacudao.
Now that moves for federalism seem to be in the air again, it might be a good thing to review what happened.
Below is an analysis by Dacudao, who named his advocacy to “Save Our Languages Through Federalism”:
Trouble with the Concom Draft: There are serious and troubling criticisms to the ConCom draft.
1.The ConCom draft describes a Unitarian Unicameral Parliamentary Government that could approve federalism only after it has approved the application of 60% of Philippine provinces to become ‘territories’.
There are 72 provinces, and 60% of that is 43.2 provinces.
Therefore, 44 provinces have to repeatedly apply for ‘territory’, and all of them have to be approved by the Manila-based Parliament.
Knowing Philippine politics, if a Provincial Governor is at odds with the Prime Minister, or if Manila-based politicians sense that part of their budget would be taken by the province (or other such similar conditions), an application probably would not be approved.
Even if Manila were to approve only one provincial application per year, it would take 44 years before the Philippines could legally qualify for Federalism, and Manila would still have the final say. At present, the legal process to Federalize the Philippines consists of a single legal step-propose a Federal draft to Congress, which approves with its changes (or does not approve), followed by ratification of the citizens of the Philippines of the final draft in a plebiscite.
Far from its claim of promoting Federalism, the ConCom draft imposes 44 additional legal steps requiring the approval of Manila, which may or may not give it, every step of the way.

IMPOSE

2.The ConCom draft allows the Parliament to impose its laws over a ‘territory’, thus making it no different from a province.
3.In the ConCom draft, there is no fiscal autonomy for the provinces (or ‘territories’).
Manila collects the taxes, and ‘automatically’ allocates a budget for each province, IRA-style.
We already know from present IRA controversies that this ‘automatic’ allocation is not automatic at all, and is a main source for provincial Manila-dependent politics and corruption.
As can be seen above, the Con Com draft, far from promoting federalism (in fact it has no federal provisions at all), makes Federalism practically speaking impossible in the Philippines. And this, even after most of the province-based NGO’s consulted by the ConCom expressed their favor for Federalism.
In retrospect, that the ConCom draft was in practical terms anti-Federal should have been expected.
The ConCom was led and peopled mostly by known Tagalistas.
A movement should never allow itself to be hijacked by its ideological opposition; it’s the equivalent of ideological suicide.
Modern federalism in multi-ethnic Europe and India has almost always been motivated primarily not by economic reasons but by the just libertarian aspirations of their diverse ethnolinguistic peoples. Ethnic diversity is a keystone of Federalism.
The ConCom draft never even mentions the ethnolinguistic groups of the Philippines, as if they did not exist.
That reveals just how un-federal its commissioners were.





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