Senate now has its turn on the budget

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 16:30:10 +0000

 

EDITORIAL edt

DETERMINED to have Congress approve the 2020 national budget early enough so it can be used on the very first day of January next year, Malaca­ñang sent its budget proposal to Congress very early this year – in August.

The House of Representatives immediately referred it to its Committee on Ap­propriations. After two weeks of plenary debates, the House last September 20 voted 257-6 to approve the P4.1-trilion 2020 Appropriation Bill.

It will now go to the Senate and the senators will have a great deal of time to examine the proposed provisions of the bill approved by the House. They will see if, despite all the precautions, some “pork barrel” projects of some congress­men have indeed managed to slip through.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, who has exposed many “pork barrel” attempts over the years, has once again claimed that the budget approved by the House contains P100 million for each legislative district. Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano said the House only has an additional P1.6 billion for the appointment of 22 deputy speakers, for research, office facilities, new committees, and additional person­nel.

If, as Senator Lacson claims, the budget contains so many millions for each congressman’s district, the Senate may well resort to its maneuver last year. Senate President Vicente Sotto III, we may recall, just sent the bill with all its disputed provisions to President Duterte with a note about the Senate’s reserva­tions. And the President simply vetoed the disputed sums – some P75 billion in alleged pork barrel for congressmen. With this prospect, we do not expect last year’s late-budget fiasco to be repeated this year.

As the Senate examines the Malacañang-sponsored budget as approved by the House, we urge our senators to focus on key programs that urgentl
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