EN BANC
G.R. No. 174153 entitled RAUL L. LAMBINO and ERICO B.
AUMENTADO together with 6,327,952 REGISTERED VOTERS, Petitioners v. THE
COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS, Respondent; TRADE UNION CONGRESS OF THE
PHILIPPINES (TUCP), RONALD L. ADAMAT, ROLANDO MANUEL RIVERA, RUELO BAYA,
SULONGBAYAN MOVEMENT FOUNDATION, INC., PHILIPPINE TRANSPORT AND GENERAL WORKERS
ORGANIZATION (PTGWO) and VICTORINO F. BALAIS, Petitioners-Intervenors; ONE VOICE INC., CHRISTIAN S. MONSOD, RENE
B. AZURIN, MANUEL L. QUEZON III, BENJAMIN T. TOLOSA, JR., SUSAN V. OPLE and
CARLOS P. MEDINA, JR., ALTERNATIVE LAW GROUPS, INC., ATTY. PETE QUIRINO-QUADRA,
BAYAN, BAYAN MUNA, KILUSANG MAYO UNO, HEAD, ECUMENICAL BISHOPS FORUM, MIGRANTE,
GABRIELA, GABRIELA WOMEN’S PARTY, ANAKBAYAN, LEAGUE OF FILIPINO STUDENTS,
LEONADO SAN JOSE, JOJO PINEDA, DR. DARBY SANTIAGO, and DR. REGINALD PAMUGAS,
LORETTA ANN P. ROSALES, MARIO JOYO AGUJA, ANA THERESIA HONTIVEROS-BARAQUEL,
LUWALHATI ANTONINO, PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTION ASSOCIATION (PHILCONSA), CONRADO F.
ESTRELLA, TOMAS C. TOLEDO, MARIANO M. TAJON, FROILAN M. BACUNGAN, JOAQUIN T.
VENUS, JR., FORTUNATO P. AGUAS, and AMADO GAT INCIONG, SENATE MINORITY LEADER
AQUILINO P. PIMENTEL, JR., and SENATORS SERGIO R. OSMEÑA III, JAMBY A.S.
MADRIGAL, LUISA P. EJERCITO-ESTRADA, JINGGOY ESTRADA, ALFREDO S. LIM and
PANFILO M. LACSON, JOSEPH EJERCITO ESTRADA and PWERSA NG MASANG PILIPINO,
INTEGRATED BAR OF THE PHILIPPINES CEBU CITY CHAPTER and CEBU CHAPTER, JOSE
ANSELMO I. CADIZ, BYRON D. BOCAR, MA. TANYA KARINA A. LAT, ANTONIO L. SALVADOR
and RANDALL C. TABAYOYONG, SENATE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Represented by its
President, MANUEL VILLAR, JR., Oppositors-Intervenors;
G.R. No. 174299 entitled MAR-LEN ABIGAIL BINAY, SOFRONIO
UNTALAN, JR., and RENE A. Q. SAGUISAG, Petitioners v. COMMISSION
ON ELECTIONS, Represented by Chairman BENJAMIN S. ABALOS, SR., and
Commissioners RESSURRECCION Z. BORRA, FLORENTINO A. TUASON, JR., ROMEO A.
BRAWNER, RENE V. SARMIENTO, and John Doe and Peter Doe, Respondents.
Promulgated:
October
25, 2006
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SEPARATE
OPINION
QUISUMBING, J.:
1. With due respect
to the main opinion written by J. Antonio T. Carpio,
and the dissent of J. Reynato S. Puno, I view the matter before us in this petition as one mainly
involving a complex political question.[1] While admittedly the present Constitution
lays down certain numerical requirements for the conduct of a People’s
Initiative, such as the percentages of signatures – being 12% of the total
number of registered voters, provided each legislative
district is represented by at least 3% – they are not the main points of
controversy. Stated in simple terms,
what this Court must decide is whether the Commission on Elections gravely
abused its discretion when it denied the petition to submit the proposed
changes to the Constitution directly to the vote of the sovereign people in a
plebiscite. Technical questions, e.g.
whether petitioners should have filed a Motion for Reconsideration before
coming to us, are of no moment in the face of the transcendental issue at hand. What deserve our full attention are the
issues concerning the applicable rules as well as statutory and constitutional limitations
on the conduct of the People’s Initiative.
2. It must be
stressed that no less than the present Constitution itself empowers the people
to “directly” propose amendments through their own “initiative.” The subject of the instant petition is by way
of exercising that initiative in order to change our form of government from
presidential to parliamentary. Much has
been written about the fulsome powers of the people in a democracy. But the most basic concerns the idea that
sovereignty resides in the people and that all government authority emanates
from them. Clearly, by the power of popular
initiative, the people have the sovereign right to change the present
Constitution. Whether the initial moves
are done by a Constitutional Convention, a Constitutional Assembly, or a People’s
Initiative, in the end every amendment -- however insubstantial or radical --
must be submitted to a plebiscite. Thus,
it is the ultimate will of the people expressed in the ballot,
that matters.[2]
3. I cannot fault
the COMELEC, frankly, for turning down the petition of Messrs. Lambino, et al. For
the COMELEC was just relying on precedents, with the common understanding that,
pursuant to the cases of Santiago v. COMELEC[3] and
PIRMA v. COMELEC,[4]
the COMELEC had been permanently enjoined from entertaining any petition for a
people’s initiative to amend the Constitution by no less than this Court. In denying due course below to Messrs. Lambino and Aumentado’s petition,
I could not hold the COMELEC liable for grave abuse of discretion when they
merely relied on this Court’s unequivocal rulings. Of course, the
4. Lastly, I see no objection
to the remand to the COMELEC of the petition of Messrs. Lambino
and Aumentado and 6.327 million voters, for further examination
of the factual requisites before a plebiscite is conducted. On page 4 of the assailed Resolution of the
respondent dated August 31, 2006, the COMELEC tentatively expressed its view
that “even if the signatures in the instant Petition appear to meet the
required minimum per centum of the total number of registered voters”,
the COMELEC could not give the Petition due course because of our view that
R.A. No. 6735 was inadequate. That,
however, is now refuted by Mr. Justice Puno’s
scholarly ponencia.
Now that we have revisited the Santiago v. COMELEC decision,
there is only one clear task for COMELEC.
In my view, the only doable option left for the COMELEC, once factual
issues are heard and resolved, is to give due course to the petition for the
initiative to amend our Constitution so that the sovereign people can vote on
whether a parliamentary system of government should replace the present
presidential system.
5. I am therefore in
favor of letting the sovereign people speak on their choice of the form of
government as a political question soonest. (This I say without fear of media opinion that
our judicial independence has been tainted or imperiled, for it is not.) Thus I vote for the remand of the
petition. Thereafter, as prayed for, COMELEC
should forthwith certify the Petition as sufficient in form and substance and
call for the holding of a plebiscite within the period mandated by the basic
law, not earlier than sixty nor later than ninety days
from said certification. Only a credible
plebiscite itself, conducted peacefully and honestly,
can bring closure to the instant political controversy.
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LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING Associate Justice |
[1] Political questions have been defined as “Questions of which the courts of justice will refuse to take cognizance, or to decide, on account of their purely political character, or because their determination would involve an encroachment upon the executive or legislative powers; e.g., what sort of government exists in a state….” Black’s Law Dictionary, p. 1319 citing Kenneth v. Chambers, 14 How. 38, 14 L.Ed. 316.
[2] See 1987 Const., Art. XVII, Sec. 2.
[3] G.R. No. 127325,
[4] G.R. No. 129754,
source: www.supremecourt.gov.ph