Jamby to Villar: Reveal your other 'insertions'

Posted at 01/29/2010 7:01 PM | Updated as of 02/01/2010 10:49 AM

4th in a series on ANC's presidential youth forum at De La Salle University, January 29, 2010

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MANILA, Philippines (UPDATED) – Presidential candidate Ma. Consuelo “Jamby” Madrigal challenged a “fellow rich senator” to reveal other budget “insertions” that favored his business interests during the ABS-CBN News Channel (ANC) presidential youth forum at De La Salle University in Manila on Friday.

Madrigal was pertaining to real estate tycoon Senator Manuel Villar, who faces possible censure by the Senate for unethical conduct due to a P200-million budget insertion in the C-5 road project.

“Hinahamon ko ang mayayaman na senators na ilabas sa website and lahat ng insertions na nakabuti sa businesses nila. [I am challenging my fellow rich senators to reveal in the Internet all the budget insertions that favored their businesses.]” Madrigal said.

A newcomer in presidential forums, Madrigal likewise referred to “rich” presidential candidates when forum host Ted Failon asked if she believes in the results of surveys where she is barely figuring.

“Sinabi ko na hindi ako naniniwala sa surveys kasi yung mayayaman lang talaga ang kayang…Marami pong mayayaman dito…Hindi ko sinasabing yung colleague ko sa kanan, pero maraming mayayaman na kayang impluwensyahan ang survey. [I do not believe in surveys because only the rich can…There are many rich here who...I'm not talking about my colleague at my right. There are many rich people who can influence the surveys,” she said.

Senators Richard Gordon and Benigno Aquino III were sitting at Madrigal's right side. Villar was sitting at her far left.

Madrigal is from the prominent Madrigal and Abad Santos clan. In 2008, she won an inheritance case granting her a share of the estate of her late wealthy aunt, Consuelo Madrigal-Collantes.

When asked by students what she thinks makes her a strong contender for the presidency, Madrigal said her platforms are specific on how to uphold “sovereignty” by protecting Filipinos and Filipino-owned business enterprises.

“Hindi lang sa pagbabago ang dinadala ko kundi pagbabago na nagbibigay ng pagkakataon na magkaron ng puhunan ang taumbayan. [I’ll bring about change that will give people investment opportunities.]” Madrigal said.

Like Obama?

Under a Madrigal presidency, there will be a program that will provide capital for small- and medium-scale businesses. The money, according to Madrigal, will be taken from funds recovered as a result of anti-corruption measures.

The senator quoted United States President Barack Obama’s State of the Union Address where he vowed to fight businesses that promote vested interests and influential banks that worsen the plight of the people.

“Sabi ko, sana ganyan din yung aking State of the Nation. Labanan na natin yung malalaking multinational [companies], yung malalaking neo-liberal policies na nagpapahirap sa taongbayan, [I wish my State of the Nation Address would be like his. Let us fight big multinational companies and the neo-liberal policies that enslave the people.],” she said. 

According to Madrigal, she will prioritize strengthening small-scale industries. She also vowed to fight multinational companies that gain from government incentives, claiming that these firms enjoy more perks than small-scale industries.

As senator, Madrigal filed a bill to repeal the Downstream Oil Deregulation Act of 1998. She was also strongly against the privatization of Transco (National Transmission Corporation) and the selling of a 59-hectare portion of the La Mesa reservoir.

She said she is also strongly against the IMF and World Bank policies on privatization, trade, and job flexibility and contractualization.

Madrigal also promised to fight corruption by big business and cartels. She said she would use the gains from these efforts to help farmers, students and teachers.

“Kailangan labanan ang corrupt, duwag, at ang sinungaling. [We need to fight officials who are corrupt, cowards, and liars.]” she said.

Going after PGMA

When asked if she would go after President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Madrigal said “it is a resounding yes.”

Madrigal said there are unresolved scandals and issues under the Arroyo government that need to be addressed, especially human rights violations, extra-judicial killings, and the Maguindanao massacre.

“With all due respect, I would have fired my secretary of national defense, I would have fired my secretary of interior kung nangyari yan sa aking liderato,” she said, in reference to what President Arroyo didn't do following the November 23 killings in Maguindanao. 

Madrigal also said she would use “all the might of the state, not…the might of the President” to prosecute Mrs. Arroyo for alleged wrongdoings made during her term.

“We have to have a fair secretary of justice, hindi secretary of injustice, and an Ombudsman na hindi nabibili. [We need to have a fair secretary of justice, not secretary of injustice…an Ombudsman who cannot be bought.]” – Leilani Chavez, abs-cbnNEWS.com


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9 comments

Madami ang utak lamok sa mga

Madami ang utak lamok sa mga Pilipino no wonder kaya madami ang mahihirap sa bansang ito hindi marunung magbasa o magresearch anu po.Itong mga Senator nto last year lang kung anu anu statement ang pinagsasabi n walang nagdidiin sa isang tao.Bkit bigla nagbago dahil tumatakbo din sila para naman makalibre ng publicity para sumikat hahaha desperado talaga.Diba ang budget dumadaan sa Congress at sa Senate bkit nun wala kayong nakita o baka tulog kayo habang binabasa ang budget kaya.Diba sa pagpasa ng budget lahat kayo mag aagree so meaning etong mga madadadang Senador ngayun walang mga ginagawa kc puro dakdak ang gawa.Malilinis potek kayo ang dumi dumi din ninyo.Lahat kayo me kanya kanyang budget at pork barrel san nyu pinaggagamit mga yun ha ipaliwanag nyu nga ng magkalinawan tayong lahat.

Inggit lang dahilan ng pagbubunganga ninyo.Kung ako kaibigan kita at ako mayaman tutulungan talaga din kita.Ikaw Jamby kailangan ko ng pera penge ako cge nga mayaman ka din minsan ng nalagay sa headline ang name mu sa dyaro na naghahabol ng mana bkit kulang pa ang yaman mo?Panu naman kung naging presidente k hays nu kayang gagawin mu?kayong mga pulitiko hwag lang sabi ng sabi nasa poder din kayo hwg lang kayong magpasa ng batas tumulong kayo hwag magbatikos.Mapapakain b ng milyun milyung Pilipino kung nakaupo ka lang sa Senate kesa magdakdak k ng magdakdak tulungan mu kaya kaming mahihirap.Ishare mu yaman mu matutuwa pa kami


MARAMI NIYAN SI ERAP! NYAHAHAHA!

5

NYAHAHAHA! KUNG INSERTIONS LANG ANG PAG-UUSAPAN, MAGALING DIYAN ANG KANDIDATO KONG SI ERAP! HINDI LANG KAY LOI ANG INSERTIONS NIYA, PATI NA RIN SA MGA GIRLFRIENDS NIYA! NYAHAHAHAHA! IDOL KO TALAGA YANG SI ERAP! MAGING KA-ERAPTION NA RIN KAYO NYEHEHEHEHE! PARA SA DARATING NA ELEKSIYON HINDI KAYO MAGMUMUKHANG TANGA!

ERAP! ERAP! ERAP! ERAP! NYAHAHAHAHA!

ERAP FOREVER! NYAHAHAHAHA!!!

@Al-FILIBUSTERISMO -do some research please! tsk tsk tsk

It’s politics, not ethics

More credibility, probably, would attach to the Senate committee report on its so-called "investigations" into the C-5 road project controversy if senators -- most politicos, actually -- were not widely perceived as being distinctly unshy, brazen even, about using their considerable power to influence government decisions on public works and procurement. That said, I would certainly give great weight to the C-5 allegations being leveled at Senator Villar if I were satisfied that they were true. I am not.

On an issue precisely of ethics, objective observers must wonder how senators -- like presidential candidate Aquino’s Liberal Party partymate Mr. Pangilinan -- can first affix their signatures to one resolution clearing Mr. Villar and then about-face 180 degrees to affix their signatures to another one censuring him, just because "it’s the party stand." Well, that, at least, is an explicit admission of how "honorable" senators define ethics.

Although Mr. Villar has actually already made a point-by-point rebuttal in the Senate itself of the charges of "ethical misconduct" against him and has clearly taken pains to make available to the public -- through media -- documents supporting his answers to each allegation, he is, alas, simply not media’s darling. Thus, media outfits whose bias for his rivals is obvious to observers constantly detail the allegations against him in their stories on the controversy and formulaically just include his denials but not his specific answers to the allegations. Such is life in these politico- and elite-dominated islands.

In a small attempt then to introduce some semblance of fairness in the media handling of the whole C-5 hullabaloo, let me (a trying-to-be-objective observer) mention, in summary, some telling details that I have personally found significant in support of Mr. Villar’s defense.

One allegation is that Mr. Villar caused a budget "insertion" that provided "double funding" for one flyover in the C-5 road project. Significantly, the main author of the present Villar-censuring resolution, Senate President Enrile, himself said in a statement he himself released on this issue on Sept. 15, 2008 that "There is no attempt to fund the same project twice, or any attempt to defraud the government, as claimed by some quarters." In his own point-by-point defense, Mr. Villar has made available engineering plans and public documents that show that the subject two P200-million items in the budget were appropriated for two different flyovers, one located at the Sucat Road intersection and one at the Manila-Cavite Coastal Road intersection. Conveniently ignored by Mr. Villar’s accusers is the fact that there is no plausible explanation as to how Mr. Villar might have been able to benefit from an alleged "double appropriation" since government disbursement procedures do not allow such a duplicate amount to be disbursed twice for the same project.

Another allegation is that Mr. Villar engineered a "realignment" of the C-5 road so that it would pass through his properties. On this point, Mr. Villar has given out copies of official documents and design drawings, both in the Senate and in press conferences, that reveal that the alleged "original" alignment referred to in the ethics complaint is actually the alignment of the Manila-Cavite Toll Expressway Project, a toll road awarded by the Toll Regulatory Board to a private concessionaire, UEM-Mara Philippines. This toll road is completely different from the C-5 Road Project that is being built by the Department of Public Works and Highways.

In an Oct. 15, 2008, clarificatory letter that responded to questions raised by then Liberal Party presidential candidate Roxas, DPWH Regional Director Robert Lala confirmed that the "original" alignment being referred to is the "alignment of the Toll Regulatory Board under concession with UEM-Mara Phils.... Said alignment is different from the (C-5) alignment being followed by the DPWH-NCR." More significantly, Mr. Lala specifically affirmed that "The (C-5) project was not rerouted as it followed the original route or alignment prepared by DPWH-NCR except for the location of one bridge (Bridge No.2) whose centre line was slightly shifted in the upstream direction...in order not to create conflict with the proposed alignment of LRT Line I Extension Project.... Except for such shifting of Bridge No. 2, no more modification was made from the original alignment up to its construction phases from Sucat Road to Pres. Quirino Avenue."

A third allegation is that the government purchased the properties from Mr. Villar’s companies at an inflated price. In his defense, Mr. Villar has insisted that all the properties acquired -- for the required right-of-ways -- were purchased for their respective zonal values at the time. In his presentations to the Senate and to the media, he made available copies of certifications issued by the Bureau of Internal Revenue as to said zonal values. In fact, the acquisition price of properties expropriated by the government is fixed by law and no discretion is given to the executing agency.

A fourth allegation is that Mr. Villar did not disclose a "conflict of interest" issue in the government’s acquisition of his companies’ properties. Proof that this is untrue is a letter -- dated Nov. 9, 1999 -- from then Department of Justice Secretary Serafin Cuevas in response to a Villar company (Adelfa Properties Inc.) request for a DOJ opinion on the conflict-of-interest issue. In that letter, Secretary Cuevas stated, "...inasmuch as the proposed transaction was not sought by API or by any of its stockholders, but was initiated by the TRB in view of the importance and urgency on the part of the government to acquire the subject properties...this Department does not foresee...that a principal stockholder of a private corporation who happens to be a member of the House of Representatives would be cited as having violated Section 14, Article VI of the 1987 Constitution which expressly prohibits legislators from being directly or indirectly interested financially in any contract with the government or any of its subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities."

Finally, a fifth allegation is that Mr. Villar should have divested his business interests in the real estate companies involved. Well, that does not happen to be required under the 1987 Constitution. What’s required (Article VI) is that "All members of the Senate and the House of Representatives shall, upon assumption of office, make a full disclosure of their financial and business interests." So, unlike in the case of members of the executive branch of government, members of the legislative branch are only required to disclose their interests but are not actually prohibited from having such interests.

Whether one is inclined to vote for Mr. Villar or not, an objective observer must be willing to at least consider the actual facts in the C-5 case and make up his mind on the basis of those facts and not on the basis of the rhetoric of political rivals. What should be obvious to any observer is that, as far as politicos are concerned, political ambition will trump ethical principles every time.

sa presidenteng walang nagawa tayo aasa.

GO JAMBY GO

Sige Jamby, galitin mo si Villar para masira ang diskarte at mabuking lalo. Kaya lang, hindi kaya 'crush' mo si Villar kaya galit na galit ka sa kanya? 'Crush' dahil gusto mo siyang 'i-crush' para lumabas ang tinatagong "dugong-buhaya" na siyang umiral ng gawin ang C-5 extension.

By the way, what a coincidence, if you can call it.

Slogan ni VIllar noon - SIPAG at TIYAGA na naging 'C5 at Taga' sa mga kalaban.

Does the name 'Manny Villar' signifies something else? Could it be as what others say 'Man yVil Liar' - a liar and evil man?

That maybe too much to call him becuase we don't know the guy personally. Let us ask Dolphy? He says he personally knows Villar, more than actors Erap or FPJ. . . Since when? After he was engaged for a 'fee' to indorse him.

However, let us not condemn Dolphy for what he did, because we are all supporting other candidate. Dolphy is just showing to us how good he is as an actor. In fact, hindi halata na nag-cocomedy siya, that's why he makes us laugh. he he he he

Al-FILIBUSTERISMO

Farewell

She should head the department of paranoia, her moves does'nt have cler directions. Maybe she is correct but definitely ineffective. So why do things as such? Yeah right, juday is no were near the picture. Options.... attack every issue. Desperate moves.... its been a while since a madrigal walked through the isle of the Philippine Senate. We will surely miss you. So long for your political career.


Sen Jumby!

you are f#ck9ng too much!!, crab mentality!! magtrabaho ka nlng para may ngagawa ka naman sa senado!!

God above all things..

A loud bang!

She's just making a lot of noise, firing here and firing there, insertions here and insertions there! With no Judy Ann Santos around, I don't think she'll win this time.


Like Obama?

The senator quoted United States President Barack Obama’s State of the Union Address where he vowed to fight businesses that promote vested interests and influential banks that worsen the plight of the people.

Mr. Obama is wrong for stating that which show lack of understanding and respect in how the constitution forbid Congress and on his case, the executive office to make no law abridging the freedom of speech. Thus, all groups of two or more persons are free to spend their own money on any political campaigns.

The Supreme Court opinion, which is 183 pages in length, specifically excludes foreign nationals and foreign-owned corporations from its ruling. So the president, the former professor of law at the one of the country’s best law schools, either did not read the opinion, or was misrepresenting it.

Lol...however, the speech did sound good from the emperor with no clothes, hahaha! Anyhoot, as I said before, how you feel doesn't always translate what the law said. So don't fire anyone yet, lol.

"When injustice becomes law, Resistance becomes duty!" - Thomas Jefferson

Dapat lang harapin ang isyu

Dapat talaga na harapin ni Villar ang isyu na ibinabato sa kanya. Kahit pa sabihin na motibong pulitikal yan at kahit pa sabihin na ang nag aakusa ay mga kapwa kandidato dapat talaga linisin niya ang pangalan niya. Huwag idadaan sa media ang pagpapaliwanag kasi walang maniniwala. HUmarap siya sa senado at ng makita ng taumbayan kung sino sa akusado at sa nag aakusa ang nagsasabi ng katotohanan. Nanonood ang taumbayan at bayan ang huhusga sa bandang huli.

Sa pag iwas ni Villar sa isyu lalo lamang nawawala ang kanyang kredibilidad. Lalo pang pinasama ang premature na pagtatangka na i-abswelto siya sa kaso. Ang nakakahiya at garapal na ginawa niya ay hindi man lang siya nag inhibit at isa pa siya sa pumirma sa pag abswelto sa kanyang sarili. Desperado talaga. Talagang manggagapang ng tao makakalap lang ng suporta na pagtakpan ang maling ginawa. Nakakatakot ito at baka mas malala pa kay GMA pag naupo sa panguluhan.



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