'Zero': Senate denies having confidential, intel funds for 2023
By Dhel Nazario
The Senate on Tuesday, Oct. 10 said that it has zero confidential funds for 2023 under Senate President Juan Miguel Zubiri.
This is in response to reports circulating on social media stating that the upper chamber has a confidential fund worth P331 million for the current year.
In a statement by Senate Secretary Renato Bantug Jr., he said that the social media posts are deliberately misleading and maliciously presented by some personalities who seek to malign and tarnish the reputation of an institution currently taking a long, hard look at the nature of confidential and intelligence funds (CIFs) and the government agencies that deserve to have them.
"The Senate, for 2023, has no allocation for confidential funds. The records will show that under the Senate's Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) this year, the object of expenditure 'Confidential, Intelligence and Extraordinary Expenses' has three line items and these are Confidential Funds, Intelligence Funds and Extraordinary and Miscellaneous Expenses," Bantug explained.
"For 2023, only ‘Extraordinary and Miscellaneous Expenses’ has a line item amounting to P331,942,000," he added.
He further mentioned that there are no line items for "Confidential Funds" nor "Intelligence Funds."
The Senate Secretary stated that the P331.9 million in the Senate's "Extraordinary and Miscellaneous Expenses" are used, among others, for meetings, seminars, conferences, public relations, education, and other activities of the chamber.
According to him, in the past Senate leadership, the confidential fund allocations of the Senate amounted to P100 million in 2020, P100 million in 2021, and P50 million in 2022. But all of these funds were never used and were reverted to the National Treasury in full.
"Senate President Juan Miguel "Migz' F. Zubiri is firm in his belief that the Senate does not need confidential funds," Bantug said.
He added that Zubiri has been actively stating that confidential and intelligence funds should be for our military, police, and other uniformed personnel who protect the country from both internal and external security threats.
Bantug said that the Senate, through the recently constituted Select Oversight Committee on Confidential and Intelligence Funds, will continue to examine the CIFs of government agencies under a rigorous lens of scrutiny and re-align them accordingly to those who really need them.