Suarez shares Valentine's Day wish to Binay, Senate after 'parliamentary bullying' comment
At A Glance
- House Deputy Speaker Quezon 2nd district Rep. David "Jay-jay" Suarez gave an advance Valentine's Day message to Senator Nancy Binay and the rest of the Senate as the two legislative chambers' tit-for-tat on Cha-cha continues.
Quezon 2nd district Rep. David "Jay-jay" Suarez (left), Senator Nancy Binay (Facebook)
Let love rule--and hasten the passage of your Charter change (Cha-cha) measure while you're at it.
House Deputy Speaker Quezon 2nd district Rep. David "Jay-jay" Suarez gave this advance Valentine's Day message to Senator Nancy Binay and the rest of the Senate as the two legislative chambers' tit-for-tat on Cha-cha continues.
"Ako naman ang Valentine's [Day] wish ko para kay Senator Nancy eh sana, 'Let love rule,'" Suarez said in a press briefing on Monday, Feb. 12.
(As for me, my Valentine's Day wish for Senator Nancy is for hee to hopefully 'Let love rule.')
"Di ba? Kung let love rule, mahalin natin yung bansang Pilipinas, bilisan nila yung pagpasa ng RBH No.6 para magawa na namin sa House yung trabaho natin at maayos na natin yung Saligang Batas," he said.
(Right? Because if you let love rule, and you love the Philippines, you will hasten the passage of RBH No.6 and it will allow us to finish our work in the House and once and for all fix the Constitution.)
Suarez was referring to Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) No.6, the Cha-cha measure that's pending at the Senate.
Over the weekend, on the occasion of Chinese New Year, the lady senator said that she wished for the "parliamentary bullying" to stop.
Binay also lamented the "shameful" and "toxic" exchanges between the House of Representatives and Senate on the topic of constitutional revision.
The Speaker Martin Romualdez-led House has consistently been pushing for revisions to the 1987 Constitution, particularly its restrictive economic provisions. Doing so will allow more foreign direct investments to come to the Philippines and unlock its true economic potential, the House said.