Numbers don't lie: Senate eating House's dust when it comes to Marcos priority bills
At A Glance
- The House of Representatives has thoroughly outperformed the Senate when it comes to passing priority measures of the Marcos administration.
- President Marcos' priority measures can be categorized in two: the bills he identified in his State of the Nation Address (SONA), and the bills listed by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council (LEDAC).
House Speaker Martin Romualdez (left), Senate President Juan Miguel "Migz" Zubiri (Facebook)
The House of Representatives has thoroughly outperformed the Senate when it comes to passing priority measures of the Marcos administration.
This was quite obvious based on the performance report provided by Majority Leader Zamboanga City 2nd district Rep. Mannix Dalipe to House reporters on Monday morning, Feb. 19.
“Under Speaker Martin Romualdez's leadership, we have done our part in supporting the President’s legislative, prosperity and economic development agenda, whose goal is to make life better for every Filipino,” Dalipe said in a statement released alongside the report.
Dalipe made this remark even as the tit-for-tat between the Speaker Martin Romualdez-led House and Senate President Juan Miguel "Migz" Zubiri-led Senate persisted.
President Marcos' priority measures can be categorized in two: the bills he identified in his State of the Nation Address (SONA), and the bills listed by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council (LEDAC).
In terms of measures identified by Marcos in his July 2023 SONA, the report said that the House members or congressmen have passed on third and final reading all 17 of these measures (100 percent rate).
Senators, on the other hand, have only passed five out of the 17 (29. 4 percent).
Composed of 57 bills, the LEDAC list has been the more daunting task for the solons. But the House has already passed 54 of these measures (94.7 percent).
The Senate also performed poorly in this category compared to the House, as it has only accounted for 18 of these 57 bills (31.6 percent).
“We have considered, deliberated on and passed all of the President’s priority bills and almost all of the LEDAC measures with a deep sense of urgency, which unfortunately was obviously not shared by our Senate colleagues,” he said.
Dalipe added that the House approved most of the bills ahead of the agreed timeline.