De Lima confident complaint can hurdle House panel, but would rather have speedy VP Duterte impeachment
At A Glance
- Mamamayang Liberal (ML) Party-list Rep. Leila de Lima expressed supreme confidence on Friday, Feb. 6 that the impeachment complaint she endorsed against Vice President Sara Duterte would pass scrutiny at the committee level, should it get referred there.
Mamamayang Liberal (ML) Party-list Rep. Leila de Lima (left), Vice President Sara Duterte (Facebook)
Mamamayang Liberal (ML) Party-list Rep. Leila de Lima expressed supreme confidence on Friday, Feb. 6 that the impeachment complaint she endorsed against Vice President Sara Duterte would pass scrutiny at the committee level, should it get referred there.
"Confident na confident po ako na makakapasa yung impeachment complaint na aking inendorso along with Akbayan Party-list Rep. Perci Cendaña (I am very confident that the impeachment complaint I endorsed, together with Akbayan Party-list Rep. Perci Cendaña, will be approved)," De Lima told House reporters in an interview.
Earlier Friday, it was reported that House Secretary General Cheloy Garafil already transmitted the two filed impeachment raps against Duterte to the office of Speaker Faustino "Bojie" Dy III.
De Lima and Cendaña sponsored the second complaint against Duterte.
"Kasi po, unang-una, ang dapat talagang batayan ay kung merong recital of facts constituting an impeachable offense (Because, first of all, the true basis should be whether there is a recital of facts constituting an impeachable offense)," said De Lima, a House deputy minority leader.
She said that the second complaint cited four out of the five available grounds for impeachment based on Article XI, Section 2 of the 1987 Constitution: Graft and corruption, bribery, other high crimes or betrayal of public trust, and culpable violation of the Constitution.
"Ang wala lang pong ground is yung treason (The only ground not cited is treason)," said the former senator and Department of Justice (DOJ) secretary.
Her belief in the impeachment complaint's merits notwithstanding, De Lima said she would rather have it directly transmitted to the Senate via the fast-track mode in plenary, instead of have it scrurinized by the Committee on Justice in a series of hearings.
"Yes [mas gusto ko yung fast-track], kasi mas madali na yun (Yes, I would prefer the fast-track mode, because that's easier)," she said.
Initiation of the complaint through this method would involve the signatures of at least one-third of the sitting House members. As of the last plenary session Wednesday, Feb. 4, the magic number is 105.
The next House plenary session is on Monday, Feb. 9.
The Senate is constitutionally mandated to hold the impeachment trial "forthwith" once it receives the articles of impeachment from the House.
As per existing House rules, Speaker Dy has 10 session days to transmit the impeachment complaints to the plenary through the Committee on Rules, which would then have three session days to refer it to the justice panel.