Will Congress listen to him? Leviste says P14B from MOOE could be tapped for disaster relief
At A Glance
- Rep. Leandro Legarda Leviste files House Resolution No. 1118 urging Congress to use part of its ₱23.89‑billion MOOE for food packs or rice for disaster victims.
- He argues ₱14 billion could fund 28 million food packs while still leaving ₱9.89 billion.
- Leviste, who donates his own MOOE and salary, pushed for reforms and detailed breakdowns to justify future budgets.
Batangas 1st district Rep. Leandro Legarda Leviste (Facebook)
Batangas 1st district Rep. Leandro Legarda Leviste believes that Congress--if it wants to--can allocate ₱14 billion from its Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) to fund food packs for disaster victims or rice for every Filipino family
That's why Leviste filed on Monday, June 15 House Resolution (HR) No. 1118, which urged the legislature to make better use of such funds amid the recent disasters that struck the country.
According to the neophyte solon, the 2026 General Appropriations Act (GAA) or national budget provides Congress with ₱23.89 billion 2026 MOOE, a 228 percent increase from its ₱7.27 billion MOOE in 2017.
Leviste argued that ₱14 billion from this could fund 28 million food packs or sacks of rice—or one food pack or sack of rice for every Filipino family—while still leaving Congress with ₱9.89 billion.
He claimed that much of this MOOE is “liquidated by certification” and presented cheques showing how members of the House get a basic MOOE of around ₱1 million per month for their office and other operating expenses with no receipts needed to support reimbursements.
He said that, for 318 House members over 12 months, this would be ₱3.82 billion.
Leviste said that based on his discussions with the House Committee on Accounts, at least ₱10 billion of the ₱18.58 billion House MOOE budget goes to unidentified uses. He estimated that a similar proportion could be saved from the MOOE of the Senate and the rest of Congress.
Leviste also cited the lack of transparency and equity in the allocation of MOOE.
He noted that some members of Congress do not receive any “bonuses” or additional MOOE to argue that, if some members can perform their duties without additional MOOE, then there is no necessity for other members to get considerably more MOOE.
Considering the House already allocates part of its existing budget to relief or social aid programs, Leviste proposed that a larger portion of the House budget be allocated to this given the country’s disasters and economic crises.
He also proposed that the House and Senate release a detailed breakdown of the use of the MOOE budget or the amount received by individual members, and adopt a more equitable allocation of MOOE among members, in proportion to the number of their constituents.
The billionaire businessman-turned-lawmaker said these could help formulate reforms for the 2026 and 2027 budget and justify MOOE budgets moving forward.
Leviste has never accepted his own MOOE allocations or salary and has instead written to Congress to donate ₱12 million of his MOOE and ₱3 million of his salary for earthquake and typhoon victims.