Press Release
March 20, 2017

Drilon proud of minority bloc performance

Senate Minority Leader Franklin M. Drilon said he is proud of the accomplishments of the members of the minority.

Seven of the 10 bills of national significance passed by the Senate before it adjourned session last week were sponsored and authored by the members of the minority, Drilon said.

"The minority bloc has been working hard all this time. The records will bear this out - five of the seven bills approved on third reading and two of the three Senate bills passed on second reading were sponsored and authored by members of the minority," Drilon pointed out.

"I am proud of our performance. We are the most productive group in the Senate. We did the lion's share of the work in passing landmark legislation and bills of national significance," Drilon stressed.

The minority bloc in the Senate is composed of Drilon, Francis Pangilinan, Bam Aquino and Leila De Lima of the Liberal Party; Risa Hontiveros of Akbayan; and Sonny Trillanes of the Nacionalista Party.

"Some are perhaps not aware that in Congress, many members can become co-sponsors or co-authors, but the legislators who conduct and actively participate in committee hearings and defend the measures on the floor are the ones who do the most work to get the bill passed," Drilon explained.

The seven bills steered into passage by the minority include the Affordable Higher Education Act for All (Aquino); Free Internet Access in Public Places Act (Aquino); Expanded Maternity Leave Law (Hontiveros); Mental Health Act (Hontiveros); Philippine Food Technology Act (Trillanes); Speech Language Pathology Act (Trillanes); and the adjustment to the present peso value of the amounts in the 87-year old Revised Penal Code (Drilon).

"These bills, once enacted into laws, will have a direct positive impact on the lives of our people. We studied and prepared hard for these bills so that they will withstand Senate scrutiny," Drilon said.

Drilon also sponsored the Senate resolution concurring in the ratification of the Japan-Philippines Agreement on Social Security, which would give the 400 thousand Filipinos in Japan access to various social security benefits. Drilon said that their legislative performance only proves that "the minority was never and will never become a stumbling block to a productive Senate."

"Our being vocal against some policies of the government should not be mistaken as obstructionism or as part of an imagined destabilization. While we may criticize or oppose, the minority bloc has shown that it has also been supportive of legislative proposals that would benefit our country and our people. To those who would insist otherwise, I would encourage them to just work as hard as we in the minority bloc do," challenged Drilon.

Drilon also vowed that the minority would continue working hard to steer the passage of important measures when Congress resumes session in May.

"The minority looks forward to the resumption of our session in May when the Senate resumes consideration of the 32 bills pending on second reading, 20 of which are authored and sponsored by the minority bloc," Drilon said. These include the Coconut Farmers Industry Development Act, Sagip Saka Act, the Corporation Code, Pagkaing Pinoy Para sa Batang Pinoy, Philippine HIV and AIDS Policy Act, increase in allowances of government employees through the Cost and Living Allowance and Personnel Economic Relief Allowance, Teachers Supply Allowance Act, among others.

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