| GMA’s Disgraceful "Midnight" Appointments |
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| Columns - JGL Eye | |||
| Written by Joseph G. Lariosa | |||
| Tuesday, 06 April 2010 21:50 | |||
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JGL Eye By JOSEPH G. LARIOSA (© Journal Group Link International) Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s “Midnight” Disgraceful Appointments
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.—George Santayana C HICAGO (JGLi) – The Under the Philippine Constitution, the President is barred from making appointments two months before the election. But the majority members of the 14-member Philippine Supreme Court, in their effort to pay back their gratitude to GMA for appointing them, accommodated her (pinagbigyan). The Supreme Court gave her an exception to appoint the next Chief Justice, which will be left vacant on May 17, seven days after the election, a blatant violation of the Constitution. If she were a condemned person, the Supreme Court gave Mrs. Arroyo her last wish (huling kahilingan). Garapalan talaga. (The justices have become shameless and thick-skinned and insensitive to criticisms.) But if Mrs. Arroyo still has a tiny shred of delicadeza (propriety), she should not exercise her option to appoint Chief Justice Puno’s replacement. She should leave it to the next President of the After all, the Constitution allows the Chief Justice to be replaced within 90 days from the vacancy, which covers the new President, who will be sworn into office on June 30, 44 calendar days after Chief Justice Reynato Puno’s retirement. Aside from Mr. Puno’s replacement, Mrs. Arroyo also announced numerous appointments inside the 60-day banned period. But Mrs. Arroyo antedated the appointments so she could circumvent the law. Instead of following on the footsteps of her father, Mrs. Arroyo made a clean break from the decision of her father, who opposed the If Mrs. Arroyo appoints Mr. Puno’s replacement, she will not only be violating the Constitution but also the Fourth Commandment – “Honor thy father and thy mother.” Perhaps, Mrs. Arroyo could feign innocence of the political upheaval brought about by her father because she was still a teenager (15-years old) at the time. But she has a battery of legal advisers old enough to remember that in his first official acts as incoming President, Diosdado Macapagal revoked the appointments of 350 friends and followers of outgoing President Garcia, including the appointment of Mr. Garcia’s Finance Minister Dominador Aytona as governor of the Central Bank of the IRREGULAR, IMMORAL T he elder Macapagal’s order was later upheld in the celebrated case of Castillo v. Aytona by the Supreme Court, which ruled that: (1) the outgoing President should have refrained from filling vacancies to give the new President opportunity to consider names in the light of his new policies, which were approved by the electorate in the last elections; (2) these scandalously hurried appointments en masse do not fall within the intent and spirit of the constitutional provision authorizing the issuance of ad interim appointments; (3) the appointments were irregular, immoral and unjust, because they were issued only upon the condition that the appointee would immediately qualify obviously to prevent a recall or revocation by the incoming President, with the result that those deserving of promotion or appointment who preferred to be named by the new President declined and were by-passed; and (4) the abnormal conditions surrounding the appointment and qualifications evinced a desire on the part of the outgoing President merely subvert the policies of the incoming administration. I agree that making
Mrs. Arroyo should listen to the near universal criticisms against her appointing a Chief Justice. Among the reasons advanced by Overseas Filipinos led by Atty. Loida Nicolas Lewis, who are urging the Supreme Court to reverse the March 17 ruling, authorizing Mrs. Arroyo to appoint the new chief justice, is that there is no urgency in appointing a new Chief Justice. Without a Chief Justice, the Supreme Court can continue “to function.” They added, “the vacancy sometimes takes as long as 60 days and yet, with an acting chief justice (held by a senior associate justice), the system did not go out of control. “There have been instances … in the “The Chief Justice vote is just one of the 15 justices and a quorum requires eight justices. Problems that may arise on the The incoming President will still have sufficient time to appoint the Chief Justice within the Constitutional 90-day requirement following Mr. Puno’s retirement. The new President takes over 44 days after Chief Justice Puno’s retirement. “ I nterestingly, it was also a case of In deciding whether William Marbury had a remedy, Chief Justice John Marshall stated in the landmark Marbury v. On March 3, 1801, just before his term was to end, Federalist President John Adams, in an attempt to stymie the incoming Democratic-Republican Congress administration, appointed 16 Federalist circuit judges and 42 Federalist justices of the peace to offices created by the Judiciary Act of 1801. These appointees, the infamous "Midnight Judges,” were all located in the His commission was not subsequently delivered. Marbury petitioned the Supreme Court to force Secretary of State James Madison to deliver the documents. But the court, with Marshall as Chief Justice, denied Marbury's petition, holding that the part of the statute upon which he based his claim, the Judiciary Act of 1789, was unconstitutional.
© opyright 2009 The Journal Group Link International. The contents provided in the JGLi may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Journal Group Link International. (Editor’s Note: Watch out for the upcoming outlet-oriented, subscription-based website of Journal Group Link International that guarantees originally sourced stories, features, photos, audios and videos and multi-media contents.)
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| Last Updated on Thursday, 10 June 2010 19:19 |