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FIRST LEDAC MEETING A SUCCESS – ZUBIRI

Malacañang hosted the first Legislative Executive Development Advisory Council (LEDAC) of the Nineteenth Congress, where the Senate and the House of Representative leadership presented their common legislative priorities for discussion with the executive.

Senate President Migz Zubiri presented a total of twenty-six priority bills, twenty of which were priority measures mentioned by President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. in his first State of the Nation Address.

Zubiri called the LEDAC a success, allowing the legislative and the executive to synchronize their priority measures.

“It’s very timely that we had our first LEDAC right before the budget season. That is going to be taking up most of our time in the plenary once we resume session, and we need this LEDAC to identify the bills we must make room for alongside the budget,” the veteran legislator said. “This LEDAC was a success in that regard.”

“We have had a productive meeting where we reaffirmed our commitment to a common legislative agenda.”

“We have had a productive meeting where we reaffirmed our commitment to a common legislative agenda. We have pledged passage of bills which will accelerate our pandemic recovery, insulate our hardworking families from the inflationary fallout from global disruptions, and anchor our regions and sectors on stronger fundamentals to build resiliency and secure our future,” the seasoned lawmaker added.

During the meeting, he indicated that the Senate and the House have agreed to pass the following measures by year-end: Medical Reserve Corps; National Disease Prevention Management Authority/Center for Disease Prevention and Control; Virology Science and Technology Institute of the Philippines; Mandatory Reserve Officers’ Training Corps and National Service Training Program; Amendments to the Build-Operate-Transfer Law; and Condonation of Unpaid Amortization and Interest on Loans of Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries.

The rest of the priority bills are as follows: National Government Rightsizing Program; Budget Modernization Bill; Tax Package 3: Real Property Valuation and Assessment Reform Bill; Tax Package 4: Passive Income and Financial Intermediary Taxation Act (PIFITA); E-Government Act; Internet Transactions Act/E-Commerce Law; Government Financial Institutions (GFIs) Unified Initiatives to Distressed Enterprises for Economic Recovery (GUIDE) Bill; Department of Water Resources; Unified System of Separation, Retirement, and Pension for Military and Uniformed Personnel; E-Governance Act; National Land Use Act; National Defense Act; Enabling Law for the Natural Gas Industry; Amendments to the Electric Power Industry Reform Act; Regional Specialty Hospitals; Magna Carta for Filipino Seafarers; Waste-to-Energy Law; Amendments to the Passport (Lifetime Validity for Senior Citizens); and Negros Island Region.

The SIM Registration Act was also part of the list and was signed by the President in a ceremony after the LEDAC. This is the first law passed in the Nineteenth Congress.

Zubiri emphasized that in the previous administration, the Senate and the House were able to efficiently push hard-to-pass measures through plenary, thanks to the “great interparliamentary working relationship between the Senate and the House leadership, especially the seamless coordination between the now Speaker of the House, Speaker Romualdez, and yours truly when we were both majority leaders of our respective chambers.”

“There was always synergy in all our efforts.”

“There was always synergy in all our efforts,” he said.

Now that he and Romualdez are heading the Senate and the House, Zubiri assured that the administration “can expect the same level of working relationship and coordination between our respective chambers’ leadership in passing priority legislation.”

“The cogs of the legislative mill are fully functioning. We in Congress have started on the right footing, on the right direction, kaya’t mataas po ang pag-asa namin na magiging madali ang ugnayan ng Executive at Legislative branches of government para matugunan ang mga pangangailangan ng ating mamamayan,” he stressed.

“This morning’s conference was proof of statesmanship and multi-partisanship at work, where Senate can engage the other branch while upholding its independence and initiative on policies which serve the national interest and people’s welfare,” Zubiri concluded.

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