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Friday, December 27, 2024

OVP will have more than what Leni had—solon

Vice President Sara Duterte will have a budget for next year that is bigger than most of the outlays allocated to her predecessor, Leni Robredo, during the latter’s six-year tenure, a senior leader of the House of Representatives said.

“The Office of the Vice President (OVP) led by VP Duterte will not be crippled despite the decision of the House to reduce her 2025 funding. The Vice President will have sufficient funds to discharge her constitutional duties,” Senior Deputy Speaker and Pampanga Rep. Aurelio Gonzales, Jr. said.

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Gonzales said to his credit, Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez prevailed upon members of the minority, who were angered by the Vice President’s absence in plenary and committee deliberations on her budget, not to further cut it.

Gonzales said in 2023, during Duterte’s first full year in office, she had P2.344 billion, including a P500-million Confidential and Intelligence Fund (CIF) and a P920-million “financial assistance” allocation; while Robredo had P428.6 million, without a CIF and a financial aid fund in her first full year in office in 2017. 

Last year, her second full year, VP Duterte had P1.874 billion, while Robredo had P543.9 million in 2018, he said.

Next year, the incumbent Vice President’s third year in office, she will have P733 million, while Robredo had P663.4 million in 2019, he added.

Robredo had P699.9 million in 2020, P900 million in 2021, which was her biggest budget, and P702 million in 2022, which she split with her successor.

The OVP had P500 million in 2016, which was shared by Robredo and his predecessor, Jejomar Binay.

“Clearly, VP Sara enjoyed much bigger budgets that what VP Leni had,” Gonzales stressed.

He pointed out that the House decision to reduce the OVP budget is consistent with the vision of Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel III on the principal job and duty of the Vice President.

In a radio interview last Sept. 1, Pimentel said Duterte should focus on her main duty as the country’s second highest elected official and successor to the presidency, and should not implement programs that are not included in her constitutional mandate.

“Ang Vice President puro aral, puro briefing para handa siya maging Presidente anytime. ‘Yun lang ang budget-an namin,” he said. 

(The Vice President does a lot of homework so she is prepared to be President anytime.  That’s all we have in our budget)

“Hindi na niya role na magbigay ng mga school bags. Hindi na niya role na magpatakbo ng mga bus. Sayang oras niya eh,” Pimentel said.

(It is no longer his role to give school bags. It is no longer his role to operate buses. It’s a waste of his time)

Last Wednesday, before adjourning for its recess, the House approved the recommendation of its Committee on Appropriations to reduce the OVP 2025 funding from P2.03 billion to P733 million.

The reduction was prompted by audit findings that OVP’s Financial Assistance (FA) schemes such as the distribution of burial, educational, medical, and transportation funds were redundant and duplicate similar programs efficiently being implemented by the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) and Department of Health (DOH).

The House realigned the entire P943-million FA fund of the OVP to the DSWD and DOH.

According to Marikina Rep. Stella Quimbo, Senior Vice Chairperson of the Committee on Appropriations, the OVP and its FA beneficiaries could still access the FA allocation by sending their requests to the two departments.

She said no money was taken from OVP’s allocation for salaries. “We wanted to preserve jobs,” she said.

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