THE House of Representatives on Tuesday reaffirmed its commitment to an open, participatory and accountable national budget process, stressing that the Interim Guidelines on People’s Organizations’ Engagement are only the first step in a broader reform agenda.
As of Aug. 24, six organizations have been accredited to participate in the 2026 budget deliberations, namely the Federation of Free Farmers Cooperatives, SafeTravelPH Mobility Innovations Organization, Makati Business Club, Alyansa ng Nagkakaisang Mamamayan, Center for People Empowerment in Governance, and WeSolve Foundation.
“We thank these organizations for their constructive engagement, adherence to the process, and dedication to pursuing reforms from within,” House spokesperson lawyer Princess Abante said. “Their participation reflects a commitment to dialogue over division, and collaboration over criticism.”
The House also released a breakdown of the accreditation process: six civil society organizations (CSOs) were accredited, four indicated intent to submit requirements, two deferred participation, and 14 have yet to respond.
“The door is always open. Participation is not a one-shot deal—it is a commitment we can build on together,” Abante said.
She said the chamber values the role of CSOs in amplifying community voices and ensuring accountability.
“The House leadership has been transparent from the beginning: this year’s guidelines are interim, designed to fit within the constitutional and operational limits of the 2026 budget calendar,” Abante said.
“We are navigating strict timelines, complex logistics, and the need to integrate a new system of public participation into a highly structured legislative process,” she added.
Abante said the mechanisms are “not yet the final model,” noting that this year is a pilot period to identify bottlenecks and improve institutional processes.
She asserted that the House is committed to building a long-term participatory framework based on evidence, experience and stakeholder feedback.
“We chose to move forward—even with limitations—because delaying reform would only delay people’s voices. We did not want perfection to be the enemy of participation,” Abante stressed.
She said the House is treating the 2026 experience as a “valuable baseline for building a more robust framework for 2027 and beyond.”
“Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez and the House leadership are committed to documenting this year’s implementation lessons, engaging CSOs in post-budget assessments, and crafting a more inclusive and standardized participation framework in future budget cycles,” Abante said.
“This is part of the House’s broader effort to institutionalize people’s participation not just in budgeting—but in lawmaking, oversight, and national development,” she added.
“This year is just the beginning. The People’s Budget is not a slogan—it is a living process we are committed to refining, with the help of civil society,” Abante said.
Abante appealed to CSOs to continue working with the House.
“We urge our partners in civil society to continue engaging, continue critiquing, but most importantly, continue participating. The budget affects every Filipino—and every Filipino voice deserves space in the conversation,” Abante said.
“Let us not stay on the sidelines. Let’s help shape the process. Reforms are not handed down—they are built, hand in hand,” Abante stressed.







