GMA ally blocks Cheap Meds Bill
By Delon Porcalla
Friday, December 14, 2007 For more than four weeks now, a known ally of President Arroyo has successfully blocked – single-handedly – the passage of the Cheaper Medicine Act of 2007, which Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. vowed to pass on third and final reading before their Dec. 21 Christmas break.
Many lawmakers observed that Cebu Rep. Pablo Garcia has been a one-man wrecking crew against House Bill 2844. Garcia is suspected to be representing the interests of multinational firms whose multibillion-peso profits will be reduced once the bill is passed.
“He’s the only obstacle now. How can one man stop it (passage of the bill) when we have a quorum? It’s like all of us are collaborating to derail the passage of this bill,” a visibly piqued Makati Rep. Teddyboy Locsin told his colleagues in plenary Wednesday.
For the entire duration of the period of individual amendments, the 240-member House of Representatives always had a quorum. But this could do nothing to stop Garcia, a Kampi stalwart, from filibustering.
“Let us not humor the gentleman because we will all be seen by the public as delaying this bill. Let those who are against this bill vote against it,” Locsin said.
Garcia has insisted he has nothing against the measure and he only wants to scrutinize it.
“I feel I don’t deserve this comment. It says here (newspaper): ‘We can’t read him, we don’t know what he really wants,’” Garcia quoted a published report. “If they can’t read me, well, that’s their problem.”
Iloilo Rep. Ferjenel Biron, the main author of the bill, said he is puzzled by Garcia’s actions.
“Let’s put it this way, he (Garcia) is against the cheaper medicine bill because he considers it as unconstitutional. But why does he participate in amending the bill?” he said.
Due to the strong lobby of multinational companies, the House may pass the Cheaper Medicine bill but without the Drug Price Regulatory Board.
Biron said the waning interest of his colleagues may spell doom for the measure’s most salient feature, which may only make it a “toothless bill.”
“As I have said before, if we will pass this bill without the price regulatory board, then we should not pass it at all,” he said.
Biron also stressed that the 50-50 chance of the bill is actually an improvement compared to the 13th Congress, where the bill was killed due to lack of quorum.
He also said that the multibillion-peso lobby fund to kill the cheap medicine bill is finding its way to the House of Representatives.
“The lobby money is there and it’s trying to find its way to congress,” Biron said, after noting that those opposing the bill have begun using doctors in paid advertisement to express their strong opposition.
Biron also expressed disappointment over the supposed moves of some congressmen to derail the passage of the bill, including the delivery of privilege speech during deliberations on the bill.
Quezon City Rep. Mat Defensor, chairman of the House committee on justice, however said: “Every congressman has his right to express his opinion.” -
With Perseus Echeminada