BY DENNIS GADIL
THE Senate is poised to abandon the filing
of a petition for inhibition of Supreme Court Associate
Justices Arturo Brion, Presbitero Velasco and Renato Corona on
the issue of executive privilege for lack of signatures.
"It’s dead in the water," a ranking Senate
source said.
Sen. Richard Gordon, in a media forum,
yesterday reminded his colleagues that the SC is not a lower
court whose members could be asked anytime to inhibit
themselves.
Gordon was among the senator-lawyers who
did not sign the petition which was the brainchild of majority
leader Francis Pangilinan.
Gordon said SC justices always enjoy the
presumption of impartiality.
"It is a constitutional body... there is no
reason for them to be beholden to anybody because they are a
co-equal branch of government," he said.
Senate sources have said at least nine
senators signed the petition, including Panfilo Lacson, Jamby
Madrigal, Mar Roxas, Pia Cayetano, Alan Peter Cayetano,
Jinggoy Estrada and Pangilinan.
The petition needed 13 signatures to make
it a majority action by the Senate.
The pro-inhibit bloc lost one supporter in
Alan Peter Cayetano after his office clarified that what he
signed was the draft of the petition.
Lacson appeared to have also lost interest,
not returning queries if the petition for inhibition would be
filed at all.
Minority leader Aquilino Pimentel has also
distanced himself from the petition.
Pangilinan also failed to clinch the
support of Senate President Manuel Villar.
Villar and Pimentel left for the
Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) meeting in South Africa
without signing the petition.
A Senate source said Villar and Pimentel
had strong reservations about the petition as it might
antagonize the high court as a whole and adversely affect
their motion for reconsideration which they filed Tuesday.
The high court, by a vote of 9-6, last
March 25 upheld the decision of former Planning Secretary
Romulo Neri last September to invoke executive privilege after
senators asked him questions about his conversations with
President Arroyo on the cancelled $329 million broadband
project with China’s ZTE Corp.
Pangilinan said three justices should
inhibit themselves because "Brion voted in favor of Neri, even
if he was not yet part of the Supreme Court when the case was
heard while Corona’s wife is said to be a presidential
appointee and Velasco, on the one hand, is reported to have
played golf with Neri."
Pangilinan said the three justices’ perceived closeness to
Malacañang puts to question their credibility and impartiality
in cases concerning the government, particularly in the
NBN-ZTE contract.