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Hotshots, Fuel Masters gun for quick semifinal clincher

CHITO VICTOLERO — PBA

Games Wednesday
PhilSports Arena
4 p.m. — Phoenix vs Meralco
8 p.m. — Magnolia vs TNT
*Phoenix, Magnolia with twice-to-beat advantage

THE FIRST part of the mission — getting win-once advantage in the playoffs — is done with.

Now it’s time for top seed Magnolia and No. 4 Phoenix to reap the fruits of their hard work throughout the PBA Commissioner’s Cup eliminations.

The Hotshots go for the quick semifinal clincher against No. 8 TNT while the Fuel Masters seek the same against No. 5 Meralco as the playoffs fire off today at the PhilSports Arena.

Magnolia and Phoenix know exactly what it entails to finish off their respective opponents with twice-to-win disadvantage and arrange a semifinal duel.

“We’re going to have to work our butts off,” said Fuel Masters coach Jamike Jarin on the eve of their 4 p.m. showdown with the back-against-the-wall Bolts.

“We have to double our efforts. If they’re going to come in at 100 percent, we should come in at 120,” he added.

That’s exactly what’s on the mind of Meralco counterpart Luigi Trillo.

“The key is for us to play ‘playoff basketball.’ We have to throw everything at them, including the kitchen sink,” he said.

Magnolia mentor Chito Victolero, whose charges have held pole position all along, stressed the playoffs are a whole new ballgame.

TNT vows to compete like it always does all-tournament long, even with a depleted crew. RR Pogoy’s return from heart ailment in their quarters-clinching 116-96 win over Phoenix last Sunday added firepower to Jojo Lastimosa’s team in time for the playoffs run.

“One thing we’ve been consistent with this season is we’re been competing. We were not out of the games; it just so happened we didn’t have the exact lineup we wanted. And now Roger’s there. I’m hoping we have enough guys to play down the stretch,” said Mr. Lastimosa. — Olmin Leyba

Eala slides to No. 187 in WTA rankings

ALEX EALA — ALEX EALA FACEBOOK ACCOUNT

ALEX Eala slipped a bit in the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) rankings after an early exit in the 2024 Australian Open in Melbourne last week.

From a new career-high of No. 185 to start the year, Ms. Eala slid to No. 187 as per the latest list of the women’s pro circuit in the middle of the Australian Open main draw.

For the second straight stint in the Australian Open women’s level, Ms. Eala exited in the first round of the qualifying draw with a 6-2, 7-5 defeat against Sweden’s Rebecca Peterson.

The 18-year-old Filipina ace, who won the 2020 Australian Open girls’ doubles title with Indonesian pal Priska Madelyn Nugroho, also absorbed an opening-round defeat against Japan’s Misaki Doi, 6-4, 6-7, 3-6 in her women’s debut last year. Ms. Eala was also dealt a first-round loss in the Canberra Workday International against Switzerland’s Celine Naef, 6-4, 7-5, that served as her warm-up for the Australian Open.

But all’s not lost for the Rafael Nadal Academy’s proud graduate, who scored a Final Four finish in the doubles division of the same event with Brazilian partner Laura Pigossi. Ms. Eala, a former world junior No. 2, is out to ride on the wealthy experience from these big tournaments to start her season after a productive campaign last year.

Her target is to barge into the Top 100 of the women’s pro circuit after capturing two pro titles last year, including two bronze medals in the Asian Games to end the Philippines’ 17-year tennis medal drought. — John Bryan Ulanday

Royse Tubino moves to Choco Mucho from PLDT

CHOCO MUCHO added a veteran presence in Royse Tubino recently, hoping the former Army standout would be the last piece of the championship puzzle the franchise has long sought for in the Premier Volleyball League.

“Attention: A new Titan is here! Salute this dynamic soldier-athlete turned powerful hitter,” the team announced Monday night via social media.

The 31-year-old Ms. Tubino, who played for Army and PLDT the past few years, should provide the needed stabilizing presence and additional firepower to the Flying Titans squad raring to fill in the void left by Bea de Leon and Caithlin Viray, who went to other teams, and Des Cheng (injury).

She would join a team that is already teeming with stars including reigning MVP Sisi Rondina, Kat Tolentino, Maddie Madayag and Isa Molde.

Choco Mucho had also acquired Mars Alba from disbanded F2 Logistics, Mean Mendrez from PLDT and Bia General from Cignal more than a week ago and Tubino’s arrival could be the key to ending its championship quest. Meanwhile, Galeries Tower has picked up libero Alyssa Eroa, who will make her return after a three-year absence.

Ms. Eroa, who last played for PLDT in the Bacarra, Ilocos Norte bubble three years ago, joined a club that has also tabbed Shola Alvarez, France Ronquillo and Renee Mabilangan. — Joey Villar

Messi named FIFA player of 2023

LIONEL MESSI — REUTERS

LONDON — Argentine Lionel Messi retained the FIFA men’s player of the year trophy on Monday, beating Manchester City’s treble-winning Norwegian striker Erling Haaland and France’s Paris St Germain (PSG) forward Kylian Mbappe to the award.

Spain’s 2023 World Cup winner Aitana Bonmati was voted the best women’s player of the year.

Mr. Messi, who also secured the men’s award in 2022 after guiding Argentina to World Cup victory, clinched the Ligue 1 title with PSG alongside Mbappe following that success, before moving to Major League Soccer team Inter Miami.

The 36-year-old, voted the best player by national teams coaches, captains, journalists and fans, helped Inter Miami win the 2023 Leagues Cup — a competition between MLS and Mexico’s Liga MX sides — scoring 10 goals.

Mr. Messi was not present to collect the trophy.

The award period for the men’s prize ran from Dec. 19, 2022 to Aug. 20, 2023, and started the day after the World Cup final in Qatar.

Mr. Haaland, who helped City clinch a treble of Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League titles by scoring 52 goals in 53 matches across all competitions in the 2022-23 season, finished second in the voting.

The 23-year-old had the same points as Mr. Messi but lost out by having fewer first-place votes from national team captains.

City’s Pep Guardiola won the Best Men’s Coach award. The Spaniard, who before winning the treble with City last term had achieved the same feat at Barcelona in 2008-09, dedicated his award to fellow nominees Simone Inzaghi and Luciano Spalletti. Mr. Inzaghi guided Inter Milan to the 2023 Champions League final, where they lost 1-0 to City, while Spalletti won Serie A with Napoli to end the club’s 33-year wait for the title.

Sarina Wiegman claimed the Best Women’s coach prize after leading England to the World Cup final where they lost 1-0 to Spain.

Seven of her Lionesses were included in the Women’s World XI, including Mary Earps, who also took the Best Women’s Goalkeeper Award.

Brazil’s Manchester City keeper Ederson won the men’s award. — Reuters

Josh Allen shines as Buffalo Bills hold off Steelers, 31-17

JOSH ALLEN passed for three touchdowns and rushed for another to lead the Buffalo Bills to a 31-17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in an American Football Conference wild-card game on Monday at Orchard Park, New York.

Khalil Shakir had a pivotal touchdown catch in the fourth quarter to help the second-seeded Bills win a playoff game for the fourth straight season. Dawson Knox and Dalton Kincaid also had touchdown catches for Buffalo. Mr. Allen completed 21 of 30 passes for 203 yards and rushed for 74 yards on eight carries. James Cook had 79 yards on 18 rushes and Kaiir Elam snatched a key interception as the Bills recorded their sixth straight victory.

The Bills will host the third-seeded Kansas City Chiefs in next weekend’s divisional round.

Mason Rudolph completed 22 of 39 passes for 229 yards, two touchdowns and one interception for the seventh-seeded Steelers. Diontae Johnson and Calvin Austin III had scoring catches for Pittsburgh.

The game, initially scheduled for Sunday, was pushed back to Monday after a massive snowstorm hit Buffalo and surrounding towns. The temperature at kickoff on Monday was 17 degrees (felt like 4).

Pittsburgh moved within 24-17 when Rudolph connected with Austin on a 7-yard scoring pass with 10:32 left in the contest.

Buffalo answered to restore its 14-point lead as the diminutive Shakir made a giant individual play. On second-and-9 from the Pittsburgh 17-yard line, Mr. Allen threw a short pass to Shakir and Steelers star safety Minkah Fitzpatrick was all over him at the 15. But Mr. Shakir shook off the tackle and broke another while weaving through traffic to complete the touchdown with 6:27 remaining that effectively defused Pittsburgh’s charge.

Buffalo appeared on track to coast through the game when it scored the first 21 points.

Mr. Allen hit Mr. Knox for a 9-yard score with 7:02 left in the opening quarter. The Bills soon received a big break when Taron Johnson forced Pittsburgh’s George Pickens to fumble, and Buffalo’s Terrel Bernard recovered at the Steelers 29.

On the next play, Allen drilled a touchdown pass to Kincaid to make it 14-0 with 4:10 left in the quarter.

Pittsburgh had a chance to narrow its deficit, but Rudolph was intercepted in the end zone by Mr. Elam with 10:52 left in the first half.

Buffalo took advantage when Mr. Allen took the ball 52 yards for a touchdown on a designed run. He broke a tackle at the Steelers 35 and kicked his speed up while finishing the play.

Late in the second quarter, Mr. Rudolph tossed a 10-yard touchdown pass to Mr. Johnson to pull Pittsburgh within 21-7 with 1:39 left.

The teams traded field goals in the third quarter — Chris Boswell connected from 40 yards out for the Steelers and Tyler Bass kicked a 45-yarder for Buffalo — to keep the margin at 14 entering the final stanza.

The Steelers dropped their fifth consecutive playoff game dating back to the 2016 postseason. They also fell to 1-11 when star linebacker T.J. Watt (knee) misses a game.

Bernard, the Bills’ leading tackler, was carted off the field with a right ankle injury during the third quarter. — Reuters

Swiatek suppresses Kenin challenge to reach second round

IGA SWIATEK

MELBOURNE — World number one Iga Swiatek overcame a strong early challenge from former champion Sofia Kenin to reach the second round of the Australian Open with a 7-6(2) 6-2 victory in a high quality contest on Tuesday.

The Pole was forced to play her best tennis to see off her 41st-ranked opponent in a rematch of the 2020 French Open final and set up a clash against either another former champion in Angelique Kerber or 2022 finalist Danielle Collins.

The match started in blazing sunshine and Ms. Kenin was soon playing with the strutting confidence that helped her clinch her only Grand Slam title on the same Rod Laver Arena court four years ago.

The 25-year-old American snatched an early break only to hand it back with successive double faults but again feasted on Ms. Swiatek’s second serve for another break with a monster of a backhand down the line.

Ms. Swiatek has not won four Grand Slam titles without being able to problem-solve, however, and again put the set back on level terms at 5-5, had a set point at 6-5, and dominated the tiebreak.

Ms. Kenin, who has plumbed the depths since her 2020 Melbourne triumph and was ranked 235 in the world at the start of last season, maintained her level at the start of the second stanza and her clean-striking was soon causing Ms. Swiatek more problems. 

Swiatek saved two break points in the next game before cruising to the finish line to reach the second round for the sixth straight year and keep alive her quest for a first Australian Open title. — Reuters

Grizzlies step up to beat Warriors in Draymond Green’s return

VINCE Williams Jr. and GG Jackson went for career-high point totals, Stephen Curry committed two backcourt turnovers in a key fourth-quarter sequence and the Memphis Grizzlies defeated the visiting Golden State Warriors 116-107 on Monday night.

Williams scored 24 points and Jackson had 23 off the bench for the Grizzlies, who scored 60 points on 3-pointers, 32 points on free throws and just 24 on two-point baskets. Memphis ended a two-game losing streak despite missing Ja Morant, Marcus Smart and Desmond Bane, among others.

Curry had game highs of 26 points and eight assists for the Warriors, who welcomed back Draymond Green from a 16-game absence, the first 12 of which were the result of an NBA suspension.

Coming off the bench, Green finished with seven points, seven rebounds and four assists in 24 minutes.

After Curry made a 3-pointer with 10:34 remaining to produce the fourth lead change of the fourth quarter, Luke Kennard dropped in three free throws to trigger a 16-5 burst and put Memphis in command for good.

Jackson had two 3-pointers and Kennard had one during the run, which ended with the Grizzlies holding their biggest lead to that point, 106-96, with 7:20 to go.

Curry had two critical turnovers in the stretch, dribbling the ball out of bounds once and getting stripped by Jacob Gilyard the other time. Gilyard converted his steal into a layup.

Williams, a second-year player, had a previous career high of 19 earlier this month against the Phoenix Suns, while Jackson, a two-way player in just his eighth NBA game, topped his previous best of 20, set Saturday against the New York Knicks.

Jaren Jackson Jr. racked up 18 points, five assists, five rebounds and four steals for Memphis. David Roddy had 12 points and Kennard, Gilyard and Santi Aldama 11 apiece for the Grizzlies, who shot 20-for-54 on 3-pointers and 32-for-40 on free throws.

The Warriors, on the other hand, went just 10-for-31 on threes and 9-for-10 at the stripe.

Williams and Roddy shared team-high rebound honors with seven, while Kennard joined Jaren Jackson with a team-high five assists for the Grizzlies.

Jonathan Kuminga backed Curry with 20 points and a game-high 11 rebounds for the Warriors, who dropped a second straight. Andrew Wiggins had 16 points and Dario Saric scored 13. — Reuters

Jordan, Iraq claim opening wins at Asian Cup as Malaysia and Indonesia fall

DOHA — Jordan crushed Malaysia 4-0 in the Asian Cup while Iraq cruised to a 3-1 win over Indonesia as the west Asian sides flexed their muscles in their respective group openers on Monday.

On a day where each match featured four goals, Jordan’s thumping victory moved them to the top of Group E — above South Korea who beat Bahrain 3-1 earlier on Monday.

Jordan’s Mahmoud Al-Mardi put his hand up for an early contender for goal of the tournament when the winger gave his side the lead with a shot from outside the box that floated over the keeper and into the top corner at the far post.

Musa Al-Taamari doubled their lead from the spot after a penalty was awarded for a foul on Yazan Al-Naimat following a VAR review while Al-Mardi made it 3-0 when he scored his second from a tap-in after being set up by Yazan Al-Naimat.

Al-Taamari grabbed his second when he lobbed the keeper in the 85th minute to complete the rout.

Like Malaysia, Indonesia were also making their return to the Asian Cup for the first time since 2007 and though the south-east Asian side were able to hold their own against Iraq for 45 minutes, they ran out of gas in the second half.

Iraq’s Mohanad Ali scored first when he was through on goal with just the keeper to beat but Marselino Ferdinan equalised after some fine work form Yakob Sayuri, who skipped a challenge and crossed the ball into the six-yard box for an easy goal.

However, Iraq burst Indonesia’s bubble late in added time just before the interval when Osama Rashid scored from close range after the keeper spilled a save.

Substitute Aymen Hussein then won a header in the 75th minute and volleyed home from the edge of the six-yard box to make it 3-1.

Iraq are second in Group D behind four-times champions Japan, who beat Vietnam 4-2 on Sunday. — Reuters

Dominant Embiid

Joel Embiid sounded confident in the aftermath of the Sixers’ win against the Rockets yesterday. Considering his disposition, it didn’t seem as if he had just emerged from yet another stint in sick bay. Perhaps it was because he had no trouble parading his usual dominant self after missing three games in which the red, white, and blue went a mere one and two. If there was any rust in him, it didn’t show in a 41-10-3-1-1 stat line that extended his streak of posting at least 30 points and 10 rebounds to a remarkable 17 outings.

Embiid was, of course, most glad because his superb showing resulted in victory for the Sixers. And given the way they have run the offense under first-year head coach Nick Nurse, it’s no coincidence that they’re 22 and six when he suits up. Which, in a nutshell, makes his addition to an exclusive list that hitherto counted only Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar all the more significant. He has been otherworldly since he was drafted third overall in 2014, but he is arguably most impactful this season.

Certainly, Embiid’s contributions are even more pronounced now than when he was recognized as the National Basketball Association’s Most Valuable Player last year. That his extraordinary exertions have come following the departure of James Harden is, perhaps, no coincidence. “Our need will be the real creator,” Plato once wrote, and it’s evident that necessity has compelled the brain trust to mold the Sixers’ playing style to best fit him and his supporting cast. The emergence of Tyrese Maxey and a wholehearted acceptance of slated roles by those around him have made them bona fide contenders for the hardware.

It’s anybody’s guess on whether Embiid can be fit enough to lead the Sixers to a deep postseason run. As things stand, seven games separate him from the minimum threshold of 65 set by the league for awards eligibility. He has, to be sure, argued that personal accolades are secondary to collective objectives. “It doesn’t matter how many games I play; the goal is to be healthy the rest of the year.” And if he is, all and sundry in the City of Brotherly Love have cause to cast moist eyes on the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Filipinos favor working with US — poll

PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza, Reporter

MOST Filipinos want the Philippine government to work with the United States amid rising tensions with China, a new poll released by Pulse Asia Research, Inc. showed.

Seventy-nine percent of Filipinos said the Philippines should work with the US as the dispute between Manila and Beijing in the South China Sea poses threats to the national economy and security, think tank Stratbase Institute ADR said in a statement, citing the Pulse Asia survey that it commissioned.

The poll conducted from Dec. 3-7, 2023, also showed that following the US, the Philippines much favors working with Australia (43%) and Japan (42%).

Meanwhile, only one out of 10 Filipinos or 10% favored working with China, the think tank said.

“As evidenced by the survey results, 90% of Filipinos are not in favor of working with China. This is only natural, as the Philippines continue to encounter aggressive and coercive acts in the West Philippine Sea,” Stratbase Institute ADR President Victor Andres “Dindo” C. Manhit said.

On the economic front, Mr. Manhit said the Philippines has decreased its participation in China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which had been embraced by Mr. Marcos’ predecessor, Rodrigo R. Duterte.

The most important reason to defend Philippine claims in the South China Sea — as cited by respondents — is the 2016 arbitral ruling that invalidated China’s expansive claims, the survey found. Some 31% of the respondents cited it.

It was followed by the need to maintain the country’s sovereign and territorial integrity (27%) and protect marine resources from further destruction and prevent the abuse of valuable resources (23%).

Stratbase said 67% of Filipinos think the government needs to strengthen the country’s external defense capability to assert its claims in the waterway.

It said 56% of Filipinos also believe there is a need to reinforce the country’s alliances and partnerships with like-minded countries through the conduct of joint patrols and military exercises (56%), establish stronger military presence in the West Philippine Sea by repairing the BRP Sierra Madre and by conducting regular resupply missions, ensure effective control of the Ayungin shoal (52%) and improve inter-agency cooperation among agencies involved in maritime security (52%).

The US, Japan, and Australia have been at the forefront of international condemnation of China’s intrusions into Philippine waters.

“Their resounding statements of support boost the confidence of the Philippines in the international community,” Mr. Manhit said. “In the face of asymmetric security challenges, the Philippines must leverage its relations with states with shared values and with the same commitment to defend the rules-based international order.”

The Philippines is America’s oldest treaty ally in the Indo-Pacific region. Their ties have been relatively special despite the Philippines becoming a US colony in the 1940s and even as Mr. Marcos’ predecessor pursued a pivot to China and away from the US and other western powers.

In February, last year, Mr. Marcos announced a decision giving the US access to four military bases on top of the five existing sites under the 2014 Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement — a move that has angered China and has been opposed by Filipino patriotic groups.

Opposition to the Philippines’ security alliance with the US is nothing new, with senators backed by nationalist forces rejecting the renewal of a bilateral military bases agreement between the two countries in 1991.

The decision led to the dismantling of an American air base in Clark, Pampanga and a US naval base in Subic, Olongapo. The two sites, which are now economic hubs, are located north of the capital Manila.

“In the face of asymmetric security challenges, the Philippines must leverage its relations with states with shared values and with the same commitment to defend the rules-based international order,” Mr. Manhit said.

China summons Filipino envoy as Marcos lauds Taiwan leader’s election

BW FILE PHOTO

By John Victor D. Ordoñez, Reporter

THE CHINESE Foreign Ministry has summoned the Philippine ambassador to China after President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. expressed intent to work with Taiwan’s newly elected president, China’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday.

“The Chinese side is strongly dissatisfied and resolutely opposes this,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told a regular news conference, referring to Mr. Marcos’ message to Taiwan president-elect William Lai Ching-te.

She said Assistant Chinese Minister Nong Rong had summoned Philippine Ambassador to China Jaime A. FlorCruz to “give the Chinese side a reasonable explanation” for the Philippine Chief Executive’s congratulatory comments to Taiwan’s new leader.

In an X post, Mr. Marcos said he looks forward to “close collaboration, strengthening mutual interests, fostering peace and ensuring prosperity for our peoples in the years ahead.”

“On behalf of the Filipino people, I congratulate President-elect Lai Ching-te on his election as Taiwan’s next president,” he said as world leaders, including US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, recognized the new Taiwanese leader.

In his response, Mr. Lai recognized the “enduring friendship” between the Philippines and Taiwan.

“I look forward to enhancing our economic and people-to-people ties while championing democracy, peace & prosperity in the region,” he said on X.

Following this exchange, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) of the Philippines said Manila would remain committed to the One-China Policy.

“The Department of Foreign Affairs reaffirms the principles contained in the Joint Communique of the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the Government of the People’s Republic of China signed by President Ferdinand E. Marcos and Premier Zhou Enlai on 9 June 1975,” the DFA said in a statement on Sunday.

Mr. Marcos’ congratulatory statement was “his way” of thanking Taiwan for hosting about 200,000 overseas Filipino workers as Manila and Taipei “share mutual interests,” the DFA said.

In a separate statement, the Chinese Foreign Ministry referred to Marcos’ remarks as “a grave violation of the one-China principle and the communiqué on the establishment of China-Philippine diplomatic relations and a breach of the Philippines’ political commitment to China.”

Earlier, China’s Taiwan Office spokesperson Chen Binhua said the elections would not “change the basic landscape and development trend of cross-Strait relations.”

Taiwan, which has been independent from China since 1949, is still seen as a “renegade province” by Beijing.

“It is important to note how Beijing has also defied diplomatic protocols many times against Manila’s interests, such as holding a surprise meeting with the former president (Rodrigo R. Duterte),” Don Mclain Gill, an international relations lecturer at De La Salle University, said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

“Therefore, there was nothing wrong with what President Marcos Jr. said,” Mr. Gill said. “Taiwan is of crucial importance to the Philippines and the Filipino people for evident commercial and socio-economic reasons.”

While the Philippines’ DFA clarified the government’s adherence to the One China Policy, he said “it is clear how Manila sought to illustrate its political autonomy while also highlighting the need for democracies to work together amidst revisionist forces in the region.” 

The election of Mr. Lai followed a year that saw increased tensions in the region involving China, which also claims the South China Sea almost in its entirety.

“The election result in Taiwan is a good reminder to the Philippines on the importance of the voice of the people in fighting for national sovereignty,” Chester B. Cabalza, founder of Manila-based International Development and Security Cooperation, said via Messenger chat.

The two countries are “natural neighbors that should be backing each other amid insecurities posed by China’s aggression in the region,” he said.

Mr. Cabalza also noted that Taiwan is a South China Sea claimant and its bond with the Philippines could boost a rules-based order in one of the world’s most important waterways.

The win of a pro-democracy leader in Taiwan gives an overview of the upcoming election in the Philippines next year, he said, which should be “a referendum of our case in the West Philippine Sea.” — with a report from Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Lawmakers question unprogrammed funds before SC

BW FILE PHOTO

By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz, Reporter

SEVERAL lawmakers have filed before the Supreme Court (SC) a petition challenging the legality of adding P449.54 billion in unprogrammed appropriations under the 2024 national budget.

In a 27-page petition filed on Monday, the petitioners said: “The Constitutional prohibition on the Congress from exceeding the totality of ceiling of the appropriations proposed by the President in the National Expenditure Program includes the ban on increasing the amount proposed by the chief executive for both the programmed and unprogrammed appropriations.”

Under the 2024 National Expenditure Plan (NEP), the President proposed a total of P281.9 billion in unprogrammed appropriations. This jumped to a total of P731.45 billion under the 2024 General Appropriations Act (GAA), the congressmen noted.

They said that both the House and Senate versions of the 2024 budget reflected unprogrammed appropriations totaling to P289.1 billion only. However, the bicameral conference committee added P449.54 billion in the unprogrammed appropriations.

Lawmakers who petitioned against the move cited section 25(1) under Article 6 of the Constitution, which states that “Congress may not increase the appropriations recommended by the President for the operation of the government as specified in the budget.”

“It is indubitable that the excess of P449.54 billion in unprogrammed appropriations is constitutionally infirm. It is an expenditure outlay inside the Constitution. It is akin to an outlaw which must be slain on sight,” read a portion of the petition.

“This unconstitutional excess outlay was appropriated with grave abuse of discretion,” it added.

The petition was filed against Congress, represented by Senate President Juan Miguel F. Zubiri and House Speaker Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez, as well as Sen. Juan Edgardo M. Angara and Party-list Rep. Elizaldy S. Co, who head both Chambers’ respective appropriations panels.

Aside from the lawmakers, the petition was also filed against Executive Secretary Lucas P. Bersamin, Budget Secretary Amenah F. Pangandaman, and National Treasurer Rosalia V. De Leon.

Petitioners of the case were Albay Rep. Edcel C. Lagman, Camarines Sur Rep. Gabriel H. Bordado, and Basilan Rep. Mujiv S. Hataman.

In December, Senate Minority Leader Aquilino D. Pimentel III also said the bicameral committee’s increase in the unprogrammed appropriations is “unconstitutional.”

Citing the Constitution, Mr. Pimentel told reporters: “Congress may approve the appropriations proposed by the President for the operation of the government, but it cannot increase the appropriations.”