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AUG U ST 1 0-16, 2018 Volume 11 - No. 42 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
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Economic managers cite risks of federalism by BEN
O. DE VERA, DJ YAP Inquirer.net
The Philippines’ investment grade credit ratings, which make it cheaper for the country to borrow money, will “go to hell” if the proposed shift to federalism proceeds, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III told the Senate finance committee on Wednesday, August 8. The shift will also be too costly for the government and may disrupt the economy’s growth momentum, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia told MONEY MATTERS. Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III (center) and Budget Secretary the committee scrutinizing the Benjamin Diokno (right) take turns explaining the highlights of the cash-based budget, a government’s proposed P3.757scheme that the government wants to implement for the first time, during a briefing at the trillion budget for 2019. Senate on Wednesday, August 8. Diokno said cash-based appropriations would minimize underspending. ManilaTimes.net photo by Bob Dungo
USA
DATELINE Obama endorses Fil-Am TJ Cox for Congress FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Former president endorses first wave of candidates for midterms elections
A TOTAL of 81 candidates for federal and state offices got the thumbs-up by former President Barack Obama on Wednesday, August 1 in his first wave of endorsements focused on candidates across 14 different states. Among the first wave of endorsees is Fil-Am congresTJ Cox, candidate for California’s 21st sional candidate congressional district
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US: Third party concerns should be included in South China Sea code WHILE China and the Southeast Asian nations are moving forward with negotiations on the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea, the United States stressed its position on the maritime dispute. Piper Campbell, chargé d’affaires ad interim at the U.S. Mission to ASEAN, stressed that Washington has always been watching the developments in the disputed waterway. “We think it’s extremely important that no country pressure other countries within structures like the Code of Conduct negotiations,” Campbell said in a teleconference on Tuesday, August 7. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had the chance to relay Washington’s position on the disputed South China during the recently concluded East Asia Summit and Asean Regional Forum meetings in Singapore. In the meetings with ASEAN member states, China, Japan and Australia, the U.S.
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THE SHOW MUST GO ON. Despite the rain, President Rodrigo Duterte boards the carabao jeep to lead the trooping of the line during the 117th Police Service Anniversary at the Philippine National Police (PNP) Headquarters in Camp Brigadier General Rafael T. Crame, Quezon City on Wednesday, August 8. Joining the President is PNP Director General Oscar Albayalde. Malacañang photo by Richard Madelo
PH economy disappoints, eases to 3-year low by JOSE
KATIGBAK Philstar.com
MANILA — The Philippine economy grew at its slowest pace in three years in the second quarter of 2018, missing estimates and failing to meet the government’s expectations. The country’s gross domestic product—or the value of all finished goods and services produced in the country—sharply eased to 6.0 percent in the April-June period. The latest GDP figure was lower than the downwardly revised 6.6 percent in the first quarter and the 6.7 percent clocked in the comparable period last year. In the first half
of the year, the economy grew at 6.3 percent. The economy’s disappointing performance was the slowest since the similar 6.0-percent expansion recorded in the third quarter of 2015. Some economists had forecast a growth rate of 6.7 percent for the second quarter. Meanwhile, the Duterte administration is targeting to supercharge economic growth by 7-8 percent through its ambitious infrastructure program. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said the economy would have
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Arroyo to hasten Cha-Cha by AJPRESS HOUSE Speaker Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on Tuesday, August 7, sought the urgent amendment of the 1987 Constitution as she called for the House of Representatives and the Senate to convene into a Constitutional Assembly (ConAss). In a report from The Manila Times, Arroyo filed House Resolution No. 2056 that pushes for the two chambers to convene but permits the House and the Senate to vote separately. “It appears from media reports that the Senate has taken the position that the manner of voting in a constituent assembly that
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A Philippine Statistics Authority employee presents at the House a sample of the ID to be issued under the national ID system. Inquirer.net photo by Jam Sta. Rosa
National ID system gets mixed reactions from citizens, sectors by AJPRESS
PUSHING CHARTER CHANGE. Speaker Gloria Arroyo discusses a point before stopping the Committee on Constitutional Amendments from deliberating on proposals to amend the constitution. To her right is former senator Aquilino ‘Nene’ Pimentel, a member of the Consultative Committee that drafted the proposed federal constitution. ManilaTimes.net photo by Ruy Martinez
THE national ID system garnered mixed reactions from the general public after President Rodrigo Duterte signed its implementation into law on Monday, August 6, at Malacanang. The law, otherwise known as the Republic Act of 11055 includes the establishment of the Philippine ID system (PhilSys), a centralized database that contains all the necessary and vital information of the residents in the country. It will also signify a unified and streamlined identification system for every citizen.
Supporters of the said law praised the initiative stating that a national ID will expedite government processes and basic services and will also put an end to bureaucratic red tape. However, those in opposition expressed concern with the privacy issues it might entail. In a report from Inquirer, among those who support the law were Catholic leaders, law enforcers, and public officials while those who do not agree with the law’s provisions were human rights groups. Church leaders, law enforcers and public officials pro-
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Funeral, public viewing set for Trinidad family members killed in car crash by MOMAR
G. VISAYA
AJPress
MARY Rose Ballocanag, the only surviving member of the Trinidad family in the fatal car crash in Delaware last July 6, will bury her husband Audie and their four daughters Kaitlyn, 20; Danna, 17; and 13-year-old twins Allison and Melissa this weekend. The public visitation will be held on Friday, August 10 from 3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at St. Anastasia Roman Catholic Church at 1095 Teaneck Road, in Teaneck. The funeral services will be held on Saturday, August 11 at Fairleigh Dickinson University’s Rothman Center at 100 University Plaza Drive in Hackensack, New Jersey. A private cremation will follow at Rosedale Crematory in Orange.
“Physical is nothing but it is the pain inside that is unbearable,” Ballocanag said in a press conference at Kessler Rehabilitation Center last week. “I just have to do what I have to do so I can seek justice for them, that’s why I am here. So that’s what I am going to do, I am gonna get better and seek justice for my family.” Audie Trinidad was a postal worker in Bronx, New York. Kaitlyn, known as Nikki, was a nursing student at the College of Mount Saint Vincent in the Bronx. Danna was a junior at Teaneck High School. The twins, Melissa and Allison, attended Thomas Jefferson Middle School in Teaneck, according to an obituary for the family. Diane Lucianna, Ballocanag’s lawyer Mary Rose Ballocanag (2nd from left) will bury her husband Audie and their four daughters said that she has a broken left arm with in- Kaitlyn, 20; Danna, 17; and 13-year-old twins Allison and Melissa this weekend. Her family was
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involved in the fatal car crash in Delaware last July 6.