Senate approves emergency powers for Marcos on fuel excise tax

The Senate approved on third reading a bill granting President Marcos emergency powers to suspend or reduce fuel excise taxes. It passed with 17 affirmative votes and no negative votes or abstentions. Bicameral talks are expected today before the congressional break.

On Tuesday, the Senate approved on third and final reading a measure granting President Marcos emergency powers to suspend or reduce excise taxes on petroleum products. Certified as urgent, it passed with 17 affirmative votes, no negative votes, and no abstentions. Senate President Vicente Sotto III urged Ways and Means Chairperson Sen. Pia Cayetano to coordinate with her House counterpart, Rep. Miro Quimbo, on reconciling versions, as the House had already approved its bill. “Hopefully, the chairperson would be able to get in touch with her counterpart so we may be able to tackle this tomorrow, if they’re willing to adopt our version or if paper bicam’s possible,” Sotto said during session. Sotto and Majority Leader Juan Miguel Zubiri noted it needs ratification on Thursday, the last session day before a month-long break. After House passage, Quimbo stated, “This passage is not just a victory for the government, but for all ordinary Filipinos, particularly our hardworking middle class, who have been most affected by this crisis and often lack adequate safety nets.” Lawmakers clarified during deliberations that the public will not immediately feel effects, as oil firms must deplete existing taxed inventories first. Cayetano said it could take 30 to 45 days for pump prices to reflect cuts, or sooner if supplies are depleted. The Department of Finance estimates reductions of P11.2 per liter for gasoline and P6.72 for diesel. Malacañang rejected a proposal from the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines for a national emergency declaration. “Right now, we are not in that situation,” said Presidential Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro. The government continues talks with oil companies through DOE Secretary Sharon Garin, and Castro urged the public to avoid sowing fear.

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Philippine lawmakers approving bill for President Marcos' fuel tax powers amid Middle East oil crisis.
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House approves bill granting Marcos special powers on fuel excise tax

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The House of Representatives has approved a bill on second reading granting President Marcos special powers to suspend or reduce excise taxes on fuel to cushion the impact of soaring oil prices due to the Middle East conflict. This measure is part of broader government efforts to protect Filipinos from potential increases in commodity prices. Meanwhile, the Department of Transportation is studying a possible fare hike for public transport.

On Thursday, March 12, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. certified as urgent a bill granting him emergency powers to suspend or reduce excise taxes on petroleum products. The move aims to address soaring fuel prices amid Middle East tensions. Sen. Win Gatchalian warned of tradeoffs, including a potential P136 billion revenue loss for the government.

Reported by AI

The House Committee on Ways and Means has approved a substitute bill empowering President Bongbong Marcos to suspend or reduce excise taxes on petroleum products amid surging fuel prices due to the escalating Middle East conflict.

José Antonio Kast's government issued decrees tweaking the Mepco, allowing historic gasoline and diesel price hikes starting March 26. The move addresses surging oil prices from the Iran war and fiscal tightness, with relief for paraffin and transporters. Congress approved the bill after negotiations exempting SMEs from higher taxes.

Reported by AI

No announcements from the government or schools exist regarding class suspensions from March 9 to 13 due to a potential oil price hike from Middle East tensions. This claim spread on social media but has been debunked as false news. Meanwhile, the Senate filed a bill for a national petroleum reserve to counter fuel supply crisis effects.

A newly formed Senate ad hoc committee on Middle East crisis response will hold its first hearing on Tuesday, chairman Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian announced. The Proactive Response and Oversight for Timely and Effective Crisis Strategy committee aims to check funds in the 2026 General Appropriations Act to address the crisis from US-Israel attacks on Iran. Fuel prices are soaring, threatening food security.

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Following the December 19 announcement of plans for an economic emergency decree, the Colombian government of Gustavo Petro on December 31 issued the tax package via Decree 1390, targeting 11 trillion pesos to address a 16.3 trillion fiscal deficit after Congress rejected reforms. Finance Minister Germán Ávila noted it covers much but not all 2026 needs, impacting liquor, cigarettes, patrimony, finance, and imports.

 

 

 

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