Supreme Court to begin oral arguments on budget insertions April 7

The Supreme Court will begin oral arguments tomorrow on petitions challenging the legality of unprogrammed appropriations and special accounts in the national budget. The hearings are set at the Session Hall in Padre Faura, Manila, starting at 9:30 a.m.

The consolidated petitions challenge provisions in the 2024, 2025, and 2026 General Appropriations Acts related to unprogrammed funds and special accounts in the General Fund. Petitioners include the late Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, former Sen. Koko Pimentel, former House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez, civic groups, and other lawmakers. They argue that Congress inserted or expanded budget allocations through bicameral conference committees beyond constitutional limits, including hundreds of billions of pesos in unprogrammed appropriations.

Separate petitions also question adjustments to special accounts, including those tied to infrastructure spending, and provisions in the 2026 budget allowing continued use of unprogrammed funds. The first hearing is tomorrow, April 7, with another on April 21.

In context, the Supreme Court has relocated its summer sessions from Baguio to Manila from April 6 to 30 due to rising fuel prices. Chief Justice Alexander Gesmundo said the move followed consultation with the full bench to remain mindful of national conditions while delivering justice. The oral arguments will proceed as scheduled.

Related Articles

House justice committee holds first impeachment hearing for VP Sara Duterte without her or lawyers present, focusing on procedural agenda and audit evidence.
Image generated by AI

House proceeds with VP Sara Duterte impeachment hearing on March 25

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The House justice committee proceeds with the first impeachment hearing against Vice President Sara Duterte on March 25, 2026, despite her and her lawyers' absence. The agenda includes ground rules, pending motions, subpoenas, and witnesses for the April 14 public hearing. Officials stress the proceedings are evidence-based from official audit findings.

The Supreme Court held its first oral arguments on April 7 on petitions challenging unprogrammed appropriations in the 2024, 2025, and 2026 national budgets. Invited experts as amici curiae presented divided views on their legality and implications. Some warned of weakened transparency, while others defended their necessity.

Reported by AI

Following initial oral arguments on April 7, the Supreme Court on April 8 asked the Office of the Solicitor General for detailed records on unprogrammed appropriations releases amid concerns over misuse in the 2024-2026 budgets. A April 14 deadline was set for the submission.

The House of Representatives will continue impeachment proceedings against Vice President Sara Duterte next month despite a Supreme Court petition filed by her supporters. Lawmakers stated the justice committee will follow the 1987 Constitution and House rules. Clarificatory hearings are underway to determine probable cause.

Reported by AI

Following the bicameral committee's approval of the P6.793-trillion 2026 General Appropriations Bill, Senate and House leaders signed the conference committee report on Friday at the Philippine International Convention Center. The move paves the way for ratification on Saturday and transmission to President Marcos for approval.

The House ways and means committee, led by Rep. Miro Quimbo, convenes on Wednesday, April 8, to discuss a potential relief package amid the oil and energy crisis triggered by the Middle East conflict. Government agencies have been invited to brief lawmakers on fuel supply, economic impacts from the US war on Iran, and the government's response. The hearings aim to craft a Bayanihan 3 package for short-term relief and long-term resilience.

Reported by AI

Lawyers for Vice President Sara Duterte were not consulted by a group that petitioned the Supreme Court to halt impeachment proceedings against her in the House justice committee. Duterte's lawyer Michael Poa said they were surprised by the filing. The panel has scheduled hearings in April.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline