Home>News Center>World | ||
Philippine president delivers state of nation address Scandal-plagued Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on Monday urged Congress to change the constitution to shift to a parliamentary form of government to ease the country's constant political instability. "The system clearly needs fundamental change - and the sooner, the better," Arroyo, the subject of an impeachment complaint filed earlier in the day, said in her annual state of the nation address to a joint session of Congress. Referring indirectly to the two "people power" revolts that have forced out two presidents since 1986 and a constant rash of coup attempts and takeover rumors, Arroyo said in the 20-minute speech that her nation had become too polarized to make the changes it needs to meet the challenges of the 21st century.
She suggested that Congress set up a constituent assembly to tackle the issue of charter change, but she made no mention of a time frame or whether she would be willing to step down early. Former President Fidel Ramos has called for making the changes in time for a referendum early next year, followed by new elections in May. Speaking hours after opposition legislators filed an impeachment complaint against her in the latest move to force her out, Arroyo briefly outlined a 10-point "phase 2" of her ambitious economic reform program to ease poverty, create jobs and attract foreign investment. Arroyo, looking tired with bags under her eyes after dealing with the two-month-old scandal, touted her administration's accomplishments in generating 4 million jobs over the last four years, fighting drugs, curtailing kidnappings and easing a bloody Muslim separatist insurgency in the south. She said the economy grew more than 6 percent last year and continues to expand despite high oil prices.
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||