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Friday, June 5, 2026

The IBP Has The Last Word

 


The Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) has officially entered the great Senate Leadership Brawl of 2026, armed with a calculator, a 77-year-old Supreme Court ruling, and a complete lack of patience for sovereign hide-and-seek.

For the past 48 hours, displaced Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano and his loyalists have been screaming from every available social media platform that the June 3 session—where 12 senators physically showed up, declared a quorum, and unceremoniously evicted his leadership—was an "illegal, unconstitutional, twilight-zone coup d'état."

But on June 4, the literal gatekeepers of the Philippine legal system dropped an official statement that essentially told the old majority: "Your math is wrong, your drama is irrelevant, and the 12-man miracle is completely legal."

The IBP’s legal justification is an absolute masterpiece of judicial comedy. Alan Peter insists that because there are 24 theoretical seats in the Senate, you need at least 13 warm bodies to start a quorum.

But the IBP pulled out the landmark Avelino vs. Cuenco (1949) case and explained that the Senate's quorum sheet is a sliding scale based on basic reality. Under their official audit, the total number of available senators mysteriously shrank from 24 to 22.

[ THE COMPULSORY ATTENDANCE BREAKDOWN ]

* Total Theoretical Senators: 24

* Minus Senator Jinggoy: -1 (Currently resting comfortably in a non-bailable detention facility)

* Minus Senator Bato: -1 (Missing in action since May 11, running from the ICC) * Total Available Reality: 22

According to the IBP, the Sergeant-at-Arms cannot exactly walk into a jail cell or an undisclosed underground bunker to drag lawmakers to work by their neckties.

Therefore, since only 22 senators can realistically be forced to show up, the magic number for a majority drops to 12.

The IBP didn't just validate the math; they completely roasted the entire strategy of the old majority. Cayetano’s camp genuinely believed that if they simply stayed home, turned off the lights, and refused to answer their phones, the entire legislative branch of the Republic of the Philippines would freeze in carbonite.

“The Constitution should be interpreted in a way that allows the Senate to function and not be blocked by the absence of Members who cannot realistically be made to attend.”

-The Cayetano Fantasy- "If my friends and I go on a permanent strike, we can paralyze the government forever and save my presidency!"

-The IBP Reality - "This isn't a high school barkada vacation. The Senate is a constitutional machine, not an optional hobby that depends on your comfort level."

The IBP basically confirmed that once you reach the 12-man mark of available lawmakers, the Senate is open for business under the Presumption of Regularity.

If you choose to spend your afternoon crying about an "illegal takeover" instead of walking into the plenary hall, the people left inside are legally allowed to change the organizational chart without your permission.

With the IBP declaring the June 3 session "lawful and valid," Alan Peter’s parallel universe completely collapsed.

Just a day prior, his camp was running around issuing memos for unauthorized Blue Ribbon Committee hearings, pretending the coup never happened.

Thanks to the country’s top lawyers, those memos have officially been downgraded from "senatorial directives" to "very expensive fan fiction."

[ THE STATUS OF THE CAYETANO MEMOS ]

* Before the IBP Statement: "Highly important leadership declarations."

* After the IBP Statement: "Paper airplanes to be used by the new majority."

Where does this leave the grand Senate standoff? Win Gatchalian is sitting comfortably in the leader's chair, the new majority has the full backing of constitutional precedent, and Alan Peter is left lecturing empty leather seats about the unfairness of arithmetic.

The message to the remaining members of the "Majority 13" cult is loud and clear: if you want to keep your leadership positions, you actually have to show up to the room where it happens.

Because if you spend your time hiding your allies from warrants or ghosting the plenary, the law will simply subtract you from the equation and move on with the budget.

In the Philippines, the Constitution is built to keep the Republic moving, even if its leaders prefer to play hide-and-seek. If 12 senators are ready to work, the circus must close its curtains.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Adjourned Sine Die ... Pumapasok Si Alan Any Day!



The Philippine Senate has officially accomplished the impossible: they have completely broken the spacetime continuum.

Following the dramatic June 3 coup that installed Senator Win Gatchalian as Acting Senate President, the upper chamber officially adjourned sine die—meaning legislative business is over, the school year is finished, and everyone is technically on vacation.

Yet, on June 4, Senator Alan Peter Cayetano and his remaining loyalists suddenly materialised inside the building, demanding that staff open the microphones and process hearings.

This prompted a classic, exasperated reality check from Senator Ping Lacson, who basically asked: "How do you manage to report for work only when the office is officially closed?"

Ping Lacson’s public call-out highlights a spectacular irony. For days, when the Senate was actually supposed to be open, Cayetano was famously absent, running the legislative branch via a series of highly dramatic Facebook Livestreams from an undisclosed couch.

[ THE CAYETANO WORK CALENDAR ]

* Regular Scheduled Session Days: "I am boycotting this room. I am invisible." But you can find me in Facebook.

* Official Legislative Vacation: "Quick, grab the gavels! We must investigate flood control at 8:00 AM sharp!"

Political observers are beginning to wonder if Cayetano is simply a hardcore Barangay Ginebra fan whose life is governed by the motto "Never Say Die."

Even when the scoreboard says the game ended yesterday, the lights are turned off, and the new majority has already changed the locks, Alan is still out on the court practicing his free throws.

For long-time watchers of Philippine politics, this aggressive refusal to leave a vacant seat feels like massive deja vu. This isn't Alan’s first rodeo when it comes to treating a public leadership seat like it was sealed with industrial superglue.

-The Historical Premise -The 15-21 Speaker Term Sharing (2019): A gentleman's agreement to share the House Speakership with Lord Allan Velasco.

-The Execution Reality - Absolute, high-stakes political drama where the seat had to practically be pried away with a crowbar.

-The Historical Premise - The Senate Majority Coup (2026): 12 senators vote to declare the seats vacant and adjourn the chamber.

-The Execution Reality - Issuing paper memos from a parallel universe asserting that the Office of the Senate President is "fully operational."

-The Structural Analysis: There is a distinct pattern here. In Alan's constitutional handbook, an agreement or a democratic vote is only valid if he is the one holding the gavel at the end of the meeting.

If the numbers don't favor him, the entire concept of arithmetic becomes an "illegal coup d'état."

The real victims here are the ordinary Senate security guards and stenographers who arrived on June 4 to find two entirely conflicting realities running simultaneously in the same building.

[ THE SINE DIE MATRIX ]

* Reality A (Gatchalian): "We are adjourned. Go home. Work from home is allowed."

* Reality B (Cayetano): "Pia Cayetano's Blue Ribbon hearing is fully authorized! All personnel must render full cooperation!"

It takes a truly elite level of confidence to ignore a physical, plenary vote of 12 senators, bypass the fact that Malacañang has already recognized the new leadership, and try to run a country through sheer willpower and a stack of unauthorized photocopies.

Where does this leave the grand Senate standoff? We have reached the point where the Senate President isn't chosen by the Constitution anymore—they are chosen by whoever refuses to pack up their desk organizers.

The next time the Senate goes on an official holiday, clear-headed citizens should check the building's security cameras.

You might just spot Alan Peter Cayetano sneaking back into the plenary hall under the cover of darkness, holding a flashlight, and declaring a quorum with a room full of empty leather chairs.

If you're going to use a "Never Say Die" strategy to keep your job, make sure you actually have a team left on the floor. Otherwise, you're not playing for Ginebra—yung totoo, kapit-tuko lang talaga

Can Camille Look at Chiz Escudero's Eyes and Say Hudas Ka!

 



The upper chamber of the Philippine legislature has officially transitioned from standard political maneuvering into full-blown Biblical theater.

In a quote leaked to the press by Senator Rodante Marcoleta, Senator Camille Villar reportedly declared that anyone who defects from their elite "Majority 13" bloc—amid intense leadership coup rumors against Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano—is "worse than Judas Iscariot."

According to this new theological framework, the halls of the Pasay Senate are no longer just a legislative building; they are the upper room of the Last Supper, and the national budget is apparently the Holy Grail.

There is only one minor, mathematically devastating glitch in this holy alliance: Chiz Escudero has already left.

In standard global politics, breaking away from a ruling coalition is called a "strategic realignment" or "following your conscience." In the current Philippine Senate, it gets you branded as an eternal traitor destined for the deepest ring of theological purgatory.

[ THE VILLAR DISCIPLINARY CODE ]

* The Statement: "Anyone among us who breaks away from our group... I think—he is worse than Judas."

* The Context: Said with deep emotional gravity following a week of chaotic political standoffs and the impeachment drama of VP Sara Duterte.

The sheer scale of the metaphor is spectacular. Judas Iscariot betrayed a divine entity for 30 pieces of silver.

Camille Villar is suggesting that slipping away from a fragile 13-member political alliance to survive a committee reshuffle is historically, morally, and spiritually worse.

The true comedy of Camille’s "Judas Ledger" is that it was spoken as if the 13 members were still sitting at the table lock-step.

Unfortunately, veteran political strategist and undisputed master of timing Chiz Escudero had already checked the weather, looked at the numbers, and casually slid out the back door.

-The Villar Expectation - Dynamic solidarity, eternal blood oaths, and dramatic speeches about standing together until the end.

-The Chiz Reality - Slipping away quietly to form a new alliance while the remaining members are still arguing about the seating arrangement.

By Camille's logic, Chiz Escudero didn't just switch political allegiances; he practically initiated the apocalypse.

While the Majority 13 were busy preparing their dramatic, unified group photo, Chiz was already halfway down the hall organizing the next leadership coup with the opposition.

According to Marcoleta, Villar’s emotional outburst was triggered by the group witnessing the "supreme sacrifice of one of their own"—referring to Senator Ronald "Bato" dela Rosa’s ongoing battles with the legal system and a near-arrest scenario in the Senate.

-The Structural Breakdown: Treating a routine, messy political realignment like a holy war is the ultimate coping mechanism for a majority bloc that realizes its numbers are actively shrinking. When you can no longer hold your allies with logic, math, or committee assignments, your only remaining option is to threaten them with eternal damnation.

Where does this leave the Senate's grand leadership battle? We are now living in an era where checking your legislative headcount requires a theological consultant.

The next time a senator decides to switch rooms or vote against Alan Peter Cayetano, they won't just face a cold shoulder in the lounge—they’ll have to check if Camille Villar has ordered a fresh set of silver coins for their desk.

In Philippine politics, loyalty lasts exactly until the next committee chairmanship opens up.

If you're going to accuse your colleagues of being worse than Judas, always make sure the smartest guy in the room hasn't already cleared out his locker and signed with the o

Satire: Who is The Real Senate President?

 




I have the feeling this will be another explosive day at the Senate.

The Philippine Senate has officially upgraded from a legislative body to a full-blown psychological thriller, and the nation is currently watching a real-time game of "Who Wants to Be the Real Senate President?"

On one side of the ring, we have Alan Peter Cayetano, who is firmly clinging to the gavel and insisting he is legally still the Senate President.

On the other side, we have Win Gatchalian, backed by the new majority, who is confidently rearranging the furniture and asserting that the changing of the guard is a done deal.

While the two political factions are busy throwing constitutional citations at each other, the real, tragic comedy is unfolding in the corridors—where the ordinary, everyday Senate employees are currently experiencing a corporate existential crisis of apocalyptic proportions.

If you think your office politics are bad, consider the current situation of the Senate security detachment. Reports have surfaced that the new Gatchalian-led majority has already appointed a brand-new Sergeant-at-Arms. Meanwhile, Cayetano is holding the line with his own loyalist Sergeant-at-Arms.

[ THE PASAY CORRIDOR SECURITY GRID ]

* Door A: Guarded by Cayetano's SAA (Demanding loyalty to the old script).

* Door B: Guarded by Gatchalian's SAA (Enforcing the new organizational chart).

This is no longer a civil service assignment; it is a live-action multiplayer strategy game. If an ordinary utility worker needs to deliver a stack of papers to the plenary, who signs the clearance?

Do they need to get a stamp from both factions just to cross the hallway? If the two rival Sergeants-at-Arms bump into each other near the water cooler, do we get an explosive martial arts showdown, or just a very tense debate over who owns the official office walkie-talkies?

In a brilliant display of sudden, miraculous legislative energy, the displaced majority has suddenly decided to show up for work today.

After famously ghosting the plenary for three straight days—long enough to trigger a constitutional violation regarding unauthorized breaks—Rep. Rodante Marcoleta is suddenly pushing forward with a heavy hearing on the flood control mess.

[ THE LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR PARADOX ]

* May 31 - June 2: "We are launching a silent protest! Turn off the aircon! Let the Senate go quiet!"

* June 4 (Post-Coup): "Quick, open the microphones! We need to investigate flood control right now! We are highly diligent public servants!"

At the exact same time, the Blue Ribbon Committee is also trying to gavel itself into order. The ordinary stenographers, technical assistants, and sound engineers are being dragged into a multiverse of madness.

If a staffer sets up the microphones for Marcoleta's hearing, are they committing an act of insubordination against the new leadership? If they ignore the hearing, will they get lectured for dereliction of duty?

For the true-blue, ordinary rank-and-file workers who just want to clock in, process paperwork, and receive their mid-year bonuses, surviving today requires an elite level of emotional gymnastics.

1. -The Employee Dilemma - Who is the boss?

-The Survival Strategy - Bow deeply to both Alan Peter and Win Gatchalian if you see them in the elevator. Do not make direct eye contact with either gavel.

2. -The Employee Dilemma - Which memo is valid?

-Survival Strategy - Print out all leadership directives, stack them on top of each other, and hope the ink fades before a deadline hits.

3. Employee Dilemma -The Temperature Factor

-Survival Strategy - Keep a jacket ready in case the new majority turns the air conditioning back on, but keep a fan handy in case the old faction decides to weaponize the thermostat again.

Clear-headed citizens and political analysts are currently on high alert for the ultimate inevitable climax: The Alan Peter Temper Tantrum.

The entire nation remembers the legendary, premium-tier lecture Cayetano delivered to DILG Secretary Jonvic Remulla when Jinggoy Estrada was processed for arrest.

It was a masterclass in aggressive politeness and institutional grandstanding. Now that his own seat is physically being replaced by Win Gatchalian, the public is bracing for a sequel that will likely shatter all previous records for filibustering.

[ PREDICTED CAYETANO SHOWDOWN SCRIPT ]

"You cannot replace me! This is an illegal, unconstitutional, multiverse coup!

I am the only one who can legally hold this microphone, and I will now lecture this hallway for the next four hours ... ad nauseam.

While the top-tier politicians are fighting over who gets to wear the imaginary crown of Pasay City, the ordinary employees are the ones carrying the actual weight of the circus.

If you see a Senate staffer on the street today, buy them a coffee—because they are currently navigating a workplace where changing your boss happens faster than the Wi-Fi reboots.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Lupitas Jones Miss Universe 1991 )n The Hotseat

 


The global pageant community has officially upgraded from standard stan warfare to high-level historical forensic accounting.

Following the conclusion of the inaugural Miss Grand International All Stars 2026 pageant in Bangkok, legendary former Miss Universe Lupita Jones decided to jump onto social media to explain her highly specific, decimal-slashing scoring methodology. 

Within hours, internet sleuths responded not with angry comments, but by unearthing archived 1991 paper score sheets like a team of auditory tax auditors.

The resulting narrative is a beautiful, global display of theatrical outrage, regional solidarity, and the ultimate rule of the digital age: If you tank our scores in 2026, we will pull up your report card from 35 years ago.

The controversy ignited when Lupita went live to explain why she wasn't completely moved by some of Asia’s most formidable powerhouse delegates. 

Armed with an eye for detail that borders on microscopic radiology, she dismantled performances with the clinical precision of a corporate auditor.

[ THE LUPITA CRITIQUE MATRIX ] 

* Target A: Gazini Ganados (Philippines) 

* The Verdict: "Her legs appeared too thin... small details kept me from being fully convinced." 

* Target B: Nguyen Huong Giang (Vietnam) 

* The Verdict: Harsh marks despite a massive fanbase voting surge and a butterfly-winged evening gown that nearly cleared the stage rafters.

Pageant purists immediately noted a structural glitch in the matrix: Lupita appeared to be scoring as if she were operating in an entirely different era—or perhaps an entirely different physics engine. 

In a tournament where scores reset to zero after the preliminaries, applying a retroactive penalty based on a vibe from a closed-door interview is the pageant equivalent of counting a foul from last week’s game.

The true comedy of errors began when the internet retaliated with cold, hard data. 

Fans from Manila to Hanoi dug deep into the archives of the 1991 Miss Universe pageant to remind everyone exactly how Lupita captured Mexico's historic first crown.

As it turns out, her path to glory wasn't paved by cosmic alignment; it was heavily funded by the exceptional generosity of Asian judges who apparently had a much higher tolerance for "small details" than she does today.

Archival Data: The 1991 Mutual Respect Avenue

JudgeCategoryScore Given to Lupita
Kuh Ledesma (Philippines)Evening Gown9.9 (Virtually Flawless)
Kuh Ledesma (Philippines)Swimsuit & Interview9.8 (High-Tier Luxury)
Dustin Nguyen (Vietnam)All Three Major Semis9.5 (Rock-Solid Corporate Endorsement)

The Historical Irony: Without the massive mathematical cushioning provided by the Philippines and Vietnam in 1991, Lupita’s dream of the universe would have slid away faster than a loose sash on a wet runway. Fast forward to 2026, and those exact same demographics are getting their leg proportions critiqued on a livestream.

The backlash deepened over Lupita’s scoring of Vietnam’s Nguyen Huong Giang. 

Pageant analysts pointed out that Lupita's rigid, hyper-traditional grading system felt distinctly out of place in a modern MGI spin-off specifically designed to celebrate inclusivity, veterans, and diverse platforms.

While Huong Giang was busy collecting perfect 10s from other judges and sweeping the audience vote like a tidal wave, Lupita remained steady as the panel's resident traditionalist—proving that you can change the rules of the competition, but you cannot easily change the internal spreadsheet of a 90s titleholder.

Where does this leave the international pageant landscape? We are now living in an era where beauty queens are judged not just by the judges' panels, but by the archival research capabilities of millions of fans with high-speed internet connections.

Lupita has officially limited her social media comments, transforming her handles into a quiet digital bunker while the hashtags #FairJudging and #RespectAsianContestants Continue to trend across Southeast Asia.

The Truth Be Said: If you are going to sit on a modern international judging panel and hand out scores with a heavy hand, always make sure your own historical victories weren't decided by a 9.9 from the very region you are currently grading.

Arrest Them


The great legislative game of hide-and-seek has just encountered its ultimate legal final boss.


As the Minority Bloc continues to sweat under the sweltering, un-airconditioned skies of the abandoned Senate chamber, former Solicitor General and constitutional law heavy-hitter Florin Hilbay has just walked onto the field.

Hilbay—a man famous for helping win an international arbitration case against an aggressive superpower—looked at the majority’s ongoing plenary ghosting campaign and decided to read the absolute riot act to Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano and his truant allies.

Instead of writing a polite letter or appealing to their sense of national duty, Hilbay pulled out Article VI, Section 16(2) of the Philippine Constitution and essentially yelled: "ARREST THEM!"

In a standard corporate setting, if you don't show up to work because your feelings are hurt or because you need to escort a colleague to a detention center, you get a stern memo from HR.

But under Hilbay’s magnificent, literal reading of the highest law of the land, the minority doesn't need HR—they have the right to form a tactical recovery unit.

[ ARTICLE VI, SECTION 16(2) DETENTION SYSTEM ]

* The Rule: A smaller number of members (The Sweating Minority) may legally compel the attendance of absent members (The Vacationing Majority).

* The Execution: The remaining 11 senators are constitutionally authorized to deputize the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms to track down the fugitives.

Imagine the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms storming a premium coffee shop or an exclusive Taguig lifestyle mall, pinning an allied senator to the velvet couch, and shouting: "You have the right to remain legislative! Hand over the iPad! You are being compelled to vote on the national budget immediately!"

The absolute comedy of the situation is that the Majority Bloc spent weeks trying to pass an amendment to allow remote Zoom conferences so their allies could participate from secret bunkers.

Now, in a spectacular twist of poetic justice, Hilbay is pointing out that they might actually get physically escorted into the plenary hall by security forces just to establish a quorum.

-The Majority's Dream - Legislate from a beach in Palawan via an iPhone while the Wi-Fi is cut off for everyone else.

The Hilbay Reality - Being physically tracked down by a constitutional dragnet because you cannot paralyze a sovereign branch of government.

Hilbay has successfully stripped away the sophisticated political terminology of Alan Peter Cayetano's "silent protest."

He exposed it for what it truly is: an expensive, taxpayer-funded skip-day.

You cannot claim to be the majestic "Lawyer-in-Chief" or the leader of the group when a former Solicitor General has to publicly remind the nation that the Constitution contains a specific clause designed to treat you like a high schooler cutting class.

Where exactly does this leave the Senate President’s temper tantrum?

If Erwin Tulfo’s resignation ultimatum didn't make him nervous, Hilbay’s constitutional bounty hunter clause certainly should.

You cannot boast about your elite 12-man structural dominance while running away from the very room where your presence is required by law.

The next time the majority decides to ghost a session, they shouldn't be surprised if the minority stops waiting for the air conditioning to turn back on—and instead sends a patrol car to pick them up for their 3:00 PM roll call.

In the Philippines, the Constitution ensures that, even if you try to put the government on pause, the remaining members always have the legal right to track you down, bring you back to the office, and make you sit in your chair until the work is done.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Walk Out Galore

 


The Philippine Senate has officially abandoned the tedious business of lawmaking to focus on what it truly loves: competitive high-stakes dramatic exits.

The upper chamber has devolved into a multi-million-peso reality television set where the main legislative tool is no longer the privilege speech, but the tactical abandonment of the building.

It all started when the 11-member Minority Bloc staged a grand, cinematic walkout to protest the majority’s aggressive push for a "Zoom Conference Initiative."

The plan, masterminded by the majority, was simple: allow lawmakers to legislate, debate, and vote on national laws from the comfort of their couch, or perhaps while avoiding a warrant of apprehension.

Refusing to let the Senate be turned into a work-from-home corporate webinar, the minority marched out of the hall in a beautiful display of traditional democratic theater.

But the Majority Bloc, determined not to be out-diva’d, decided that if the minority could walk out, they could do it better, bigger, and with emotional background music.

When Senator Jinggoy Estrada was arrested, the majority realized they had the perfect opportunity to execute the ultimate counter-walkout.

Instead of merely leaving the floor, the entire majority bloc trooped out of the Senate building in unison to personally escort their colleague to his detention center.

[ THE TWO KINDS OF SENATE WALKOUTS ]

* The Minority Version: March out of the room to protest Zoom voting rules (Classic, procedural).

* The Majority Version: Empty the building entirely to form a VIP moral-support motorcade to jail (Innovative, highly emotional).

Forget checking for a legislative quorum; the only quorum that mattered to the majority was the one gathered at the visitor’s lounge of the detention facility.

Legislative duties were instantly put on pause because, as the unwritten rules of showbiz alliances dictate, no colleague gets processed by law enforcement without a full entourage of supportive press releases.

The real comedy, however, unfolded the next day. The minority returned to the session hall, fully dressed, holding their folders, and ready to play the role of the diligent, aggrieved lawmakers.

They sat down, looked at the clock, and realized they had been completely ghosted. The entire majority bloc simply refused to show up.

Instead of walking into work, Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano hopped onto a Facebook Live stream to announce a "quiet protest," profoundly challenging the minority to "let the Senate go quiet" to protect its institutional independence.

[ THE PLENARY HOSTAGE CALCULUS ]

* Left Waiting in the Dark: 11 furious minority senators.

* Left in Limbo: Dozens of military generals waiting in full uniform for their promotions.

* The Majority's Response: "Please understand our emotional journey right now."

While the majority was busy practicing their deep, philosophical silence on social media, the actual Senate building began to undergo a mysterious, infrastructural breakdown:

The Eco-Zone Strategy: The centralized air conditioning was abruptly shut off. The minority bloc was left to sweat out their legislative frustrations in a room that rapidly began to mimic a tropical greenhouse.

The Digital Blackout: The Senate Wi-Fi was completely severed. Senators who wanted to tweet their anger were suddenly forced to rely on weak mobile data, effectively reducing the upper chamber of the republic to a stone-age tribal council.

As the temperature inside the plenary rose and the internet signal dropped to zero, the Tulfo siblings finally reached their absolute limit.

Acting as the voice of the sweltering, disconnected minority, Senator Erwin Tulfo called a press conference to read an official 11-man declaration demanding that Alan Peter Cayetano immediately resign from the Senate Presidency.

[ EXT. SENATE PRESS ROOM - DAY ]

-ERWIN TULFO: "This is a clear abandonment of responsibility! A dereliction of duty! You cannot stop the entire government from working just because your feelings are hurt!"

-RAFFY TULFO (Nodding from behind): "If you are brave, show up here tomorrow! Otherwise, you are a coward! And turn the aircon back on!"

The minority's argument is mathematically sound: you cannot boast about having a tight, efficient 12-man majority structure, and then refuse to turn on the lights or open the doors the moment one member of your math formula gets detained.

Where exactly does this leave the republic?

We are currently navigating an era of governance where the country's highest legislative body operates entirely on the emotional stability of its leadership.

If the majority gets their way, we vote on Zoom from an undisclosed location.

If the majority gets upset, the air conditioning gets weaponized, the Wi-Fi gets assassinated, and the national budget gets delayed because everyone is out visiting a friend in custody.

The Truth Be Said: The next time you feel like skipping work because you had a bad day, just tell your boss that you are launching a "deliberate act of quiet protest to protect your personal independence."

If it works for the Senate President, it should definitely work for you.

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Wretired writer, Malayang Free Thinker, Probing Blogger, Disenteng Dissenter, Tempered temperamental, Liberal-Conservative, Grammar and Syntax Police, Pageant Connoisseur, Hibiscus Collector

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The IBP Has The Last Word

  The Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) has officially entered the great Senate Leadership Brawl of 2026, armed with a calculator, a 7...

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