*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM

I remember one afternoon with my daughter Juliana Rizalhea sitting in a small lugawan in Barangay Fortune, Marikina City, the kind of place where the broth is always hot and the conversations are even hotter. Two men beside me were arguing—not about basketball, not about fuel prices, but about impeachment. One insisted, “Mali ang ginawa ng Korte Suprema dati.” The other countered, “Eh ngayon sinusunod na nga ng Kongreso, mali pa rin?” I stayed quiet, stirring my bowl, but inside, I realized something deeper: this was not just a legal debate. This was a reflection of how we, as a people, struggle with consistency, principle, and objectivity.
As someone who has spent years in governance, doctrine development, and public safety education, I have learned that the strength of institutions is not measured only by their power, but by the consistency of how we understand and apply them. The current discourse surrounding impeachment—particularly the role of the Supreme Court and the response of the House of Representatives—exposes a deeper national dilemma: we do not merely debate law; we negotiate it based on preference.
At the center of this issue is the perceived intervention of the Supreme Court in impeachment processes. Critics in the past were quick to declare such involvement as unconstitutional, invoking the principle of separation of powers. Impeachment, they argued, is a political function lodged solely in Congress. The judiciary, therefore, should not intrude.
Ngunit ngayon, narito tayo sa isang kakaibang sitwasyon. Ang Kongreso—partikular ang House of Representatives—ay sumusunod sa direksyon o epekto ng interpretasyon ng Korte Suprema. At ano ang naging reaksyon? Mali pa rin. Biglang ang pagsunod ay naging kahinaan. Ang pagtalima ay naging kawalan ng paninindigan. Parang kahit saan lumugar ang Kongreso, may kapintasan pa rin.
This contradiction reveals what I call a crisis of principle. In constitutional theory, consistency is fundamental. One cannot argue that judicial interpretation is illegitimate, and then later condemn a legislative body for adhering to that same interpretation. Such a position is not rooted in constitutionalism—it is rooted in convenience.
The statement attributed to Senior Associate Justice Marvic Leonen underscores a fundamental element of due process: that a respondent in an impeachment complaint must be given the opportunity to be heard before the case is transmitted to the Senate. This is not a mere procedural technicality. It is a constitutional safeguard designed to prevent impeachment from degenerating into a tool of political expediency.
Ngunit kung susuriin natin ang reaksyon ng publiko, makikita natin na hindi ang prinsipyo ang nangingibabaw, kundi ang personalidad. Kapag ang isang desisyon ay pabor sa ating sinusuportahan, ito ay tama. Kapag hindi, ito ay mali. Sa ganitong kalakaran, nawawala ang tunay na diwa ng rule of law. Hindi na batas ang sinusunod—kundi kagustuhan.
From an academic standpoint, the role of the Supreme Court is to interpret the Constitution. This includes clarifying ambiguities in processes such as impeachment. Such interpretation does not automatically constitute overreach. It becomes problematic only when it disrupts the balance of powers, not when it provides guidance within constitutional bounds.
Sa kabilang banda, ang Kongreso ay may sariling kapangyarihan. Hindi ito dapat maging sunod-sunuran lamang. Ngunit hindi rin ito dapat kumilos na tila walang umiiral na interpretasyon ng batas. Ang tunay na hamon ay hindi simpleng pagsunod o pagtutol—kundi ang paghahanap ng tamang balanse sa pagitan ng constitutional compliance at institutional independence.
The House of Representatives now stands at a crossroads. If it disregards the Supreme Court’s interpretation, it risks constitutional conflict. If it adheres to it, it faces criticism for perceived submission. This is the burden of governance in a politically polarized environment.
Ngunit ang sagot ay hindi dapat nakabatay sa ingay ng publiko. Ang sagot ay dapat nakabatay sa prinsipyo. Ang Kongreso ay dapat kumilos hindi dahil sa pressure, kundi dahil sa malinaw na pag-unawa sa Konstitusyon. Dapat nitong ipakita na ang kanilang mga hakbang ay bunga ng kanilang sariling mandato—hindi lamang reaksyon sa desisyon ng iba.
In doing so, the House preserves both legitimacy and independence. It demonstrates that compliance with constitutional interpretation is not weakness, but discipline. At the same time, it affirms that its authority is not diminished by adherence to the rule of law.
Sa huli, ang mas mahalagang tanong ay hindi kung sino ang tama sa kasalukuyang isyu. Ang tanong ay kung tayo ba, bilang mamamayan, ay may kakayahang maging consistent sa ating mga paninindigan. Kaya ba nating panindigan ang isang prinsipyo kahit hindi ito pabor sa atin?
Because if we cannot, then we are not practicing constitutionalism—we are practicing selective reasoning.
Naalala ko muli ang dalawang lalaki sa lugawan. Pareho silang may lakas ng loob magsalita, ngunit pareho rin silang nahulog sa parehong bitag: ang pagtingin sa isyu batay sa resulta, hindi sa proseso. At doon nagiging mapanganib ang diskurso—kapag ang proseso ay isinakripisyo para sa nais na kinalabasan.
As I left that place, one realization stayed with me: the true test of a nation is not how loudly it argues, but how consistently it stands by its principles. Because in the end, institutions do not fail simply because of flawed decisions. They fail when the people who interpret them abandon the very principles that give them meaning.
Kung hindi natin ito mababago, mananatili tayong nasa siklo ng “sala sa init, sala sa lamig”—kung saan ang tama at mali ay hindi na nakabatay sa batas, kundi sa kung sino ang ating pinapanigan.
At iyon ang tunay na krisis—hindi ng impeachment, kundi ng ating kolektibong pag-unawa sa hustisya at pamamahala.
_________________
*About the author:

