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

The Senate crisis of 2026 presents one of the most important constitutional questions in recent Philippine political history. At its core lies a deceptively simple issue: must a quorum always consist of thirteen senators, or can extraordinary circumstances justify a different constitutional interpretation?
At first glance, the controversy appears to be merely a dispute over numbers. One side argues that the Senate consists of twenty-four members and that a majority therefore requires thirteen senators. Under this view, constitutional arithmetic is fixed and cannot be altered by political circumstances, practical difficulties, or institutional inconvenience. The Constitution says what it says, and constitutional stability depends upon the consistent application of its provisions.
Yet constitutional law has never been solely about arithmetic. It is also about ensuring that democratic institutions remain capable of functioning. Constitutions exist not merely to impose limitations upon government but also to preserve the continuity of governance itself. When constitutional provisions are interpreted in a manner that risks institutional paralysis, courts are often called upon to reconcile constitutional text with practical reality.
This is precisely the challenge confronting the Philippine Senate today.
What began as a political disagreement evolved into a situation where repeated non-attendance threatened the operational capacity of the legislative branch. A boycott lasting one day may be viewed as a political statement. A boycott that continues indefinitely raises a far more serious constitutional issue. Can a legislative chamber remain hostage to prolonged absence, thereby preventing the institution from performing its constitutional responsibilities?
The consequences extend far beyond Senate politics.
The Senate is not merely a debating society. It is a constitutional institution entrusted with passing laws, approving appropriations, conducting oversight, investigating matters in aid of legislation, ratifying treaties, and addressing issues affecting the welfare of the Republic. When the Senate cannot function, the effects are felt throughout the nation.
The true victims of legislative paralysis are not senators.
The true victims are the Filipino people.
Every day that the Senate remains unable to conduct business delays measures affecting economic policy, public welfare, national security, infrastructure development, disaster preparedness, social services, foreign affairs, and countless other concerns that require legislative attention. Important bills remain pending. Oversight functions may be suspended. National priorities are placed on hold. The legislative agenda of the Republic becomes hostage to a continuing political deadlock.
The present controversy becomes even more significant when viewed against the actual circumstances surrounding the Senate during the crisis. At the time the issue emerged, one senator was under detention and therefore unable to freely participate in the ordinary proceedings of the chamber. Another senator was effectively unavailable for attendance and beyond the practical reach of the Senate’s compulsory processes. These circumstances created an unprecedented situation in which the Senate was confronted not merely with political disagreement but with questions regarding its operational capacity as a legislative institution.
From a constitutional standpoint, the issue is not whether these senators remain members of the Senate. Unless removed through the constitutional processes prescribed by law, they continue to occupy their respective positions. The more difficult question is whether prolonged inability to participate should be considered in determining the practical functionality of the legislative body.
This question becomes particularly relevant when viewed through the lens of constitutional governance. A Senate operating with members who are indefinitely unable to participate is not functioning under ordinary conditions. While the Constitution clearly contemplates a twenty-four-member Senate, it does not explicitly address the consequences of situations where one member is detained and another remains continuously unavailable for participation over an extended period.
It is precisely this constitutional gap that may eventually require judicial clarification. The Supreme Court may be asked to determine whether such circumstances constitute merely temporary absences or whether they create conditions that affect the operational composition of the Senate for purposes of determining its ability to conduct business. The issue is not the permanent reduction of Senate membership but the temporary preservation of legislative functionality during extraordinary circumstances.
Supporters of a functional interpretation argue that the Constitution was never intended to allow prolonged unavailability of members, whether through detention, legal circumstances, or continuing absence, to indefinitely paralyze an entire branch of government. Their position is that constitutional interpretation must consider not only legal membership but also the practical ability of the institution to discharge its constitutional responsibilities.
It is under such circumstances that the Doctrine of Necessity enters the discussion.
The Doctrine of Necessity is founded upon the principle that constitutional systems should not be interpreted in a manner that causes the destruction or paralysis of the very institutions they are designed to govern. While constitutional safeguards must always be respected, the doctrine recognizes that extraordinary circumstances may require courts to consider whether strict adherence to ordinary procedures could result in institutional dysfunction.
The doctrine does not exist to create convenience.
It exists to prevent collapse.
Critics of a functional approach understandably warn of the dangers. If constitutional requirements can be modified whenever circumstances become difficult, future political actors may invoke necessity whenever compliance becomes inconvenient. Constitutional limitations could gradually lose their meaning.
Yet the opposite danger also exists.
A Constitution that cannot respond to extraordinary circumstances risks becoming an instrument of paralysis rather than governance. Constitutional provisions are intended to facilitate democratic government, not to permanently disable it. When a legislative chamber becomes unable to perform its duties because of prolonged and continuing absences, the question inevitably arises whether constitutional interpretation should prioritize numerical rigidity or institutional functionality.
This is where the Supreme Court assumes a central role.
Ultimately, only the Supreme Court possesses the authority to determine whether extraordinary circumstances may justify a more functional interpretation of quorum requirements. The issue is no longer merely whether twelve is less than thirteen. The issue is whether constitutional governance can continue when traditional assumptions regarding legislative participation are disrupted by unusual and prolonged circumstances.
This question inevitably invites renewed examination of Avelino versus Cuenco. The continuing relevance of that decision lies not merely in its historical facts but in the broader constitutional principle it represents. The central question is whether “the House” refers strictly to all occupied seats regardless of practical realities or whether, under extraordinary conditions, constitutional interpretation may consider the operational composition of the legislative body.
The answer to that question may shape Philippine parliamentary jurisprudence for decades.
Another practical reality cannot be ignored. Constitutional litigation does not operate instantaneously. Even if petitions challenging the legality of the Senate reorganization are eventually brought before the Supreme Court, judicial review requires time. Pleadings must be filed, parties must be heard, constitutional questions must be examined, and the Court must deliberate upon issues whose consequences may affect the future of parliamentary governance in the Philippines.
In the meantime, government cannot simply stop functioning.
Unless the Supreme Court issues a directive altering the existing situation, the practical reality is that the leadership currently exercising authority within the Senate will continue to perform its functions while the constitutional controversy remains under review. As a matter of institutional continuity, Senate business would proceed while the Court studies the legal questions surrounding the reorganization.
This creates a unique constitutional and political dynamic. On one hand, the legality of the leadership arrangement may still be subject to judicial determination. On the other hand, the day-to-day operations of the Senate continue. Committees may be organized, legislative priorities may be pursued, oversight functions may proceed, and the institution itself remains operational.
From a political perspective, time may become one of the most important factors in the entire controversy.
The longer the existing leadership remains functional, the greater the opportunity to consolidate support within the chamber. What began as a bloc operating under disputed circumstances could eventually attract additional members. If the leadership succeeds in increasing its support to thirteen or more senators, it would acquire an undisputed constitutional majority and significantly strengthen its political position while judicial review remains pending.
Such a development would not automatically resolve the constitutional issues before the Court. However, it would alter the political environment in which those issues are being considered. A leadership supported by a clear majority of senators presents a different institutional reality from one operating on a disputed numerical foundation.
This demonstrates that the Senate crisis is unfolding simultaneously on two fronts. The first is the legal battlefield inside the Supreme Court, where constitutional principles, quorum requirements, and parliamentary precedents will eventually be examined. The second is the political battlefield inside the Senate itself, where alliances continue to evolve and where numbers may change even before a final judicial ruling is rendered.
The controversy therefore becomes a race between constitutional review and political reality.
Viewed from this perspective, the controversy transcends arithmetic. The debate is no longer simply about whether the number is twelve or thirteen. The debate is about the relationship between constitutional text and constitutional functionality. It is about how democratic institutions should respond when political realities threaten their ability to serve the people. It is about balancing constitutional certainty with governmental continuity.
Most importantly, it is about protecting the welfare of the Filipino people.
The Supreme Court therefore stands at a historic constitutional crossroads. If it adopts a strict textualist approach, it may reaffirm that thirteen remains an absolute constitutional requirement under all circumstances. Such a ruling would strengthen constitutional certainty and reinforce the sanctity of fixed constitutional thresholds.
If it adopts a more functionalist approach, it may recognize that extraordinary circumstances justify a temporary interpretation designed to preserve institutional continuity and prevent legislative paralysis.
Either way, the Court’s decision will become one of the most significant constitutional precedents of the post-1987 era.
History may remember this controversy as a dispute between twelve and thirteen senators. Future constitutional scholars may see it differently. They may view it as the moment when the Philippine constitutional system was compelled to answer a deeper question:
When constitutional arithmetic collides with the welfare of the Filipino people, should constitutional interpretation prioritize mathematical certainty or the continued functionality of democratic governance?
The answer now rests with the Supreme Court. Its eventual ruling will shape not only the future of the Senate but also the future understanding of constitutional governance in the Republic of the Philippines for generations to come.
#DJOT
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