MANILA-Defense Secretary Avelino Cruz Jr., who had allegedly influenced Supreme Court (SC) justices to "kill" a petition backed by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to revise the 1987 Constitution, has resigned from his post after a brief meeting with the President in Malacanang.
The President accepted the resignation, effecting Nov. 30, with the usual "regrets."
Malacanang has refused to confirm or deny that the President had in fact axed Cruz from his post.
Earlier, Malacanang warned Cruz not to
campaign in public against the Arroyo-backed people’s initiative (PI) that
intends to push Charter change (Cha-cha).
Cruz earlier admitted that his strong
opposition to Cha-cha had earned him the ire not only of the Chief Executive
but three Cabinet members, whom he did not name, who had been wanting his head
to roll.
The influential law firm that he helped
found with now SC Justice Antonio Carpio and F. Arthur ‘Pancho" Villaraza
(now known as Villaraza and Angangco) in 1980 is said to have become the
country’s biggest law firm due to its alleged connections with Mrs. Arroyo and
her husband Jose Miguel Arroyo.
Carpio, who was appointed by the
President to the high court on Oct. 22, 2001, was the ponente of the decision
trashing PI and among those who issued a strongly worded dissenting opinion on
the petition.
The defense department later said
“Secretary Cruz wishes his successor to continue the comprehensive reform
agenda under the Philippine Defense Reform (PDR) program that he initiated to
professionalize and upgrade the capability of the defense and military
establishments.”
‘Despite leaving government service, he
commits to maintain an abiding interest in ensuring good governance, upholding
the rule of law and the pursuit of genuine reforms in our society," it
said.
The 53-year-old Defense secretary, who is
called ‘Nonong" by friends, joined the Cabinet in Aug. 2004 after former
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) Chief of Staff Angelo Reyes was
transferred from the DND to the Department of Interior and Local Government.
Recently, he was entangled in a political
controversy after the high tribunal dismissed the so-called PI mode for Cha-cha
wherein three of the high tribunal justices, his former colleagues in the
Carpio, Villaraza and Cruz Law Office, voted against the petition seeking a
revision of the 1987 Constitution.
The Defense chief had admitted that even
before the start of the PI campaign, he was already against it because it was
bound to fail.
As a result of the junking of by the SC
of the petition by an 8-7 vote, some Cabinet members blamed him for the
dismissal of the motion filed by Sigaw ng Bayan and Union of Local Authorities
of the Philippines (Ulap), both of which
are believed to be bankrolled by Malacanang.
Considered a ‘silent worker and a man of
few words,’ the Defense secretary was highly credited for PDR, which primed up
vital reform programs in the DND and the AFP.
Most of the priority programs in the PDR
were based on recommendations of Malacanang-created fact-finding bodies that
investigated root causes of failed coup attempts against the government.
Among such programs implemented by the
PDR were the abolition of the Office of the AFP deputy chief of staff for
comptrollership (J-6), which was considered a milking cow by allegedly corrupt
military officials, the deactivation of the Retirement Service and Benefits
System or RSBS that is experiencing heavy financial difficulties and the
streamlining of the AFP structure.
The Defense chief was also instrumental
in the recall of some 9,000 soldiers who were serving as security detail to
VIPs and other political personalities for them to be redeployed in areas still
threatened by rebel groups and terrorist elements in different parts of the
country.
Sigaw ng Bayan and Ulap are planing to
file a motion for reconsideration before the high tribunal in an apparently
last-ditch effort to revive the PI.
Their move, which has to be pursued
within 15 working days after the SC ruling handed down last Oct. 25, will be
supported by the Solicitor’s General’s Office headed by Eduardo Nachura.