Source of idea and Photo credits to: SouthLuzonDotPoliticsDotComDotPh
Habang ang SOGIE Bill ay kasalukuyang pinagdidibatihan sa Congress - sa lalawigan ng Cavite ito ay isang official Ordinance na ng probinsya na isinulong sa pangunguna ni Vice Governor Jolo Revilla and approved by the board members. The article was published at SouthLuzon.Politics.Com.Ph on February 28, 2018.
Masayang ibinalita ang ordinansang ito sa lahat ng LGBTQ sa lalawigan ng Cavite, I quote "Naipasa na po natin dito sa lalawigan ng Cavite ang SOGIE ordinance also known as the Anti-Discrimination on LGBTQ. Itong ordinansang ito ay ang nagbibigay proteksiyon para sa mga Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, Transexuals, and Queer. Alam ninyo po, kung nagawa po namin ito sa lalawigan ng Cavite, mas lalong kayang-kaya natin ito sa buong Pilipinas,” Revilla said.
Ibig sabihin nito - ang lahat ng nakasaad na mga probisyon sa nasabing SOGIE Bill ay mae-enjoy na ng lahat ng LGBTQ+ community in the province of Cavite. Kung ang isang probisyon ay ang Same Sex Marriage - ang gustong magpakasal na lalake sa kapwa lalake O na babae sa kapwa babae ay malaya nilang isasakatuparan ito na walang hadlang.
Mahabaging langit - ako'y kinakabahan sa kung anong mundo ang naghihintay na lalakaran para sa mga susunod na henerasyon.
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Basahin nga po natin ang history ng SOGIE Bill. Bakit hindi ito maipasa sa Congress sa kabila na isinulong ito noon pang 2000.
The SOGIE (Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity and Expression) Equality Bill, also known as the Anti-Discrimination Bill (ADB), is a proposed legislation of the Congress of the Philippines. It is intended to prevent various economic and public accommodation-related acts of discrimination against people based on their sexual orientation, gender identity or expression. The current versions of the bill are championed by Kaka Bag-ao, Geraldine Roman, and Tom Villarin in the House of Representatives, and Risa Hontiveros in the Senate. The version in the House of Representative passed its third reading most recently on September 20, 2017, but died in the Senate. It has been refiled for the 18th Congress.
Legislative history
The bill was first filed in Congress in 2000 by then-senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago and then-Akbayan party-list Representative Etta Rosales, in which the bill passed 3rd reading in the House but stalled in the Senate. Similar measures were filed by other senators in the 15th and 16th congresses which failed to see progress. The bill was re-filed by Defensor-Santiago in every congressional period in the Senate until the end of her last term in 2016. The counterpart bill in the House was also filed continuously by the representatives of Akbayan party-list.
17th Congress
In 2017, House Bill No. 4982, sponsored by Dinagat Islands Rep. Kaka Bag-ao, who has been the principal author of the measure since her first term, Bataan Rep. Geraldine Roman, Akbayan Party-List Rep. Tom Villarin, and several others, was approved on third and final reading for the first time since 2001 with 198 members of the House of Representatives voting for the bill and none opposing it, a historic pro-LGBT move from the House of Representatives.
In 2017, House Bill No. 4982, sponsored by Dinagat Islands Rep. Kaka Bag-ao, who has been the principal author of the measure since her first term, Bataan Rep. Geraldine Roman, Akbayan Party-List Rep. Tom Villarin, and several others, was approved on third and final reading for the first time since 2001 with 198 members of the House of Representatives voting for the bill and none opposing it, a historic pro-LGBT move from the House of Representatives.
The counterpart bill in the Senate, filed by Senator Risa Hontiveros (the first Akbayan senator), was in the period of interpolations by May 2018. It is backed by Senators Loren Legarda, Grace Poe, Nancy Binay, Franklin Drilon, Bam Aquino, Chiz Escudero, Ralph Recto, Sonny Angara, JV Ejercito, Francis Pangilinan, Juan Miguel Zubiri, and Leila de Lima, although de Lima is barred from voting on the bill as she is currently in police custody. It was opposed by Senators Tito Sotto, Manny Pacquiao, Cynthia Villar, and Joel Villanueva.
Ironically, Villanueva has signed up as a 'co-author' of the bill he opposes. Other senators such as Win Gatchalian, Koko Pimentel, Antonio Trillanes, Panfilo Lacson, and Richard J. Gordon have not yet expressed their support or rejection of the bill. Senator Trillanes is currently facing cases that may put him in jail, which may make him ineligible to vote for the bill like senator De Lima if ever he is arrested. Additionally, Alan Peter Cayetano and Gregorio Honasan no longer have voting rights on Senate measures as they declined to be part of the presidential cabinet.
All in all, out of the existing 24 Senate seats: 12 seats support and can vote on the bill; 1 seat supports but cannot vote on the bill (although the number may rise to 2); 4 seats oppose and can vote on the bill; 5 seats can vote on the bill but have not yet given their positions on it (although the number may be reduced to 5); and 2 seats are de facto vacated. For a bill to pass the Senate, it needs a vote of 50% (12) of the body, plus one (1) vote for a total of thirteen (13) votes. The SOGIE Equality Bill currently is supported by 12 seats that are allowed to vote on the measure.
The bill is also supported by the Catholic student governments of University of the Philippines-Diliman (UPD, Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU), De La Salle University(DLSU)-Manila, De La Salle - College of St. Benilde (CSB), Far Eastern University (FEU), Miriam College (MC), St. Scholastica's College (SSC)-Manila and San Beda University (SBU). The longest running LGBT student organization UP Babaylan has also been supporting the bill ever since it was first filed., as well as known celebrities and icons such as Heart Evangelista, Bianca Gonzalez, Iza Calzado, Charo Santos-Concio, Dingdong Dantes, Joey Mead King, Divine Lee, Karen Davila, Chot Reyes, Tootsy Angara, BJ Pascual, Samantha Lee, Christine Bersola-Babao, Rajo Laurel, Tim Yap, Anne Curtis, Mari Jasmine, Laureen Uy, Pia Wurtzbach, Lorenzo TaƱada III, Vice Ganda, Arnold Van Opstal, and Chel Diokno.
In March 2018, a small group of Christians protested at the Senate against the SOGIE bill by calling the proposed legislation an 'abomination', adding that homosexuality is allegedly a 'sin' citing that their 'hate' is allegedly credible because it is supposedly written in the Bible and that viewing that identifying as part of the LGBT community is a supposedly a 'lifestyle'. The group also claimed that the bill relates to same-sex marriage, which is not found anywhere within the bill. Senators Villanueva, Gatchalian, and Villar spoke against same-sex marriage after the protest. In May 2018, senator Tito Sotto, who opposes the SOGIE bill, became the new Senate President. In an interview, Sotto was asked on the bill's passage, to which he responded, "Not in this congress."
In July 2018, various high-profile celebrities rallied for the passage of the SOGIE bill. They also called out senators Sotto, Pacquiao, and Villanueva to end the debates and pass the proposed legislation. In August 2018, on the height of the bill's postponed debates, various discrimination events against the Filipino LGBT community surfaced, causing public calling for the passage of the SOGIE Equality Bill in the Senate. Numerous influential personalities, including political allies of the three senators who oppose the bill, sided with the calls to pass the landmark proposal.
In January 2019, fake news and chain mails claiming that there are 'satanic' and 'same-sex marriage' provisions in the SOGIE bill began circulating, a move to dislodge the bill's progress.
In May 2019, the SOGIE Equality Bill officially became the longest-running bill under the Senate interpellation period in Philippine history. Supporters of the bill have remarked that the prolonged interpellation was intended by the dissenters to block the passage of the historic anti-discrimination bill. The bill's principal author and sponsor in the Senate, senator Risa Hontiveros, has again called on her Senate colleagues to formally close the interpellation period, so that the bill can finally be subject for amendments and voting.
In June 2019, with the end of the session of the 17th Congress, the SOGIE Equality Bill prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity or expression -- after the lawmakers failed to tackle the bill in this session of the Senate of the Philippines. The Senate version of the bill was first filed in August 11, 2016. It was sponsored by Risa Hontiveros in December 14 of the same year.
The bill has become one of the slowest-moving bills in the country’s history. The passed house version of the bill would have penalised discrimination with a fine of not less than ₱100,000 but not more than ₱500,000, or imprisonment of not less than one year but not more than six years or both, depending on the court's decision. However, she said the bill had gained new allies and wider acceptance among policy makers and the public and that she is confident the bill will pass in the next Congress. The bill was archived, and the bill must again be refiled in the 18th Congress, starting over the one to three-year process of enactment again.
18th Congress
In early July 2019, Senator Sonny Angara introduced a new proposal to Congress. "Any form of discrimination threatens social stability and economic progress in the Philippines, making it imperative that discrimination—or any act that establishes, promotes and perpetuates standing inequalities and disregards the right to 'equality of treatment' afforded by the 1987 Constitution—be reduced", Angara argued. The measure would prohibit unfair discrimination based on, among other categories, sex, sexual orientation and gender identity and expression. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOGIE_Equality_Bill
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