Tulfo: Cayetano Preventing 2 Senators From Attending Special Session Today, June 17
To thwart the election of a new Senate president, Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano is allegedly blackmailing two senators from his bloc so they would not attend the special session today, June 17, Sen. Erwin Tulfo said.

With a secure quorum, the Senate is poised to elect its president and other leaders as it holds a special session today, June 17, in accordance with Malacañang’s directive, to formally reorganize the chamber, clear the legislative backlog and rescue the expiring promotions of top military officers.
But to thwart the election of a new Senate president, Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano is allegedly prohibiting two senators from his bloc from attending today’s session, Sen. Erwin Tulfo said.
Tulfo, who is Blue Ribbon committee chairman under the new majority, told radio dzBB that there are at least two senators who communicated that they just want to work, but are being prohibited by Cayetano.
He claimed the two senators said they have been “threatened” with severe social media backlash, trolling and coordinated smear campaigns led by vloggers and online trolls against their families.
Tulfo said one of the senators hails from Mindanao. Within the Cayetano bloc, only Senators Bong Go and Ronald dela Rosa are from the region.
Acting Senate President Sherwin Gatchalian told reporters that the session, which begins at 9 a.m., will have priority measures in its agenda until a suspension at 11 a.m. to give way to a Commission on Appointments (CA) confirmation of presidential appointees.
Gatchalian said he has secured full backing of the House of Representatives led by Speaker Faustino Dy III to ensure the CA reaches its required numbers to confirm the appointees.
He said the CA will adjourn after tackling the expiring promotion of military officers, and by 3 p.m. or 4 p.m., the chamber will reconvene to tackle additional measures.
Tulfo also told dzBB on Tuesday that the morning portion of the session would be dedicated to appointing committee chairpersons.
The two lawmakers emphasized that the CA must immediately confirm five military colonels, whose promotions to general had been left hanging due to the month-long leadership deadlock.
While Gatchalian is calling for full attendance, Tulfo said he is confident the chamber would have the numbers to reach the constitutional threshold to conduct business. On Sunday, June 14, Sen. Joel Villanueva confirmed his attendance in today’s session, adding to the 12 comprising the majority.
But to Gatchalian, the chamber can already proceed with its official business even with 12 members present, based on the Avelino doctrine, a Supreme Court jurisprudence that establishes a working quorum based on the chamber’s active and capable headcount.
Also in today’s special session, the chamber will strive to pass several near-finished priority measures.
The legislative lineup includes the geriatric health bill, an expansion of the GASTPE education voucher system to cover elementary students from Grades 1 to 6 and two agriculture measures championed by Sen. Francis Pangilinan.
The agenda also covers the Anti-Hospital Detention Bill, a measure institutionalizing the Department of Social Welfare and Development’s crisis assistance funds, a nuclear safety treaty, two long-delayed citizenship grants and formal resolutions providing additional relief aid to victims of the recent Mindanao earthquakes and commending essential frontliners. — With Delon Porcalla














