Senator Francis “Kiko” Pangilinan on Sunday, November 23, pressed for the immediate passage of Senate Bill 1547 creating a Justice Reform Commission, saying mounting public anger over the government’s failure to jail high-level offenders shows the urgency of overhauling the country’s broken accountability systems.
He said Filipinos are “crying out for justice,” citing the multibillion-peso Flood Control Corruption Scandal as a clear example of how stolen funds and entrenched governance failures have fueled deadly flooding, destroyed homes, and devastated livelihoods.
“Gusto nilang makulong ang mga may sala, hindi malaya at nagpapakasasa sa kinurakot,” he stressed.
Pangilinan, who chairs the Senate Committee on Justice and Human Rights, warned that the persistence of large-scale corruption coupled with the near-absence of convictions demonstrates how “the justice system has collapsed for ordinary citizens, while working perfectly for the powerful.”
He said this imbalance has eroded public trust and deepened frustration, especially as recent controversies expose longstanding weaknesses across multiple institutions.
The senator argued that without structural reforms, the cycle of impunity will continue unchecked.
Under Senate Bill 1547, the proposed Justice Reform Commission would launch a comprehensive review of the country’s five pillars of justice: law enforcement, prosecution, the judiciary, corrections, and the community.
It would examine why cases against public officials drag on for years, why court backlogs remain staggering, and why accountability mechanisms consistently fail to deliver results.
Pangilinan said the aim is to produce concrete solutions, not another report that “gathers dust.”
The Commission will be composed of representatives from both chambers of Congress, alongside experts from the private sector and academe.
It will be empowered to summon data and documents from the Department of Justice, the Office of the Ombudsman, the Philippine National Police, and the Supreme Court.
It will also investigate procedural bottlenecks, barriers to justice for vulnerable groups, and longstanding gaps that enable corruption and case delays.
“We will root out why the country’s justice system has massively failed—why the guilty remain free, why cases are delayed to death, and why corruption thrives,” Pangilinan said.
He warned that unless deep reforms are undertaken, public confidence will continue to erode, making governance even more difficult.
“We must fix this system together as a nation, or watch public trust collapse even further,” he added.
The Commission will operate for three years, with the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) designated as its research arm.
It is expected to submit periodic reports and, ultimately, a full reform blueprint to Congress and Malacañang, outlining actionable measures to restore confidence in the justice system and ensure accountability for public officials.