
SENATE SESSION HALL DAMAGED AFTER FIRE — BUT THE REAL DAMAGE RUNS DEEPER
A minor fire on the third floor of the Senate building led to major water damage inside the Session Hall — proof that even a small spark can reveal how fragile our democratic institutions have become.

According to initial reports, firefighters used large volumes of water to prevent the fire from spreading, causing damage to several senators’ desks, including those of Senate President Tito Sotto, Sen. Jinggoy Estrada, and Sen. Imee Marcos.
But while the Senate scrambles to dry its floors and wipe its desks, the public is asking a deeper question:
Kung ang tubig ay pumasok sa Session Hall, kahit bawal — ibig sabihin ba ay matagal nang may “sunog” sa loob?
This incident, though called “minor,” comes at a time when the political climate is burning with allegations of corruption, plunder, blackmail, and calls for truthfulness from top government officials.Netizens were quick to point out the symbolism:
“Minor damage daw, pero major ang kahihiyan ng institusyon.”
“Pag may usok sa Senado, may sunog din sa sistema.”
“Baka naman hindi tubig ang kailangan kundi paglilinis.”
As the repairs begin, the public is hoping that the Senate’s cleansing goes beyond wet floors and damaged woodwork — and reaches the very integrity of those who sit in those damaged seats.
📖 “For nothing is hidden that will not be made manifest.” — Luke 8:17
A reminder: God exposes what institutions try to hide.
Sotto Dismisses Claims of District Budget Cuts as “Black Propaganda” — But Questions Linger
In the middle of heated Senate debates over the 2026 national budget, Senate President Vicente “Tito” Sotto III firmly denied allegations that he and Senate President Pro Tempore Ping Lacson were cutting or slashing district budgets.

Sotto called the accusations “pure black propaganda,” insisting that no reductions were made and that the Department of Finance chair can verify this.
According to Sotto, several district representatives from the House of Representatives have expressed uneasiness, believing their allocations were being trimmed at the Senate level. But Sotto clarified that this is simply a misunderstanding tied to the budget interpellation period — not evidence of a real cut.
“There is nothing happening here. We didn’t make cuts in any district. This is just part of interpellation,” Sotto said.
He also pointed out that those worried about their district allocations should consult the House appropriations chair instead of blaming the Senate leadership.
However, Sotto did not identify which House members were allegedly spreading the claims.
The controversy comes at a time when scrutiny of the national budget is intensifying — from duplicate DPWH projects to ballooning allocations in specific programs. With public distrust rising, even minor allegations can trigger major political storms.
As the Senate continues to fine-tune the 2026 General Appropriations Bill, Sotto maintains that the narrative of budget cuts is nothing more than politically motivated noise.
Bato’s Senate Absence Sparks New Questions as ICC Warrant Rumors Intensify
Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa has been absent from the Senate since Nov. 10, missing hearings and foregoing his role as sponsor of the 2026 national budget for key security and defense agencies. His absence comes as rumors swirl that the International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued a warrant for his arrest over alleged crimes against humanity tied to the Duterte administration’s war on drugs.

Dela Rosa was expected to defend the budgets of the DND, DILG, NICA, and other major agencies, but Senate Finance Chair Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian took over the discussions. Gatchalian said he received a message from Dela Rosa’s staff saying the senator “could not defend” the agencies but offered no explanation.
The ICC has publicly stated that it has only “confirmed” one warrant — unrelated to the Philippines — yet officials like Ombudsman Samuel Martires and Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla previously acknowledged receiving inquiries about a supposed warrant for Dela Rosa.
The DFA has also noted that any warrant “may be sent directly to law enforcement agencies,” fueling further speculation.
Dela Rosa’s legal team maintains that no warrant has been officially served to him. The senator previously elevated the issue to the Supreme Court seeking a temporary restraining order to prevent any unverified enforcement — a petition the Court ultimately denied without confirming nor denying the alleged warrant.
For now, Dela Rosa remains out of the public eye, raising questions on whether his absence is precautionary, strategic, or simply coincidental. With budget hearings ongoing and public interest rising, both supporters and critics await clarity.
Judging by the political climate — and the ICC’s notoriously confidential procedures — silence does not necessarily mean safety nor guilt. What it guarantees is uncertainty.
Lacson: Bonoan Is the “Missing Link” That Can Tie Ex-Executive Secretary Bersamin to Flood-Control Mess
November 28, 2025•2 min read
MANILA, Philippines — Senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson has identified former Public Works Secretary Manuel Bonoan as the “missing link” needed to clarify whether former Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin played any role in the ballooning flood-control anomalies now under Senate investigation.

According to Lacson, Bonoan is the crucial figure who can verify if questionable fund releases, project approvals, and alleged irregular endorsements that happened under the Office of the Executive Secretary were ever connected to the flood-control allocations that lawmakers now call “the dirtiest playground in the budget.”

Bonoan previously sat at the top of DPWH when billions in flood-control funds surged across multiple regions — and when “duplicate projects,” “ghost works,” and mysteriously identical programs began appearing in congressional insertions.
Lacson stressed that only Bonoan can confirm whether Bersamin had any involvement or whether the anomalies were orchestrated solely within the DPWH chain of command.
But here’s the twist:
Bonoan has yet to testify.
And without his statement, the full picture remains incomplete.
Flood-Control Corruption: A Consistent Pattern
The Senate has so far uncovered patterns such as:
duplicate road & flood projects across multiple districts
identical project titles but different funding amounts
insertions funneled to specific contractors
sudden budget ballooning despite unchanged scopes
and ghost flood-control structures with no trace on-site
Billions of pesos remain unaccounted for — and investigators now believe the Office of the Executive Secretary may have been used as either a gateway… or a shield.
Lacson, known for dissecting budget anomalies down to the last centavo, said:
“Bonoan is the only one who can bridge these inconsistencies.”
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Kung totoo ang sinasabi ni Lacson, may “link” talaga — pero kung hindi magsasalita si Bonoan, mananatiling ligaw na puzzle piece ang papel ni Bersamin.
Flood control ang pinakamaruming budget sector ngayon.
Paulit-ulit, taon-taon, bilyon-bilyon.
At kapag ganito kalaki ang pera, hindi lang engineer ang sangkot — may mas mataas na level na nag-aapruba, nagtatakip, at kumikita.
“For nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed.” — Luke 8:17
Sa huli, kahit gaano pa kalalim ang flood-control mafia, may araw din ang katotohanan.
Lacson calls Bonoan the “missing link” connecting Bersamin to flood-control anomalies.
Billions in questionable DPWH flood-control projects now under scrutiny.
Duplicate projects and ghost works repeatedly found across regions.
Bonoan’s testimony expected to clarify who approved or benefited from insertions.
Flood-control said to be “the dirtiest budget playground” today.
Senate investigators push for accountability at both DPWH and OES level.