In constitutional systems, process is not a technicality — it is the message. How institutions behave when confronted with uncomfortable questions often matters more than the questions themselves. This is why the refusal of the Office of the Secretary General of the House of Representatives to accept subsequent impeachment complaints deserves closer public scrutiny, regardless of one’s view of the complaints’ merits.
The 1987 Constitution is explicit. Article XI, Section 3 vests the House with the exclusive power to initiate impeachment proceedings and lays down mandatory timelines. A verified complaint filed by a Member of the House, or by a citizen endorsed by a Member, shall be included in the Order of Business within 10 session days and shall be referred to the proper committee within three session days thereafter.
The word “shall” is neither casual nor optional.
Equally important is what the Constitution does not say. It does not authorize House officers to screen complaints for political prudence. It does not allow administrative officers to delay filing due to internal convenience. And it certainly does not condition acceptance on the physical presence of one specific official.
House impeachment rules echo this constitutional design. A verified complaint “shall be filed with the Office of the Secretary General and immediately referred to the Speaker.” The duty to receive is ministerial. It involves no discretion, no evaluation, and no judgment on substance.
Against this framework, the refusal to accept second and third impeachment complaints — reportedly because the Secretary General was abroad — appears legally untenable. An office does not cease to function because its head is unavailable. Bureaucratic continuity is foundational to institutional credibility.
Defenders of the refusal argue that no impeachment “exists” until formally accepted. But that logic reverses constitutional order. Filing is the act that triggers constitutional timelines; acceptance is merely acknowledgment. To withhold acceptance is effectively to insert a nonconstitutional gatekeeper into a process meant to be rule-bound.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Francisco v. House of Representatives is instructive. While primarily addressing the one-year bar on impeachment, the Court stressed that impeachment procedures must not be manipulated to defeat constitutional accountability. The House may regulate impeachment — but it may not frustrate it through procedural improvisation.
This brings the Speaker into focus. The Speaker is not only a political leader but also the guardian of House procedure. Intervention would not have meant endorsing any complaint. It would have meant affirming that rules apply even when politically inconvenient. Silence, however, creates a perception — fair or not — that procedure bends in favor of power.
Public perception matters. In a climate of declining trust, blocking access to a constitutional process reinforces cynicism. It suggests that accountability mechanisms exist on paper, but not in practice.
Should administrative sanctions follow? That question requires balance. Punitive action may not be necessary, but institutional correction is. At minimum, the House must formally clarify that impeachment complaints are receivable at all times, by the Office, regardless of personnel availability. Anything less risks normalizing procedural obstruction.
Ultimately, impeachment is not about personalities. It is about whether institutions honor their own rules. When procedure becomes selective, accountability becomes fragile. And once that happens, everyone — supporter and critic alike — loses.