Sunday, June 8, 2025

TUCP URGES SENATE FOR EXPEDITED BICAM & ENDORSEMENT FOR A WAGE LAW IN PBBM SONA




The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) calls on the Senate for an expedited bicameral conference, ratification, and endorsement for the signing of the wage hike bill before the 19th Congress ends so President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos will have something truly meaningful to uplift the lives of Filipino workers in his July 2025 State of the Nation Address (SONA).

“We are eager to work urgently with our Senate counterparts to reconcile the House and Senate versions of the wage hike bills—₱200 and ₱100 respectively—and ratify the final version on the same day.  We fervently urge Senate President Francis ‘Chiz’ Escudero and Senate Labor Committee chaired by Sen. Joel Villanueva to not deny the workers this much needed reprieve and to not succumb to the lazy economics of marketing the Philippines as a haven for cheap, unorganized labor to investors in ensuring their profitability instead of addressing the bigger business problems of high power costs, corruption, and ease of doing business,” stated TUCP Party-list Representative and House Deputy Speaker Raymond Democrito C. Mendoza, who will serve as one of the House bicam conferees.

Before the resumption of session, Senate President Escudero stressed the urgent need to pass priority legislation before the 19th Congress ends. 

“No other single piece of legislation today would more directly improve the lives of Filipino working families than a legislated wage hike—be it ₱100, ₱200, or a middle ground of ₱150. We remind all social partners that the Senate and the House passed their respective bills without a "NO" vote. We trust, hope, and pray that this rare opportunity—transcending toxic political partisanship and cutting through the fear-mongering of elite employer groups and big business—will carry the day in the bicameral conference, leading to the swift ratification of the final wage increase as early as possible,” urged Mendoza. 

The May 2025 Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey found that 92% of Filipinos believe the Senate should prioritize increasing the minimum wage, while 95% said the same for the House, underscoring the overwhelming public clamor for a legislated wage hike. 

“No amount of tired, baseless scare tactics by big business—who shamelessly invoke MSMEs and workers in the informal economy as their human shields to protect their obscene profits—can silence this groundswell of support for the first-ever legislated wage hike in 39 years. This wage increase bill is the result of years of exhaustive public hearings and deliberations in Congress wherein economists, academics, civil society groups, informal workers, and minimum wage earners themselves testified to the imperative of raising workers' wages now primarily to lift over five million minimum wage earners out of poverty. Big businesses' unsubstantiated and deceptive doomsday scenarios of massive inflation, unemployment, and business closures supposedly due to a wage increase have been debunked and refuted time and time again in these hearings. In truth, higher minimum wages drive inclusive growth by boosting consumption, which in turn fuels business activity and creates more and better jobs for all,” explained Mendoza. 

IBON Foundation, based on the largest survey of business establishments in the country, found out that a ₱200 wage hike would only account for 9–15% of annual business profits—from micro to large firms. We must not forget that there are existing wage exemptions already in place for Barangay Micro Business Enterprises (BMBEs), and billions in tax cuts and financial incentives already granted to corporations and MSMEs under laws like CREATE and CREATE MORE. Also, just like the Christmas bonuses and 13th month pay that boost consumer spending every year, minimum wage earners are more likely to spend the wage increase in the informal economy such as in carinderias, jeepney fares, market vendor sales, and sari-sari store essentials, hence raising the income of the informal economy. 

“There is no grandstanding involved by doing our duty as representatives of the people and responding to their plea for a wage increase now. With due respect, it is not Congress but certain employer groups, big business, and armchair pundits who are being myopic and self-serving, doing a verbal overkill against the wage bill. The real threat to businesses and jobs is not the national wage increase bill but the insanity of keeping workers too poor, too sickly, and keeping their children hungry, through  the broken regional wage boards that institutionalize the cheap labor policy. We have been in this situation for over three decades since the passing of the regionalization of wage fixing, and it has only proved a disastrous failure: workers trapped in intergenerational poverty with the so-called investments bonanza failing to materialize,” said Mendoza.

“We trust that President Marcos sees the legislated wage bill as mutually beneficial to workers, businesses, and the economy.  The conventional wisdom being bandied around by some economists that higher minimum wages lead to lower employment has long been discarded as Nobel Laureates in Economics have established that higher minimum wages do not destroy jobs because they are not just a cost - they are an investment to boost demand and stimulate growth as it fuels more spending and creates more and better jobs.  If we are to create a "Bagong Pilipinas," let us discontinue the practice of selling dirt cheap productive labor because it does not work anymore.  The 36 years of regional wage fixing failed miserably.  It mainly placed workers below the poverty threshold and no investment growth was triggered outside the developed regions.  The economic managers are keenly aware that the other crucial factors for investments to enter are logistics, power costs and others. The ‘Bagong Pilipinas’ vision is incompatible with three decades long of a cheap labor policy, and the road to realizing that new Philippines begins with the pending wage hike. The legislated wage increase is the crucial first step towards a living wage for every Filipino worker,” underscored Mendoza.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

MAYO UNO 2025: NATIONAL WAGE COALITION JOINT LABOR DAY MOBILIZATION ₱200 DAGDAG SAHOD, ISABATAS!



Ngayong Araw ng Paggawa, libu-libong manggagawa mula sa iba't ibang unyon at pederasyon—TUCP, KMU, BMP, at NAGKAISA!—ay sama-samang magmamartsa patungong Mendiola upang iparinig ang iisang sigaw:

MR. PRESIDENT, CERTIFY AS URGENT!
CONGRESS, URGENT NA IPASA!
₱200 DAGDAG SAHOD, ISABATAS NA!

Tatlong taon nang walang pag-uusap sa pagitan ng Pangulo at ng kilusang paggawa. Sa harap ng nagtataasang presyo, gutom, at kahirapan, panahon na para ipasa ang kauna-unahang ₱200 legislated wage hike sa loob ng 36 na taon!

DALAWANG DAAN, ISANG BAYAN!
SAMA-SAMANG LUMALABAN ANG MANGGAGAWANG PILIPINO!

#MayoUno2025
#200WageHikeIsabatas
#NationalWageCoalition
#BosesNgManggagawa
#20TUCPPartylist 


Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Trade union urges P200 wage hike certification



At a press conference on April 29, 2025, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) called for a dialogue with the president to certify the proposed ₱200 legislated wage hike as urgent, days before the Labor Day celebration. - Analy Labor


Thursday, March 6, 2025

TUCP hits gov’t managers’ reliance on standard job fairs


The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) criticized government economic managers for relying on standard job fairs, delaying the full implementation of the Trabaho Para sa Bayan (TPB) Act, and harboring unrealistic expectations, with foreign investments resolving the issues at hand.

The labor group said since the beginning of 2025, over half a million Filipinos have lost their jobs, and nearly a million more are facing challenges in securing stable work and income.

In a statement, the TUCP, the largest labor group in the country said the economic leaders continue to rely on the same outdated strategies—hosting job fairs, promoting job-sharing initiatives that fail to provide genuine employment, and making hollow promises about foreign investments that are unlikely to materialize unless flawed policies are addressed.

According to the latest January 2025 Labor Force Survey, unemployment rose to 4.3 percent (2.16 million) from 3.1 percent (1.63 million) in December 2024, while underemployment surged to 13.3 percent (6.47 million), up from 10.9 percent (5.48 million) in the same period.

The TUCP demanded an immediate innovative intervention and stopped making excuses and delays.

The TUCP emphasized the necessity for the government to transition from merely formulating plans to actually creating tangible employment opportunities.

“The TPB Act should move past the usual statements about the need for improvements in job quality and income levels, focusing instead on the comprehensive implementation of strategies that generate more and better jobs. This includes not only sustainable positions but also those that offer living wages, job security, and full adherence to labor rights,” the TUCP added. - By Vito Barcelo



Thursday, January 23, 2025

TUCP asks govt to aid Filipino ‘TNTs’ in US

Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) Vice President Luis Corral


The Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) has called on the government to create an inter-agency body “to synchronize efforts among government agencies, civil society, and Filipino organizations in the United States.”

“With nearly half a million undocumented Filipinos facing the potential threat of what could be the largest mass deportation in American history, the TUCP looks forward to working together with the Marcos Administration to consolidate efforts with urgency and dispatch to ensure the just transition of our kababayan,” TUCP Vice President Luis Corral said.

US President Donald Trump has announced plans to “deport all immigrants” residing in the US illegally in his four-year term and has expressed his intent to take executive action on his first day in office to end birthright citizenship, which currently grants citizenship to anyone born in the US regardless of their parents’ immigration status.

However, Philippine Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel “Babe” Romualdez said there may yet be stumbling blocks to the implementation of Trump’s controversial EO as a growing number of states are challenging it in court.

“There are already about 22 states as of an hour ago that have filed a suit against this executive order because it [birthright citizenship] is precisely in their constitution. We don’t know where that’s going… and that’s going, of course, all the way to the US Supreme Court,” he told ANC on Wednesday.

Romualdez emphasized that even undocumented immigrants have rights, and that the Philippine Embassy has been in touch with lawyers to clarify those rights.

The diplomat said that Filipinos who have a legal path toward US citizenship should immediately get lawyers to help them with their immigration goals, while those who are there illegally should go back to the Philippines voluntarily.

For its part, TUCP, one of the Philippines’ largest trade unions, affirmed its readiness to collaborate with the Marcos administration “to protect and promote the welfare of our kababayan in the United States spearheaded by an intensified information and education campaign to reach out to them about their rights, available resources, and assistance, especially accessible, affordable—ideally free—legal assistance.”

“We strongly advocate for a unified, coherent response, ranging from legal assistance to reintegration services, not only to enable the Government to effectively oversee these initiatives but also to empower our kababayan with a one-stop shop for accessible and comprehensive services,” Corral said.

He also highlighted the challenges faced by Filipinos due to illegal migration, particularly the lack of stable, well-paying jobs to support their families, stressing the need for equitable opportunities.

“We are prepared to accelerate efforts to reintegrate returning kababayan not just through employment facilitation but also through public employment programs led by the swift full implementation of the Trabaho Para sa Bayan Act in synergy with DOLE and DTI,” Corral concluded.

As this developed, Tom Homan, the incoming border czar under Trump, affirmed that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) “will start arresting public safety threats and national security threats on day one.”   - By Rachelle Tonelada