Jessica “Gigi” Reyes |
MANILA: Dubbed by the gossips in
the Senate as the “24th senator,” Jessica Lucila “Gigi” Gonzales-Reyes signs
checks in the millions on behalf of Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile and issues memos to Senate functionaries
involving the funds of the chamber.
Enrile’s chief of staff also is allowed in the exclusive Senate lounge
to hobnob with the senators.
She also
attends Senate caucuses where she “can speak her mind and join the discussion,”
Sen Alan Peter Cayetano said in his privilege speech Wednesday.
Reyes’ brother, Patrick, also works in the office of the Senate
President. Cayetano said to get to Enrile, you have to go through Gigi or
Patrick.
So, who’s this Gigi Reyes, and why was she the star of Cayetano’s
privilege speech?
The Chicago Tribune reported 15 years ago that Enrile’s wife Cristina
walked out on him in January 1998 after
charging adultery.
The Tribune also
reported that the “other woman “ was Gigi Gonzales-Reyes, Enrile’s chief of
staff, about 30 years his junior.
Enrile and Reyes, the Philippine Daily Inquirer has learned, met shortly after Reyes graduated from the
University of the Philippines College of Law in 1988 and joined the law firm of Pecabar (Ponce Enrile,
Cayetano, Reyes and Manalastas).
“As chief of staff, we respect
Ma’am Gigi. We allow her inside the lounge even if it’s off-limits to members
of our staff because she’s helping the Senate President,” Cayetano told
reporters a day after the usually reticent Reyes went on radio station dzMM to
call Cayetano and a few other senators “hypocrites".
Who’s running Senate?
The Senate minority leader said that pronouncements of Enrile and Reyes
differed on the removal of Senate secretariat employees detailed to his office
and the P250,000 “cash gift” to senators.
“So who between the two of them is running the Senate?” Cayetano said.
Following the break in the emotionally-charged session, Enrile
apologized for the “fracas that happened".
He also stood by Reyes saying that all her actions particularly her
handwritten instructions on the MOOE were all done upon his instructions.
In defense of her man, Reyes
who’s barely heard from, took to the airwaves. On Monday, she gave a rare radio
interview.
She said that Enrile would not have distributed cash gifts amounting
to P250,000 each if the senators never asked for Christmas doles.
“It’s illegal? Why does he accept such gifts every year?” Reyes told
radio station dzMM when confronted by anchor Karen Davila about Cayetano’s
allegation that it was illegal to distribute cash gifts from the Senate’s
savings.
Reyes said Enrile wasn’t into giving cash gifts but senators teased him
about such doles as Congress was about to take a Christmas break. She said
Cayetano was one of those who had taken the lead in asking for such deals.
“This year, there were two senators, who we no longer named, who asked
[for cash gifts]. The Senate President decided that all be given because there
was enough savings from his office,” said Reyes, 50.
Cayetano denied Reyes’ claim.
“You’ve seen how we have not been in good terms because of the sin tax
and because of the RH (reproductive health) bill. I told him [Enrile] it was
nothing personal. It’s just that we have a difference in opinion. I said Merry
Christmas. He put his arm around my shoulder and he said ‘okay,’” Cayetano told
reporters on Tuesday.
Cayetano said Enrile’s camp was actually skirting the issue of having
to justify the P250,000 per senator that the Senate President gave in December.
In his own radio interview on Monday evening, Cayetano said Reyes made
asking for a committee assignment look bad.
Cayetano said a senator without a committee chairmanship would not have
anything to do.
He maintained that savings should be returned to the national
treasury. He added that the P250,000 he received had been “impounded” following
its receipt in December by his office.
The Reyes interview hit Cayetano hard that in his privilege speech he
sort of formally introduced Gigi Reyes
to the country at large as the powerhouse that she is. – Inquirer
With a report from Norman Bordadora
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