Who voted ‘No’ to the 2026 budget—and why one majority solon broke ranks

Tempo Desk
4 Min Read
HOUSE of Representatives plenary hall

The House of Representatives on Monday, October 13, approved the proposed P6.793-trillion national budget for 2026 on third and final reading, with 287 lawmakers voting in favor, 12 against, and two abstaining.

As expected, most of the dissenting votes came from the minority bloc—but one stood out.

Batangas 1st district Rep. Leandro Legarda Leviste, a neophyte lawmaker and member of the House majority, defied his bloc and cast a lone “no” vote, citing systemic corruption and inequitable budget allocation as his reasons.

Leviste’s reasoning was simple but compelling to him: kickbacks can still happen under the 2026 General Appropriations Bill (GAB).

For weeks now, the 32-year-old neophyte congressman has been aggressively pushing for the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to lower the price tag on its projects by 25 percent to end the systemic kickbacks in the agency, which have affected flood control works.

“After all the flood control hearings, we should not approve the same prices for projects of DPWH. We should lower prices by 25% to remove P150 Billion in possible kickbacks.”

According to him, the DPWH “sets the prices, does the bids, and even if a Congressman does not get a kickback, someone else can get it”.

“Kickbacks are factored into DPWH’s high prices. We should lower prices so there’s no more budget for kickbacks of DPWH. Not lowering prices is tantamount to funding more kickbacks for 2026,” stressed Leviste, who earlier had a DPWH district engineer arrested for attempting to bribe him.

To prove that kickbacks are factored into the budget for DPWH projects, Leviste wrote to the House Committee on Appropriations to ask to lower by 30 percent the price of DPWH road projects in Batangas’ first district and re-align P508 million in savings to fund the construction of over 200 classrooms.

“I don’t accept kickbacks, so I asked Congress to lower the price of DPWH even just in my district, so we can show that DPWH can build projects at lower prices as long as there’s no kickbacks. If we can end kickbacks in some districts, we can end kickbacks in the whole DPWH,” Leviste said.

Another reason why Leviste entered a “no” vote was the inequitable allocation of budgets. He cited the example of how Region 4A comprises 15 percent of the country’s population and gross domestic product, but only gets 10 percent of the DPWH budget.

“If the 2026 budget is amended to lower the prices of DPWH, hopefully the savings can be allocated to make the budget more equitable,” the son of Senator Loren Legarda said.

The other 11 “no” votes came from minority lawmakers: Akbayan Party-list Reps. Chel Diokno, Perci Cendaña, and Dadah Ismula; Makabayan bloc members ACT Teachers Rep. Antonio Tinio, Kabataan Rep. Renee Co, and Gabriela Rep. Sarah Elago; Mamayang Liberal Rep. Leila de Lima; SAGIP Rep. Paolo Marcoleta; Albay 1st district Rep. Krisel Lagman; Dinagat Islands Rep. Kaka Bag-ao; and Caloocan City 2nd district Rep. Edgar Erice.

Meanwhile, Cavite 4th district Rep. Kiko Barzaga and PPP Party-list Rep. Harold Duterte abstained.

With the House’s approval secured, the 2026 General Appropriations Bill (House Bill No. 4058) now moves to the Senate for further deliberation. (Ellson Quismorio)

 

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