A good friend of mine used to say “Run on your merits and not on the demerits of others.” Tama sya doon.

Yesterday, I read Korina’s  column in Philippine Star. Nakakatawa kasi makikita mong insecure sya sa mga ginagawa ni Senator Villar who is on top of his game.

Here are some comments of the readers:

kititot

anong wala si Roxas kay Villar

si Roxas anak ng trapo, mayaman, hindi naghirap – Si Villar mahirap na nag-kusa at yumaman kung kasalan ang yumaman kay Korina lang ito may kasalanan kasi obvious kanino pa ba ito si-sip- sip siempre sa syota.

anong nagawa ni roxas – mr palenke raw . kasi siya ang may ari ng farmers. tingnan mo ang presyo sa farmers market naku mahihilo ka. sa laki ba naman ng upa ng mga tindera/tindera kanino ipapatong ang renta eh di sa mamimili. ito bay kayang trabahuhin para sa mamayan kesa puro batikos na alang si Korina na wala naman nasasabi sa mga gawain mo kuno para sa mahihirap. anong dating mo Mar. at saka paki sabihan mo narin si korina na wala ng naniniwala sa manok niyang si kuratong baleleng kasi basa na ito at laos na… wala ng asim kung baga.

Mabuti pa korina para makatulong ka ki Dyowa mo ay sumulat ka nalng ng tungkol sa mag nagawa niya para makatulong sa rating niya kesa puro ka patutsada o baka naman wala ka rin alam sa mga nagawa ng manok mo. mabuti na si Loi puro papauri sa anak niyan majority fllor leader. gayahin mo na lang ang style in Loi.

amthyst

Si manny villar ay mabuting ama at mapagmahal na asawa. Responsableng padre de familia. Tumutulong sa mahihirap. Gawa hindi ngawa. Di tulad ng iba dyan… all bark no bite!

Kung magdala lang ng pamilya di pa makaya, pilipinas pa?

Cast the first stone!

rar01

Sana lang ay hindi mo sinulat ito Madam Koring para bumango rin ang pangalan ni Mar dahil partner mo sya ngayon. Lahat ng tao ay nagkakamali at bahagi yan ng pagkatao natin. Ikaw ba Miss Koring… hindi ka nagkakamali? Tayo ang huhusga nyan pagdating ng eleksyon pero sabi nga nila mas magiging maanghang ang labanan pag may mga kontrabida.

Ano nga ba ang nagawa na ni Mar? Hindi bat mas bagito sya kumpara kay Villar? Ano na ba ang napatunayan nya mula nung pumasok sa politika? Oo nga naman bat ka susulat ng negatibong artikulo tungkol kay Mar?

Alam kong gawain nyo yan at yan ang pinagkakakitaaan nyo pero kung ayaw mong tirahin ng ibang writers ang Mr. Mar Roxas mo eh tigilan mo rin ang paninira. OFW ako dito sa Saudi pero ang ginagawa ni Villar eh malaking tulong sa ibang pamilya kahit pa ginagawa nya yun para tumaas ang rating nya para sa nalalapit na election. Ano ba depinisyon ng moral at immoral sa mga katulad ninyo? Hwag mong diktahan ang isip ng tao sa pamamagitan ng panulat mo para bumango lang ang pangalan ng Mar mo. Kung tutuusin wala pa namang napapatunayan si Mar !! Ano? Ang mag-rigodon sa mga palengkeng bayan para bantayan ang merkado? Achievement ba yun? Para kasing excited ka na maging 1st Lady eh… hi hi hi !!! Sana nga malinis ang intensyon mo dahil kung hindi eh sarili mo ang niloloko mo bukod pa dun eh nagkakasala ka sa Diyos.. Amen.


Manny Villar through the eyes of a classmate

I’d like to share this a guest post by Danny Daguio. The article was first posted in villar2010.ning.com – Koenig

I wrote this to a friend of mine who works with NEDA sometime in September 2008. He wanted me to give him an idea of the kind of person MBV is so he could share it with some of his kababayans from the north of the Philippines. I am re-posting this for the benefit of the new members of this site. Thank you to those who took their time to comment and sent me emails of encouragement.

We all need to carry our belief in THE MAN, the only one left who can really give our beloved country the chance it deserves. If we all feel it, think it, believe it…… WE WILL SUCCEED!!!!

Manny used to tell us, his close friends from UP BA, that he enjoyed our company a lot more than being with politicians. I guess he was a lot more comfortable with us because we never would ask him for anything, we just enjoyed his company and being just what we are, no pretenses, we would laugh a lot, sharing jokes. At times , we would be talking about the state of our nation, the problems, and he always felt that he gets honest feedback from us. You very well know that politicians can be your friend one day and be on the opposing side the next.

UPCBA

Even When in College, Manny Villar already had the attributes of a topnotch leader. Here is a photo taken at the old UP College of BA. Manny is at left, towering over all of us.

He also told us about the gaunlet of vested interest people and groups, that for one to get to the pinnacle of government…to the highest office, you need to be able to ride through murky and troubled waters, you have to play politics sometimes and you try to get a consensus as often as you can. Many never get to be President even if they have honest intentions and good aspirations for the country because they get waylaid very early by these interest groups and ambitious politicians who only think about themselves.

He would also say, if you try to get mileage from other’s mistakes or you attempt to brush others as though you have all the answers and only you can solve the problems, you sometimes fall into the trap of not getting to the bottom of the problem and coming up with a half bake solution. Also, in the end, you will be found out as someone who really jumps the gun in every opportunity to get political score or, as they say, instant publicity.

We would ask him why go to the trouble of inheriting the big problems that the country face, when in fact he is already a made man, very rich in his own right. Why the need to run for President? To that he says, he has always wanted to be remembered as having brought the country to greater prosperity amidst the quagmire of worldwide upheavals. He does not want to be remembered as a rich businessman but someone who has done something for his country. I heard him say once, the famous Kennedy line, “ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country”.

He says, the biggest problem that a Presidential candidate faces is the huge expenditure for the campaign. Most often, the President-elect gets indebted to the rich businesses or vested interests groups. The President’s hands then get tied once payback time comes. Because he is willing to fund his own campaign, he believes this will be good for the country as he can then make decisions for the good of many, if not all, without having to worry about succumbing to political pressure. He welcomes financial support from anyone but, in the final analysis, he does not want these to carry any sort of political blackmail.

I am very close to his brother, Jojo, and was once with him and another brother Cesar, who now has passed away. Jojo told me that he and Cesar cannot get favours for other people with their big brother…it is so difficult and oftentimes have given up. One thing you must know about Manny is that he abhors nepotism but will not shy away from giving a friend a position of responsibility if that friend is qualified for the job and is of good character.

All his siblings are successful people in their own right. Jojo, for one, was the Managing Director of a multinational German medical supplies company in their Philippine operations just before his retirement early this year. One of the sisters is a successful grocery and fish vendor for whom we bought our weekly food budget when my family was still in Manila.

You work with NEDA and I know that Romy Neri used to be your boss there. Romy is also a classmate and we would be together in reunions hosted by Manny for whenever I visit Manila. That is why, when this thing about ZTE broadband scandal came out, I would not believe that Romy would have profited at all from that deal. I know he is an honest person like all of us, his classmates. You just have to look at me…I am just like you, like many of us, simple not rich inspite of my close connection to Manny.

Manny is a very honest person. He does not believe in instant richness, You have to work for it. If one supports Manny because he thinks he can benefit from this support financially, he is in the wrong camp. But, if you think, you want the best for our country and you believe you can contribute something concrete, then you are right in supporting Manny Villar.

Loyalty is also something that Manny values highly. You can be a simple man but if you are a loyal friend to Manny, he will treasure that friendship.

I also remember a time when we were having a get together at a classmate’s house. At that time, many of us were preparing to leave the Philippines to try our luck in a foreign land. Some of us went to Canada, the USA, and I, for one, to Australia. Another of the guys was going to Singapore for an employment stint covering a few years. Manny commented (he was not yet in politics at that time), “what is it that you all know (that you are all leaving) that I don’t?” We told him, Manny…you are already made, we are not anywhere like you. He told us he was going to stick it through, for better or worse. A few years later, he became a Congressman.

I have been looking at all the Presidentiables but nothing or no one among them gets anywhere close to his qualifications. He is the only one who has been Speaker of the House, a three termer in Congress before becoming Senator and eventually Senate President. He also is bred educationally on Philippine soil and hence his perspective is genuine Filipino.

Personality wise, Manny is laid back, not prone to bouts of excitement and stress, very calm. He does not jump on issues simply to score points against his rivals. He thinks positive all the time and is not into destroying others for his own benefit. He wants success for everyone and he is proud of what others achieve.

He is approchable. One time, when he visited Sydney, he had no bodyguard when we were in Chinatown. We were waiting for Cynthia to get a few grocery items with Camille, I was with Manny standing at the door to Market City. We were just chatting when two young girls from the Philippines recognised him and said, Sir… pwede bang mag pakuha ng photo. Sure, sabi ni Manny, and he posed with the two..and guess who took the picture ;-) )

Sa airport, he lines up like any other person does and goes through the checkpoint when this happens during his holidays. When I visit the Philippines, even if he knows I am coming, I too go through Customs like any other citizen does. My bags are checked like everyone else. I then go to the car park where my sundo is but I have to follow the law. He wants everyone to follow the law and also expects those working in government to follow the law.

At UP, we used to go out on Thursdays, kasi Fridays, we had no classes, this was reserved for exams. We formed the Thursday Club…(in the Senate, ito ang naging prototype ng kanilang Wednesday Club). We would go out to relax after a week’s study. Kakain kami sa Hong Ning, mami at siopao, then over to Fun Center sa Cubao. We would usually come home sa bahay namin sa Project 6, kasi mahirap na siyang makauwi sa Tondo at yung iba sa Malabon..para kaming tropa, nakahiga sa sahig, may banig naman at kutson…when we woke up, my mother would prepare breakfast for us. He remembers these and does have a soft spot for my Mom. (My mom, Estela Fermin Daguio is now 90 years and is the widow of the late Amador Taguinod Daguio; poet, nationalist, short story writer, teacher)

A bit late now…so I hope I have been able to convey my own understanding of the person that someday will be our President.
Cheers,  Danny

Feedback : Villar links ouster move to 2010 polls

From: “cesar santos umali” <csum********@yahoo.com>
To: <feedback@gmanews.tv>
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 9:20 PM
Subject: [feedback] Feedback : Villar links ouster move to 2010 polls

>I still believe in the power of divine providence
> in restoring leadership.  As man proposes, God
> disposes.
> For so long, the specter of evil has influenced
> all sectors of society in the Philippines; that is
> why for so long, the people have suffered and
> continue to suffer from the bondage of want and
> poverty.  But God so loves the Filipino people
> that someday He will provide a saviour to help
> resurrect the Philippines once again.  We have a
> man like Villar who is honest, sincere and a heart
> for service for the people and will not stick to
> power and position but will sacrifice himself so
> that truth may prevail.  Let us pray that the Lord
> will save our country from the perdition to come.
> – November 17, 2008, 9:20 pm

Villar satisfaction ratings still highest prior to Senate coup

The Third Quarter 2008 Social Weather Survey, fielded over September 24-27, 2008, found 61% satisfied and 17% dissatisfied with the performance of Senate President Manuel Villar Jr.

The SWS survey confirms that the latest coup was politically motivated by the presidentiables. Manny Villar stills enjoys the credibility among the Filipino people but his fellow Senators still booted him out.

Senate President Villar’s net satisfaction (% satisfied minus % dissatisfied) is at +43, the highest compared to Vice-President de Castro’s +34 or Speaker Nograles’ -12.

Villar recognized for achievement as a home builder

Senate President Manny Villar today received an award in recognition of his unparalleled achievement in the real estate industry, especially in providing shelter to Filipinos of lower income groups.

The Chamber of Real Estates and Builders Associations, Inc. (CREBA), the country’s largest organization of real estate brokers, builders, developers, professionals, suppliers, and other allied professionals and businesses bestowed on Villar its first Lifetime Achievement Award during the gala night and culmination of its 2008 National Convention at the Subic Bay Exhibition and Convention Center in Subic, Zambales.

“This award is precious because it is conferred by distinguished peers and colleagues in the industry who know intimately the roadblocks and pathways along the way,” Villar, also the Nacionalista Party president, said.

“I suppose it was my sense of daring and a clear vision of where I wanted to be that served as my compass. I was driven by sipag, tiyaga at dasal,” he added.

Villar is being awarded to recognize his past and continuing contribution to the real estate industry as a key player in this sector, through his various subdivisions, commercial, condominium, town house, golf course and other developments, and his efforts and initiatives as a public servant, beginning with his stint as Representative of Las Piñas City, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Senator, and now as President of the Senate.

CREBA believes that Villar’s feat has not been equalled yet by anyone from the industry and its effect will be there for many years to come. They hope that the award will be an encouragement to other leading figures of the business.

Villar started venturing into the real estate business in 1975 after availing of a P10,000 loan, which he used to purchase two reconditioned trucks to start up a sand-and-gravel business. It was while delivering construction materials to big developers that Villar came up with the idea of selling house and lot packages.

He eventually became the biggest home builder in Southeast Asia , having built more than 100,000 houses for lower and middle-class Filipino families. His business achievements were featured in international publications such as Far Eastern Economic Review, Asia Week, Forbes, Asia Money and Asian Business Review.

The award was given by CREBA National President, Reghis Romero II, and the members of the Council of Leaders, which is composed of all past CREBA presidents. It was witnessed by convention delegates from different parts of the country as well as heads and other representatives from key shelter agencies, leaders from all the important and influential business organizations and local government officials.

Source:
Senate Press Releases, 25 October 2008
http://www.senate.gov.ph/press_release/2008/1025_villar1.asp

Transcript of interview with Senate President Manny Villar and OFW Jennifer Calinao

Q: On the repatriation of Jennifer Calinao

Villar: Nais ko lang ikwento na dumaan ako sa Bahrain papuntang Jordan noong sinamahan ko pauwi ang ating mga OFW doon. Ako ay kumain sa isang restaurant at ibinigay sa akin ng may-ari ng restaurant itong mga papel na ito. Sinabi nila na meron daw isang kababayan tayo na nakapulot nito at dinala sa restaurant kaya ibinibigay niya sa kasama ko na ambassador at aking tiningnan. Binasa ko ang istorya ni Jennifer. Siguro, pwedeng ikwento ito ni Jennifer. Jennifer Calinao: Sabi ko po doon sa agency, magpapalit ako ng sponsor. Ang sabi niya po, hindi daw niya ako papalitan ng sponsor. Ide-detain na lang daw po ako ng agency tapos ikinulong po ako ng isang linggo. May nakita po ako na isang Pilipina na dumaan sa building ng agency. Tapos po sabi ko, kabayan tulungan mo naman ako kasi nakakulong ako dito, ayaw akong palabasin ng manager. Araw-araw na po siyang dumadaan doon, inaabangan ko ang kada daan niya kasi malapit lang po ang accommodation nila. Naghuhulog po ako ng sulat doon sa may pinakabutas ng building. Kasi po init na init na po ako doon, walang aircon, walang kahit ano doon. Tapos sabi ng Pilipina…

Q: Ano ang pangalan ng kaibigan mong Pilipina?

Jennifer Calinao: Hindi ko po kilala iyon. Dumadaan lang siya doon. Lagi-lagi na po siyang dumadaan doon, inaabangan ko kada daan niya tapos gumagawa po ako ng letters para ibigay nga po doon sa mga kababayan natin. Talaga pong ayaw akong palabasin doon sa building ng manager ng agency. Tapos sabi niya, sumigaw siya kunwari may kausap siya sa cellphone. Sabi niya, sige ako ang bahala, tutulungan ka namin diyan basta huwag ka lamang mag-aano. Tapos lagi po akong sinasabihan ng manager na kapag nalaman nga daw sa Philippine embassy, papatayin daw po o kaya ipakukulong daw po. Kaya sabi ko doon sa Pilipina, huwag ka munang magsusumbong kasi pagka nangyari iyan, baka mapahamak ako dito. Iyon po. Tapos hindi po ako binibigyan ng pagkain sa loob. Stay daw po ako two years doon hangga’t hindi ako nakakabayad ng 600 BD na ibinigay nila sa agency dito.

Villar: Ako naman, noong dumaan ako sa Bahrain, kumain muna kami ni Ambassador at ni Consul Burgos sa restaurant. Ibinigay po sa akin ito. Ito pala ang mga itinatapon ni Jennifer sa kanyang pinagkakakulungan at ibinigay noong nakapulot, iyong ikinukwento niyang dumadaan everyday. Ngayon binasa ko itong istorya at kara-karakang inutusan ko si Ambassador at si Consul na kailangan ay makuha nila itong si Jennifer at hindi puwedeng hindi makukuha ito. Pinuntahan nila agad. Una muna ay wala, sarado. Iyong pangalawa ay naayos nila. Pinababayaran kasi sa kanya iyong $2,000 tsaka pamasahe. Sinagot ko na lamang iyon para makalaya na siya at para walang problema. Ito ay nakakatuwa rin dahil sa nagkataon lamang na kumain kami sa particular na restaurant na iyon. Kaya ko naman sinasabi ito dahil sa maaaring maraming ganitong halimbawa na nangyayari sa atin pong mga kababayan doon. Itong kay Jennifer ay maaaring isang halimbawa lamang ng maraming mga ganyang kaso na nakakulong. Mabuti si Jennifer ay sumulat dito sa karton at napulot at nagkataong naibigay naman sa ambassador at naibigay sa akin. Kung hindi nangyari iyan ay matagal na makukulong itong si Jennifer. Kaya hindi natin puwedeng tigilan itong pagtulong sa ganitong mga may problema. Bagamat mayroon na tayong mga kasunduan na napipirmahan sa Jordan, dito naman sa Bahrain ay meron ding mga ganitong pangyayari at marami pang mga bansa. Kaya tuloy-tuloy lamang ang ating programa para dito upang itong nangyari kay Jennifer ay hindi mangyayari sa iba nating mga kababayan.

 

Continue Reading

Manny Villar Video

Who is Manny Villar?

The public life of Manny Villar straddles both the worlds of business and politics. He is one of the few who managed to excel in both.

Working Student

He was born to a simple family on December 13, 1949 in Moriones, Tondo, Manila. His father, Manuel Montalban Villar, Sr., a government employee, hailed from Cabatuan, Iloilo and his mother Curita Bamba, a seafood dealer, came from Pampanga and Bataan. Manny is the second child in a brood of nine. At a very young age, he was already helping his mother sell shrimp and fish in the Divisoria Market. With the burning desire for a better future and a strong determination to improve his family’s living conditions, Manny worked hard in selling shrimps and fish to be able to send himself to school.

“I learned from my mother what it takes to be an entrepreneur,” he revealed. “And it means working really hard to achieve your dreams.” In Divisoria, he marveled at the volume of sales that Chinese merchants were making, thus he vowed early on to become an entrepreneur.

Hard work, persistence, and perseverance became his guiding principles in life. This earned him the title “Mr. Sipag at Tiyaga.”

He continues to inspire Filipinos with his life story and encourages each and every kababayan to improve their quality of life and fulfill their dreams through the very values he believes in — “sipag at tiyaga.”

Entrepreneur

Manny Villar was a working student at the University of the Philippines, the premier institution of higher learning in the country, where he obtained his undergraduate and master’s degree in business administration and accountancy. By then, he was also putting in long hours as a fish and shrimp trader, where the action starts at the ungodly hours of the morning when the catch lands in the market.

After graduation, he tried his hand as an accountant at the country’s biggest accounting firm, Sycip Gorres Velayo & Co. (SGV & Co). He resigned shortly though to venture on his own seafood delivery business.

When a restaurant he was delivering stocks to did not pay him, he printed out “meal tickets” which he persuaded the restaurant owners to honor. He then sold these tickets at a discounted price to office workers. It took him one year to liquidate his receivables.

He worked briefly as a financial analyst at the Private Development Corporation of the Philippines. His job was to sell World Bank loans, despite the attractive rates of which there were no takers. Convinced that he could make it on his own again, he quit his job and promptly availed of one of the loans.

So with an initial capital of P10,000 in 1975, Villar purchased two reconditioned trucks and started his sand-and-gravel business in Las Piñas.

Housing Innovator

It is here while delivering construction materials to big developers that Manny Villar came up with the idea of selling house and lot packages when the convention then was for homeowners to buy lots and build on them.

Manny Villar became the housing industry leader, and the biggest homebuilder in Southeast Asia, having built more than 100,000 houses for the poor and middle class Filipino families.

He then initiated mass housing projects to achieve economies of scale. His various innovations practically created the country’s mass housing industry. The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism calls him “the dean of the (Philippine) real estate industry.”

Awards and Distinctions

For his business achievements, he was made cover story in the Far Eastern Economic Review. And his life story was also featured in Asiaweek, Forbes, AsiaMoney and Asian Business Review.

He garnered various awards such as the Ten Outstanding Young Men Award (1986) by the Philippine Jaycees, Agora Award for Outstanding Achievement in Marketing Management (1989), Most Outstanding CPA by the Philippine Institute of Certified Public Accountants (1990) and Most Outstanding UP Alumnus (1991).

Through the years, universities and colleges all over the country have conferred upon Villar honorary degrees in various fields in recognition of his exemplary performance in public service, his pioneering initiatives and innovations that revolutionalized the country’s mass housing and real estate industry, and his distinct role in the enactment of economic and social reform laws that are vital in sustaining the country’s economic momentum and improvement of the lives of Filipinos, particularly the cause of small and medium enterprises.

Among these universities and colleges that have bestowed Honoris Causa to Villar are: Adamson University, Doctor of Science; Bataan Polytechnic State College, Doctor of Humanities; Bulacan State University, Doctor of Humanities; Cagayan State University, Doctor of Humanities; Central Luzon State University, Doctor of Humanities; Foundation University (Dumaguete), Doctor of Humanities; Laguna State Polytechnic College, Doctor of Humanities and Entrepreneurship; Pangasinan State University, Doctor of Development Management; Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology, Doctor of Business Administration; Ramon Magsaysay Technological University, Doctor of Entrepreneurial Management; Romblon State College, Doctor of Humanities; Tarlac State University, Doctor of Public Administration; Wesleyan University-Philippines, Doctor of Humanities; and Western Visayas College of Science and Technology, Doctor of Technology in Entrepreneurial Management.

Political Career

In a stunning political debut in 1992, Villar won with the most overwhelming mandate among congressmen in Metro Manila. He promptly applied his economic and managerial expertise as a key member of the House’s economic team, marshalling in economic reform measures of the Ramos Administration such as the New Foreign Investments Act and the restructuring of the Central Bank of the Philippines. He was the House representative in the government’s negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington D.C. in 1992.

He also oversaw various infrastructure projects in his districts like the construction of concrete roads and the Alabang-Zapote Flyover. He introduced the “Friendship Route” to ease the traffic problems in southern Manila by persuading subdivision homeowners to open up their roads to the general public.

He succeeded in passing Republic Act 8003 “Declaring Certain Areas in Las Piñas as Tourist Spots.” The law formalized his program of rehabilitating historical and cultural landmarks in Las Piñas starting with the world-famous Bamboo Organ Church. The ongoing project dubbed as “Las Piñas Historical Corridor” covers the stretch of the Old District and may even rival the Intramuros and Vigan restoration projects.

A staunch environmentalist, he initiated a privately funded tree planting drive in his district. He developed a P10-million tree nursery beside his home. He also quietly led a dedicated tree-planting drive complete with maintenance and watering of tree seedlings planted in the open spaces of the community.

When he realized that many poor students could not go to school because they do not even have fare money, he organized the “Manpower on Wheels” Program, a livelihood training school housed in a van that makes the rounds in depressed areas. The program has since produced more than 5,000 graduates and has been awarded by various government and civic organizations for its innovative scheme.

During his first term, he steered Las Piñas and Muntinlupa to cityhood. He pointed out: “As a developer, I have always envisioned these two communities as the ‘Twin Cities of the South’ of Manila. In fact, Las Piñas and Muntinlupa are the two fastest growing communities in the country today.”

For his constituency work and personal vow, he extended grants of home sites to some 10,000 poor families in Barangay CAA, Las Piñas City. Two major roads were also opened in his district: the Sucat-Pulanglupa Link Road to Parañaque and the Zapote-Molino (Daang Hari) Link Road to Cavite, thus alleviating the traffic congestion in the area.

During his second term, he was able to upgrade the Las Piñas District Hospital with a new building and better facilities. He also launched the “Sagip-Bukas” Drug Prevention Program on all the private and public schools of Las Piñas to educate the youth about the dangers of drug abuse. He also nationalized the Las Piñas High School to upgrade its facilities.

By the end of his second term of office, Villar had already proven beyond doubt his capacity for excellence as a true Filipino entrepreneur and a brilliant public servant who can get things done.

Champion for Entrepreneurs

In 1995, Manny Villar ran for re-election and won an unprecedented 142,000 votes, the highest number of votes for a congressman in the entire country. Winning media acclaim as an outstanding congressman as well as the respect and recognition of his peers, he was elected to chair the Committee on Entrepreneurship.

As one of the leading entrepreneurs in the country, he championed the cause of small and medium-sized enterprises. He authored and passed into law the landmark New Magna Carta for Small and Medium Enterprises (RA 8289). He initiated creative legislation such as the establishment of the Small and Medium Enterprises Stock Exchange and Business One-Stop-Shop centers, the latter he immediately implemented in Las Piñas City with the help of local officials.

Speaker of the House

It was no surprise then to those in the know when he gained the remarkable acclaim of 171 of 220 congressmen as the Speaker of the 11th Congress of the House of Representatives.

In a time when the country is slowly recovering from a host of economic and political crises, the election of the ‘brown taipan’ at the helm of Congress signaled a watershed event in the Philippine political history. The rise of Manny Villar ushered in a new consensus of leadership based on managerial skills and not simply on oratory and rhetoric.

By his first year in office, Villar undertook three pathbreaking reforms. He succeeded in marshalling consensus in the House to reform the ‘pork barrel’ system by limiting congressional discretion projects to the set parameters of the Executive’s development policies. Secondly, he launched a revamp of leadership by appointing at least seven neophyte congressmen to head powerful committees like ecology and banks. Finally, he set a strong and principled stance on environment protection legislation with the passage of the “Clean Air Act,” a measure that for more than ten years and three previous congresses were not able to pass.

On his second year in office, Manny Villar steered the 11th Congress into a record-breaking achievement in legislation and economic reforms. Among the pioneering measures he shepherded into law were the Retail Trade Liberization Act, the New Central Bank Act, the New Securities Code, and the New Banking Act.

Senator of the Republic

In the national elections held last May 14, 2001, despite being a relative newcomer in national politics, Manny Villar posted one of the most impressive showings in the national polls. On his first day in office, he filed 204 bills covering a comprehensive legislative program of action— the first among neophyte senators and the third highest filer among the senators of the 12th Congress of the Philippines.

After being elected by his colleagues, he assumed the position of Senate President Pro-Tempore, the second to the highest post in the higher Chamber of Congress. He is presently the Chairman of the Committee on Finance that is in charge of all deliberations and discussions on the national budget of the country and the Committee on Public Order and Illegal Drugs. He is also the Vice Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations and Committee on Agriculture. He authored 44 laws during the 12th Congress, among them are: RA 9178 Barangay Micro Business Enterprises Act, RA 9189 Overseas Absentee Voting Act, RA 9208 Anti-Trafficking of Persons Act, RA 9257 An Act Granting Additional Benefits and Privileges to Senior Citizens, and RA 9262 Anti-Violence Against Women and their Children Act. He has filed Bills aimed at providing business opportunities for the people and improving the Filipinos’ quality of life through basic health care, decent shelters, responsive social services, and high quality education.

Outside the Senate’s halls, Villar actively sponsors the Sipag at Tiyaga Caravan Kaalaman, a livelihood training program that provides skills and inspiration to people that will allow them to venture into their own businesses. The caravan travels all over the country conducting livelihood seminars that are consistently widely attended and appreciated.

He has also spearheaded the building of schools, sending out medical missions and setting up relief operations whenever or wherever needed. He led the inauguration of the Las Piñas-Muntinlupa-Laguna-Cavite (LPMLC) link road, more popularly known as Daang Hari, as part of his road improvement program aimed at easing traffic in the south of Metro Manila. According to him, an efficient and rationalized road network is one of the fundamental requirements in improving commerce and spurring economic progress.

In February 2004, he was elected as President of the Nacionalista Party—the country’s oldest and grandest political party. He was also named the Most Distinguished UP Alumnus—the highest recognition given by the UP Alumni Association—for his exemplary public service and achievements.

Senator Manny Villar, despite his numerous accomplishments and heroism, has remained simple and unaffected. A true family man, he is a devoted husband to Congresswoman Cynthia A. Villar (Lone District of Las Piñas), and a loving father to sons Paolo and Mark and daughter Camille.

(taken from http://www.mannyvillar.com.ph/biography.html)

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