When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Wolf-PAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf-PAC

    Wolf-PAC is an American nonpartisan political action committee formed in 2011 with the goal of adding an "amendment to the United States Constitution to ensure balance, integrity, and transparency to our national system of campaign finance". [3] Wolf-PAC argues that Congress is too corrupted by big money and special interests to adequately ...

  3. Philippine Senate Committee on Constitutional Amendments and ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Senate...

    Based on the Rules of the Senate, the Senate Committee on Constitutional Amendments and Revision of Codes has 12 members. The President Pro Tempore, the Majority Floor Leader, and the Minority Floor Leader are ex officio members. Here are the members of the committee in the 19th Congress as of September 30, 2022: [3]

  4. Interim Batasang Pambansa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interim_Batasang_Pambansa

    The Interim Batasang Pambansa (English: Interim National Assembly) was the legislature of the Republic of the Philippines from its inauguration on June 12, 1978, to June 5, 1984. It served as a transitional legislative body mandated by the 1973 Constitution as the Philippines shifted from a presidential to a semi-presidential form of government.

  5. Convention to propose amendments to the United States ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_to_propose...

    A political action committee called Wolf-PAC emerged from New York's Occupy Wall Street movement in October 2011. Wolf-PAC calls for a convention of states in order to propose a constitutional amendment that addresses the issue of campaign finance. The resolution reads "Corporations are not people. They have none of the Constitutional rights of ...

  6. 2024 constitutional reform attempts in the Philippines

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_constitutional_reform...

    Rene Estorpe, the barangay captain of Agdao Centro, claimed these promises came from the PBA Partylist, a party-list political party representing the country's athletes. [25] A PBA party-list coordinator from barangay San Antonio admitted to distributing coupons for government aid to lure people in her village to sign for the PI forms. [26]

  7. 1981 Philippine constitutional plebiscite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981_Philippine...

    Call for the establishment of a modified parliamentary system, amending for this purpose Articles VII, VIII and IX of the Philippine Constitution Institute electoral reforms Provides that a natural-born citizen of the Philippines who has lost his Philippine citizenship may be a transferee of private land, for use by him as residence

  8. List of legislatures of the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_legislatures_of...

    Revolutionary government: Assembly of Representatives First Republic: 2 Taft Commission: 2nd: Unicameral assembly: Philippine Commission: Unelected 5–8 March 16, 1900 U.S. military government: U.S. Insular Government: 3 Philippine Legislature: 1st: Philippine Commission: Unelected 8–9 Philippine Assembly: July 30, 1907: 59 Nacionalista 16 ...

  9. Batasang Pambansa (legislature) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batasang_Pambansa...

    The seal of the Batasang Pambansa from 1978 to 1986, during which the Philippines had a unicameral legislature. The Batasang Pambansa (English: National Assembly; lit. ' National Legislature '), often referred to simply as the Batasan, [1] was the legislature of the Philippines, established as an interim assembly in 1978 and later as an official body in 1984.