Breaking News

Monsour Del Rosario and the social media comments

Monsour Del Rosario and the social media comments

0 0

Some comments on social media can ruin your day, but Monsour Del Rosario tries not to let this get to him. Ever since he announced his candidacy for a Senate seat, the majority of people familiar with his Congress record are ecstatic, but some netizens can’t help but poke holes. 

‘Anong gagawin mo sa Senate? Maninipa? (‘What are you going to do in the Senate? Kick people?’) This is how the usual troll comment goes. But it’s a legitimate question that Monsour tries to answer with his usual flair. In a virtual conversation at RVOTE (Rotary District 3820 Advocacy For Voter Education) held November 12, the man tries to answer the question by weaving a short story of his life.  

“Well, I can’t deny that being in the movies made me popular, but first and foremost, I’m a Negrense who became a Taekwondo fighter and was asked by my Master to make Taekwondo famous, so I went on to become an action star who can barely speak Tagalog. But that’s also just the beginning for me. People elected me to public office for years. I was a two-term councilor, I was a lawmaker in the 17th Congress where I wrote, pushed, and defended 292 Bills and Resolutions. Not bad for ‘just an actor’,” Del Rosario says.

His life story is not rosy but very familiar for a promdi. Bullied at a young age and his parents divorced, he got into a lot of trouble during his youth in Negros. He eventually moved to Manila to live with his grandmother, who he remembers fondly for instilling discipline in him. Combined with Taekwondo lessons, he was able to receive strict guidance to contain his restless energy and channel it to something positive. 

Still looking fit at 58 years old, Monsour Del Rosario will face another challenge as he aims for a Senate seat in the upcoming 2022 elections. What is his motivation to run? “I was perfectly happy living my private life after my stint in Congress, but after the 292 bills and resolutions I filed during my term, only a few of them eventually became laws of the land. I felt like I had a lot of unfinished business. The pandemic also stirred me to help solve our current problems in healthcare, employment, and the economy. I believe the senate needs fresh eyes – a new perspective.”

Unbeknownst to many, Del Rosario is the father of the Telecommuting Act of 2018 or the Work from Home Law, which is now the legal basis used by companies to allow their employees to work from home during the pandemic. “I pushed that law 7 months into my Congress days. Back then, we only wanted to solve the problem of traffic in the Metro. Little did we know that 3 years later, a global pandemic would put people off the streets and into their homes. But that bill was just there waiting to be utilized. I’m happy and sad at the same time because it became very useful, but we didn’t want a pandemic to make it so.”

“That bill, I made that during my seventh month in office. I was working in Congress and people were complaining, the biggest problem we had was the traffic and it would take me three hours long to take me to the House of Representative. Sometimes it took two hours, sometimes three hours. Everybody was complaining about the traffic.  So, I was trying to find a solution to solve the traffic problems. I came up with the Telecommuting Act which could solve the traffic problems where people will be allowed to work from home and it will benefit a lot of people because first, you don’t have to beat the traffic. Second, if the weather is bad, you don’t have to beat the weather. Then of course there’s criminality outside. We are safer at home. We can get to spend time with the family. And it allows you to work from home for the same benefits that you get going inside an office, going to a corporation, and working. Little did I know that this bill will be applicable as of today in the last 20 months in this pandemic that we are facing right now. So, there’s a lot of people who have jobs, still earning money because of this Telecommuting Act, that I am very proud of. That one, I don’t know if many people know that sa ngayon ang tinatawag sa akin ay “Ama ng Telecommuting” or “Ama ng Work-from-Home” bill na naging batas dito sa bansang Pilipinas. Yan ang pinaka-proudest na nagawa ko bilang isang congressman and I feel good about,” added Monsour.

Asked what he will do to ease the effects of the pandemic, he maps out his plans: “My suggestion is to put a commission to explore new industries and fields that are suited to the skills of Filipinos. We want to create a jobs market that will employ millions of Filipinos who do what they do best. But I think the most pressing matter, which the pandemic highlighted for us, is the need to improve our healthcare system – primarily the way we treat our frontliners or healthcare heroes. We have a pandemic raging in the country and our nurses are running away to go abroad. The simple reason for that is because we’re not giving them the salaries and benefits that they deserve. We need to close the gap of salaries they may receive abroad and entice them to stay here with their families, so we have to work on that with urgency,” he says.

Del Rosario notes his proposal to have a Healthcare Heroes Card that will provide incentives to qualified workers in the healthcare sector. “This card will be given to licensed medical practitioners and they can present this to establishments and services where they will be given discounts – the same privileges given to our PWDs and Senior Citizens. That’s the first thing I will do if I ever make it in the Senate.”

“I know a particular nurse whose mother didn’t see her for ten years. By the time she came back, hindi na sila masyadong magkakilala dahil sampung taon silang hindi nagkita. So, if we can find a way to keep our nurses here in the Philippines, taking care of us; give them a better life, give them better benefits, give them better salaries, I’m planning if my first platform, my first bill if I would made it is really to take care of the healthcare workers, the nurses. I want to bridge the gap between the people leaving and the people staying. Hopefully I can bridge it enough that we would have enough nurses here taking care of us. Maybe we can, I’m planning to give them the same benefits as the PWDs get, the same benefits as the senior citizens get, a 20% discount on food, on travel, and medicines. And maybe it won’t be the same benefit and salary that they get but at least they’re here in the Philippines. And they’re here with their families,” he said.

We wonder what the people in the comments section think of this proposal?

Anonymous

About Post Author

Admin - Metropoler

Metropoler is a social media-centric news website in the Philippines that covers the intersection of financial, business, media, tech, science, tourism, food, entertainment, art, politics, and culture launched on June 1, 2020.
Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
0%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

%d bloggers like this: