In the
2001 election, he won without opposition as congressman of the 4th District of
Pangasinan. He was reelected overwhelmingly by the House, and was voted by some critical left-wing partylist representatives. He formed alliance with other political parties to form
Sunshine Coalition. In 2003, he received an unexpected high commendation from the public when he accepted the
Supreme Court ruling that junked the petition for the
impeachment of the
Chief Justice Hilario Davide. In the
2004 election, he became instrumental in
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's
campaign victory as
president. He also won by a landslide as congressman and was reelected as speaker for the fourth time.
NBN-ZTE scandal On July 10, 2007, De Venecia's supporters opposed secret balloting by the majority coalition to select the speaker of the House of Representatives in the Fourteenth Congress. Rep. Eduardo Zialcita of Parañaque, said the House is not a "secret society." Meanwhile, Sorsogon Rep. Jose Solis accused De Venecia's son, Jose de Venecia III, of questioning a $330 million broadband connection deal between the Philippine government and Chinese firm ZTE. Solis hit De Venecia III for desiring to have his Amsterdam Holdings, Inc. (AHI) get the deal (which will connect national government agencies to local government units through the Internet and save government up to P3 billion in telephone expenses every year). Solis further claimed that AHI is a "veritable mom's-and-pop's enterprise with a reported paid-up capital of only P650,000.
Re-election as Speaker On July 23, 2007, 159 lawmakers picked De Venecia as House Speaker for 5th time—after the House commenced at 2:17 pm, a roll-call vote for the position. De Venecia was the lone nominee, while his opponent, Cebu Rep. Pablo Garcia, was not nominated. Iloilo Rep.
Arthur Defensor Sr. was elected Majority Leader while San Juan Rep.
Ronaldo Zamora was elected minority leader. The 14th Congress of the House of Representatives is composed of 240 lawmakers, 21 of whom are party-list representatives. [https://archive.today/20070709212017/http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=85568
Removal as Speaker On January 31, 2008,
Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (KAMPI) announced that 134 congressmen signed a
manifesto of "loss of confidence" versus Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr.
Camarines Sur's 2nd district Rep.
Luis Villafuerte, KAMPI president, said the successor should be
Davao City's
1st district representative
Prospero Nograles. During the regular session on February 4, 2008,
Palawan Representative Abraham Kahlil Mitra moved that the position of
House Speaker be declared vacant. Before the motion was submitted to a vote, De Venecia delivered a speech before the House where he criticized President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and alleged that her government was behind the move to oust him from the speakership. He recounted the times he had stood to defend President Arroyo, and said,
"It pains me grievously to hurt the President and to hurt the First Family because I have invested so much more than any of you in this chamber to help the President become Vice President, become President…." Shortly after his remarks, de Venecia acknowledged to reporters: "I will join the opposition to denounce corruption in this administration. I will join the battle against corruption." During his speech at the House plenary, De Venecia said that three military generals visited his house. They were accompanied by
Raul Lambino. De Venecia's son reported the incident to the Makati police. The Speaker, meanwhile, wrote a letter to President Arroyo to ask her to do something about the threat on their lives. The Speaker said he asked President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in a letter to "please do something." "''It's simple arrogance. Just plain arrogance that Malacañang and the people of the Palace are above the law. Someday this can happen to you''," he said. The speech was delivered hours after
Palawan's 2nd district Rep.
Abraham Kahlil Mitra, an ally of Davao City Rep.
Prospero Nograles, moved the speaker's position be declared vacant. ==Post-speakership==