Senator Risa Hontiveros stands out in the Senate as a powerful advocate for critical social issues, including women’s rights, healthcare access and anti-corruption. Through tireless efforts, she works towards meaningful legislative solutions embodying her commitment to a better Philippines
“Fun!” she mutters as she hurries to her third outfit change. Senator Risa Hontiveros is enjoying this break from politics, which has been nerve-wracking since the new year, particularly for her. Just emerging from, but not entirely out of, the maelstrom brought about by her Senate Bill No. 1979, also known as the Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Bill, she values this afternoon as a welcome distraction.
But not distracting enough to forget the top item on the agenda.
“I’m so sad thinking of the prospect that the Bill will not get the support of a Senate majority,” says one of the only two opposition leaders in the Upper House. SB 1979 will require all schools to implement comprehensive sex education for students aged 10 to 19, from upper primary through secondary levels. The Bill was already approved by the Lower House in September 2023 as House Bill No. 8910; its counterpart is still pending in the Senate, where it is currently defending itself from a backlash mainly coming from conservatives.

“It’s a straightforward bill which became a victim of fake news that made it complex,” Hontiveros, its leading proponent, says, stressing the importance of supporting this legal document to address an alarming peak in adolescent pregnancies. “Since the pandemic, teenage pregnancies among 10-19 year-olds spiked by 10 per cent and among 15-19 year-olds by 9.7 per cent. But, among the 10-14 year-olds, the number has risen by about 35 per cent!” Hontiveros describes the dire situation with the numbers she must have repeated countless times. “Why is it much steeper in the lower ages?” she asks, and answers, “Because of the presence of abuse in the equation. Ninety-seven per cent of teenage pregnancies are caused by older relatives of the girls themselves or partners much older than they are. Only 3 per cent are close in age, the Romeo-and-Juliet types.”
“If the Bill doesn’t pass the Senate, then we’ll simply have to refile it,” says the tenacious senator. Though a delay will be a costly derailment to addressing a worsening problem, she is thankful she will still be around to refile it in the next Congress. Hontiveros will serve her last term in the Senate during the 20th Congress, which will be elected in May 2025. She would then have been a legislative body member for 12 years, six in the Lower House and six in the Upper House.











