Chapter 188: Closed-Door Meeting Senate
Senate of the Philippines – Committee Room 49:15 AMThe room was smaller than televised hearings made it seem. No press. No cameras. No audience gallery. Just a long mahogany table, a row of senators, a few staffers, and a pitcher of water sweating under the fluorescent lights.
Timothy stepped inside with Hana beside him. Carlos waited outside per protocol; this meeting was invite-only.
Senator Reyes, chair of the Committee on Public Services, sat at the center seat. Older, sharp eyes, deliberate movements. The kind of politician who survived decades by never being the loudest—but always the most dangerous.
"Mr. Guerrero," he said, motioning to the seat across from him. "Thank you for coming."
Timothy sat. Hana took the chair beside him, tablet ready.
Seven senators were present. All had seen the protests last night. All had issued statements carefully worded to avoid offending either side. Today, without cameras, their tone was different.
Senator Valdez spoke first.
"Let’s get straight to it. Your project has caused nationwide unrest in less than twenty-four hours."
Hana opened her mouth to respond but Timothy raised a hand slightly.
"You’re mistaken," he said calmly. "The leak caused unrest. Not the project."
Senator Valdez leaned back, unimpressed. "Regardless, the public sees you as the catalyst."
"Drivers see fear," Timothy said. "Fear someone engineered. Not us."
Senator Reyes folded his hands. "Then clarify for us. Is your electric bus program designed to replace jeepney drivers and bus drivers?"
"No," Timothy said. "The program requires drivers. We are offering training, certification, and guaranteed employment slots."
A senator beside Reyes—Senator Caldwell, known for populist theatrics—tapped his pen loudly.
"And yet," Caldwell said, "thousands of drivers marched on EDSA yesterday screaming that you’ll take food off their tables. Did they imagine that?"
"Someone told them that," Timothy replied.
Caldwell narrowed his eyes.
Reyes interjected quietly, "Do you have evidence of orchestrated agitation?"
Timothy held his gaze. "Not yet. But the pattern is obvious. Mass mobilization in under an hour. Coordinated messaging. Identical infographics across groups that don’t normally work together. Someone unified them."
The room was silent for several seconds.
Senator Valencia spoke next, younger, analytical. "Let’s discuss substance. You’re proposing EV buses integrated into city routes. Pilot fleets. Zero procurement cost initially. Drivers remain employed. Cities maintain control." She tapped her notes. "This sounds like modernization without displacement."
"It is," Timothy said.
"Then explain why transport groups insist you are privatizing public transport."
Timothy looked at each senator before answering.
"Because operators—the ones who collect daily boundary payments—lose power if cities adopt structured, accountable fleets. They lose control. They lose leverage. Drivers are not the ones at risk. Operators are."
Hana typed quietly beside him.
Senator Valdez frowned. "You’re accusing them of manipulating the sector."
"I’m stating the reality," Timothy replied. "Drivers work twelve to fourteen hours a day because the system bleeds them dry. Electric buses with fixed salaries threaten that system—not the drivers."
Caldwell smirked. "You’re very confident, Mr. Guerrero."
"I’m aware."
The chair adjusted his glasses. "Let’s move to the logistics side. Charging infrastructure. Road deployment. Maintenance costs. What guarantees do you offer the government if this pilot collapses?"
Timothy didn’t hesitate.
"If the pilot fails, TG Motors pulls out. No cost to the cities. No contractual penalties. No stranded assets."
A senator at the far end, who had remained silent until now, raised an eyebrow.
"So you take all the risk?"
"Yes," Timothy said.
"That’s unusual," the senator said.
"It’s necessary."
Reyes tapped the table lightly with a knuckle. "Your confidence is commendable. But the protests have created political pressure. Senators are being painted as anti-poor if we support you."
Timothy sat straighter. "You won’t take the hit. I will."
Caldwell snorted. "Do you think that helps us?"
"Yes," Timothy said plainly. "Because public anger doesn’t sustain itself. It needs a target. Right now, that target is TG Motors. That is fine. Anger exhausts itself when reality disproves fear."
Hana noticed the senator’s staffers pause typing. Tim’s phrasing always did that—simple, disarming, and irritatingly logical.
Senator Reyes leaned forward.
"What exactly is your timeline, Mr. Guerrero?"
"Driver training starts within two weeks. Charging stations installed in six. First EV bus deployed in sixty days."
"Two months?" Reyes said. "That is aggressive."
"Metro Manila’s problems are aggressive," Timothy said.
Valdez tapped her screen. "Let’s address a public concern: If the system scales, will you eventually automate the buses and remove drivers?"
Hana stiffened.
Timothy kept his tone steady.
"Autonomous buses are part of long-term possibilities. But not for the Philippines today. The infrastructure is not ready. The roads are unpredictable. The policy environment is incomplete. It is irresponsible to consider automation that removes human drivers in the near term."
"So you’re giving your word drivers stay?" Reyes asked.
"Yes."
Senator Caldwell interjected again. "You understand that if you break that promise—"
"I don’t break promises," Timothy said.
Caldwell studied him for a moment, then went quiet.
Reyes flipped to another page. "Explain the economic point. How does this benefit the government, not just your company?"
Timothy gestured to Hana, who slid a document forward.
"Electric buses reduce noise pollution, heat output, and fuel dependency," Timothy said. "Maintenance costs fall by fifty percent. Air quality improves. Productivity increases. When people spend less time in traffic, the economy gains billions a year."
Valdez nodded slowly. "Cleaner cities. Lower emissions. Predictable transport."
"Exactly," Timothy said. "This is not a luxury project. This is infrastructure reform."
Caldwell interjected again, leaning forward with a thin smile.
"And what about jeepney modernization? Are you positioning yourself to dominate the entire market?"
"No," Timothy said. "Jeepney modernization is a separate initiative. Our buses run on major corridors—high-volume, fixed routes. Jeepneys operate in feeder routes. Both systems can coexist."
Reyes looked at him carefully. "Then why pursue this at all? You’re already wealthy. You don’t need this headache."
Timothy didn’t look away.
"Because Metro Manila is dying," he said simply. "And no one with power is fixing it fast enough."
Silence dropped over the room like a curtain.
For the first time, the senators were not evaluating him as a businessman—
but as someone who genuinely intended to break the status quo.
Reyes exhaled slowly.
"Mr. Guerrero," he said, "off the record—are you aware that some groups are preparing to escalate the protests?"
Timothy nodded. "Yes."
"Are you aware that some operators plan to file cases against your company?"
"Yes."
"Are you aware that endorsing your project may cost us votes?"
"Yes."
"And you expect us to support you?"
Timothy answered without hesitation.
"I expect you to support the country," he said. "Not me."
Another silence.
A different one.
Hana watched the senators shift—some uncomfortable, some thoughtful, one or two almost impressed.
Reyes finally spoke.
"This committee will not oppose your pilot," he said quietly. "But we expect transparency, weekly reports, and coordination with city governments."
"You’ll have it," Timothy said.
"And if the situation escalates," Reyes added, "we will call you back."
Timothy nodded. "I’ll be here."
The chair dismissed the meeting.
One by one, the senators stood.
Some offered curt nods.
Others avoided eye contact.
But none opposed him directly.
Not anymore.
Outside the room, Carlos looked up from his phone as Timothy stepped out.
"How did it go?"
Timothy took a breath.
"They didn’t endorse us," he said. "But they didn’t stop us."
Hana closed her tablet.
"That’s enough," she said.
Timothy looked down the hallway—quiet, echoing, the kind of place where decisions were made far from public view.
"It’s a start," he said.
And they walked out of the Senate together.
Chapters
×
Chapter 1
- The Mysterious Floating Interface
Chapter 2
- Reconstruction
Chapter 3
- Brimming Anticipation
Chapter 4
- It Worked
Chapter 5
- The Glimpse to Brighter Future
Chapter 6
- Of Course Suspicion
Chapter 7
- Wait the System Can Do That
Chapter 8
- The Effect of the Pill
Chapter 9
- Job Offer
Chapter 10
- A Perfect Cover For Now
Chapter 11
- One Serendra Residence
Chapter 12
- Tutoring Session
Chapter 13
- Time to Lock In
Chapter 14
- The Journey Towards Ultra Rich Begins
Chapter 15
- Buying the Cars
Chapter 16
- Reconstructing the Cars
Chapter 17
- First Customer
Chapter 18
- Out of Stocks
Chapter 19
- Restocked
Chapter 20
- Back to Business
Chapter 21
- Unexpected Visitor
Chapter 22
- It Passed
Chapter 23
- The Dilemma
Chapter 24
- Curiousity
Chapter 25
- Testing the GPU
Chapter 26
- Sending Email to NVIDIA
Chapter 27
- The Capability of the Reconstructed Futuristic GPU
Chapter 28
- Ill Think About It
Chapter 29
- How Much Are You Willing to Pay
Chapter 30
- That Huge Amount
Chapter 31
- Pushing For More
Chapter 32
- How Much Do You Want
Chapter 33
- They Are Serious
Chapter 34
- Taxes No F Way
Chapter 35
- Going to Singapore
Chapter 36
- Finding Someone that Can Help
Chapter 37
- Making it Real
Chapter 38
- The Birth of TG Enterprise
Chapter 39
- Announcing His Ambition
Chapter 40
- Heading to the Condo
Chapter 41
- Finalizing the Deal
Chapter 42
- Visiting
Chapter 43
- The Surprise
Chapter 44
- Showing them Around
Chapter 45
- Treating Them
Chapter 46
- The Aspiration
Chapter 47
- Narrowing it Down
Chapter 48
- Reconstructing an EV Vehicle
Chapter 49
- Setting Off
Chapter 50
- Renaming the Shell Company
Chapter 51
- The Candidates for Chief Executives
Chapter 52
- CTO Acquired
Chapter 53
- A Slice-of-Life in Singapore
Chapter 54
- Finalizing the Executives and then Unexpected Encounter
Chapter 55
- New Personnel Added
Chapter 56
- Preparing for a Date Though Not a Date
Chapter 57
- Learning About One Another
Chapter 58
- This is the Start
Chapter 59
- Departure
Chapter 60
- Christmas Eve
Chapter 61
- Hanas Arrival to the Philippines
Chapter 62
- Robert Walters
Chapter 63
- Looking for Leadership for the Subsidiary
Chapter 64
- The CEO of TG Motors
Chapter 65
- A Chit-Chat
Chapter 66
- The Prospect of Getting a Private Jet
Chapter 67
- Falling into Place
Chapter 68
- Lets Find an Office Space
Chapter 69
- Office Secured and the Prelude to Reconstruction
Chapter 70
- TG Motors Lineup
Chapter 71
- The Day Has Come
Chapter 72
- Lets Start the Meeting Part 1
Chapter 73
- Lets Start the Meeting Part 2
Chapter 74
- Lets Start the Meeting Part 3
Chapter 75
- Mr President Lets Talk Business
Chapter 76
- Requesting Support from Government
Chapter 77
- MoU and the Private Jet
Chapter 78
- World Circuit
Chapter 79
- The Groundbreaking Ceremony
Chapter 80
- I Made It
Chapter 81
- Top Companies React
Chapter 82
- CEO of NVIDIA visits Philippines
Chapter 83
- Solaire Meetup
Chapter 84
- Lunch Before Business
Chapter 85
- A Big Business Suggestion
Chapter 86
- Discussing about the Offer with Secretary Hana
Chapter 87
- Sealing the Deal
Chapter 88
- Joint Venture Agreement
Chapter 89
- The Lineups and Prices
Chapter 90
- The Announcement of Partnership
Chapter 91
- Reactions from the Media and Getting Starstruck
Chapter 92
- Lets Have a Dance
Chapter 93
- Lets Have a Drink
Chapter 94
- Almost
Chapter 95
- Couldnt Remember
Chapter 96
- The Release of the Lineups to the Public
Chapter 97
- Reactions from the World
Chapter 98
- Pre-selling Through the Roofs
Chapter 99
- The Site for the Semiconductor Foundry and the Prospect of Skyscraper
Chapter 100
- Skyscraper
Chapter 101
- Making the Legacy
Chapter 102
- Family Dinner
Chapter 103
- Reconstruction
Chapter 104
- The Second Product Confirmed
Chapter 105
- A Year Later
Chapter 106
- Superchargers Nationwide
Chapter 107
- Sudden Thunderstorm
Chapter 108
- The Potential Problem in Future
Chapter 109
- System is Fucked Up
Chapter 110
- A Year Later
Chapter 111
- Potential Massive Profits
Chapter 112
- Concern Over Her
Chapter 113
- Getting Checked Up
Chapter 114
- Back at Singapore
Chapter 115
- Arrival in Singapore with Parents
Chapter 116
- The Meeting of TG Motors Expansion Part 1
Chapter 117
- The Meeting of TG Motors Expansion Part 2
Chapter 118
- Talking More About the IPO
Chapter 119
- Conclusion
Chapter 120
- Executives Dinner
Chapter 121
- Family Dinner
Chapter 122
- Meeting of the Giants
Chapter 123
- The Offers of the Giants
Chapter 124
- Squeezing them Out
Chapter 125
- Deals Secured
Chapter 126
- Planning on Acquisition
Chapter 127
- Working on the Task
Chapter 128
- Lets Do It
Chapter 129
- Birth of Helios
Chapter 130
- Family Day
Chapter 131
- A Date
Chapter 132
- Preparation for the IPO
Chapter 133
- Visiting the TG Tower
Chapter 134
- The IPO
Chapter 135
- Interview Part 1
Chapter 136
- Interview Part 2
Chapter 137
- Interview Part 3
Chapter 138
- Interview Part 4
Chapter 139
- Concluding the Interview
Chapter 140
- I Want Your Company Part 1
Chapter 141
- I Want Your Company Part 2
Chapter 142
- The Fluor
Chapter 143
- They Accepted
Chapter 144
- CFIUS
Chapter 145
- Compliance
Chapter 146
- Stage Two Cleared
Chapter 147
- Meeting Reyes
Chapter 148
- - 100 Progress
Chapter 149
- Migration
Chapter 150
- What a Journey
Chapter 151
- Neuralyzer
Chapter 152
- Test Subject
Chapter 153
- Prelude to Technological Leap
Chapter 154
- Its Impossible and Normal
Chapter 155
- Prototype One
Chapter 156
- A Visit From a Person
Chapter 157
- A Deal Struck
Chapter 158
- Commitments Part 1
Chapter 159
- Commitments Part 2
Chapter 160
- Reactions From Endorsements
Chapter 161
- Election
Chapter 162
- It Was Official
Chapter 163
- The New Beginning for this Country
Chapter 164
- Restructuring
Chapter 165
- Suggestions
Chapter 166
- Getting Closer
Chapter 167
- Finding Investors
Chapter 168
- Potential Sites
Chapter 169
- The Future of Energy
Chapter 170
- Strategy
Chapter 171
- Public Opinion
Chapter 172
- Senate Hearing
Chapter 173
- Prelude to Nuclear Energy in PH
Chapter 174
- Groundbreaking
Chapter 175
- The Press
Chapter 176
- Scouting for a Proper House for the Family
Chapter 177
- Cafe Relaxation
Chapter 178
- Visiting the House with Mother
Chapter 179
- Enjoying Wealth Part 1
Chapter 180
- Enjoying Wealth Part 2
Chapter 181
- Another Luxury
Chapter 182
- So This is What it Feels Like
Chapter 183
- New Autonomous Vehicle
Chapter 184
- New Ventures on Transportation
Chapter 185
- Adopt our Buses Please
Chapter 186
- Permission
Chapter 187
- Protest
Chapter 188
- Closed-Door Meeting Senate
Chapter 189
- First Rollout of Bus of TG Motors
Chapter 190
- Hydro Plant
Chapter 191
- A Spark for Foundation
Chapter 192
- Discussion of TG Foundation
Chapter 193
- Finding Personnel
Chapter 194
- TG Foundation
Chapter 195
- Public Announcement
Chapter 196
- Reactions from the People
Chapter 197
- The Projects
Chapter 198
- Scholars
Chapter 199
- Calls That Change Futures Part 1
Chapter 200
- Calls That Change Futures Part 2
Chapter 201
- Site Evaluations
Chapter 202
- The Groundbreakings
Chapter 203
- Resistance Forms
Chapter 204
- The Lines Are Drawn
Chapter 205
- Normal Afternoon Part 1
Chapter 206
- Normal Afternoon Part 2
Chapter 207
- Sportscar Part 1
Chapter 208
- Sportscar Part 2
Chapter 209
- The Sportscar
Chapter 210
- Showing it to the Others
Chapter 211
- Validation Run
Chapter 212
- Another Run
Chapter 213
- Teaser
Chapter 214
- A Filipino Made Sportscar
Chapter 215
- It was Real
Chapter 216
- Christmas Eve
Chapter 217
- New Years Eve Part 1
Chapter 218
- New Years Eve Part 2
Chapter 219
- New Year
Chapter 220
- Invitation
Chapter 221
- The Vacation Part 1
Chapter 222
- The Vacation Part 2
Chapter 223
- Enjoying the Day
Chapter 224
- The Bar
Chapter 225
- Shopping
Chapter 226
- Return from Work
Chapter 227
- Prelude to Work
Chapter 228
- New Ventures
Chapter 229
- Watching Movies
Chapter 230
- Another One
Chapter 231
- Reconnaissance
Chapter 232
- Reconstructing Autodoc
Chapter 233
- Medical Enterprise Part 1
Chapter 234
- Medical Enterprise Part 2
Chapter 235
- The Creation
Chapter 236
- Leasing a Building
Chapter 237
- Candidates
Chapter 238
- Filling the Gaps
Chapter 239
- The Unveiling
Chapter 240
- Baseline
Chapter 241
- Containment
Chapter 242
- Session Two
Chapter 243
- First Product
Chapter 244
- The Bench Comes First
Chapter 245
- First Contact With Reality
Chapter 246
- The Weight of a Name
Chapter 247
- The Actual Test on Humans
Chapter 248
- Teaser
Chapter 249
- Revealing it to the Public
Chapter 250
- Another Tease
Chapter 251
- Releasing to the Market
Chapter 252
- Reactions from the Field
Chapter 253
- Surprise
Chapter 254
- The First Crack That Mattered
Chapter 255
- The Customers