10 MAY 2007

pcij.org


us your views and comments about this article.

Or discuss it in our blog.

RELEVANT DOCUMENTS

RELEVANT LINKS

SEE ALSO

RECENT FEATURES

FACES OF CHANGE AND CHANGELESS PLACES

PUBLIC EYE

NEW POLITICAL DYNASTIES LOCAL BOSSES GOOD (LOCAL) GOVERNANCE

2006 FEATURES

2010 POLITICAL PREDICTIONS

ADDICTIONS

VOYEURS AND EXHIBITIONISTS HEALTH AND THE FILIPINO

 i    R E P O R T  —  G H O S T S   O F   P A S T   P O L L S   H A U N T   C O M E L E C


IT HAD been as adamant about keeping the names of party-list nominees secret from the public, and were it not for the Supreme Court, the Comelec would have probably kept on ignoring demands for the names to be revealed. In previous years, the party-list nominees were always made known to the public, and so everyone was surprised by the sudden policy reversal.



BALLOT boxes being transported to a canvassing center. [PCIJ file photo]
According to the Comelec, the Party-List Law does not require it to disclose the names. But election lawyer Brillantes counters that neither does the law prohibit the commission from revealing this. He says the Comelec has only itself to blame for the resulting suspicions that it was peddling party-list seats.

Now that the list of party-list nominees has been made public, though, earlier fears have been confirmed that among the nominees are people identified with the Arroyo administration and who are relatives of government officials. They include retired Major General Jovito Palparan, Raul Lambino (of Sigaw ng Bayan and the failed attempt to amend the 1987 Constitution via a people's initiative), a brother of Comelec Chairman Abalos, a brother of poll commissioner Romeo Brawner, and Assistant Secretary Marcelo Fariñas II of the Office of External Affairs (OEA) under the Office of the President, the first nominee of Agbiag! Timpuyog Ilocano.

As head of OEA's Special Concerns Group, Fariñas has even been accused of spearheading Malacañang's "special operations" to reduce the likelihood of a third impeachment attempt against President Arroyo by winning an overwhelming majority of seats in Congress, including those of party-list groups. This "special ops" has allegedly fielded and supported pro-administration party-list groups as a foil against leftist and left-leaning party-list organizations seeking more congressional seats.

It remains to be seen if the Comelec will act on disqualification cases against certain "dubious" groups tagged as Malacañang fronts with the disclosure of the nominees' list. Earlier, the commission had said that it can disqualify the concerned party-list nominees only after their party gets elected, citing the lack of any procedure.

But former Comelec Commissioner Mehol Sadain disagrees, commenting, "Comelec can subject them to disciplinary action as part of continuing review. It's illogical to wait for them to get elected first before they can be subjected to disqualification."

IPER's Casiple notes, "The Comelec has plenary powers. In the interest of clean and honest elections, they can do anything. They have the power to accredit, but they can't disqualify?"

By continuing to shield these dubious nominees, he says, the Comelec is already guilty of obstruction of justice. "They're hiding a lot of things," says Casiple. "It goes against legal and common sense logic. There must really be a hidden agenda."

Piecemeal Law Implementation?

IT'S THE lack of political will that is keeping the Commission on Elections (Comelec) from fully implementing legally mandated safeguards against wholesale electoral fraud like dagdag-bawas, says Kontra Daya, an election monitoring organization.

In particular, Kontra Daya cites a new election law that it says the poll body has been "negligent and selective" in implementing. Republic Act No. 9369, signed into law on January 23, 2007, introduced amendments to the Omnibus Election Code (B.P. 881), RA 6646 (the law introducing additional reforms in the electoral system), and RA 7166 (the law on synchronized national and local elections) that made the manner of counting votes at the precinct level and canvassing them at the municipal and higher levels more transparent and accessible to the public.

One significant reform in RA 9369 is the inclusion of the requirement that the second copy of election returns and the third copy of certificates of canvass be posted for 48 hours on a wall within the premises of the precinct or canvassing center for the perusal of the public.

Section 39 of the law also prescribes that the election return or certificate of canvass be projected on a wall so that those present in the canvassing center could monitor the progress of the canvassing process from beginning to end.

Last January 26, the Comelec issued a resolution providing for general instructions to Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) on the casting and counting of votes for the May 14, 2007 elections. But the resolution did not reflect RA 9369's prescribed manner of counting of ballots as provided for in Sections 31 to 36, and so on March 27 the Comelec issued another one amending it.

"Yet even then, it left something out," says Antonio Tinio, Kontra Daya convenor and Alliance of Concerned Teachers chairperson, pointing to Section 53 of the Comelec-issued instructions to BEIs that mandate the BEI chairman to turn over custody of unclaimed copies of election returns to the Comelec election officer. RA 9369 already directs the BEI chairman to retain custody of any unclaimed copy of ERs, turning them over to authorized recipients or any competent authority only upon demand.

The election return is the basic poll document upon which any election protest will be based. It is thus of paramount concern to contending parties — particularly the opposition — that will not have enough watchers to claim their ER copies at the precinct level. Says Tinio: "Obviously the law places more trust in the teachers than the Comelec election officers as far as the safekeeping of these ERs is concerned."

Fr. Joe Dizon, Kontra Daya spokesperson, also warns, "A large number of teachers nationwide has undergone training (as BEIs) based on this flawed document. We are concerned that, unless teachers undergo retraining before May 14, Comelec's negligence in implementing the relevant sections of the new law will result in chaos and confusion at the precinct level on election day. Teachers may also be charged with election offenses if they fail to follow the new procedures mandated in RA 9369."

In February, Abalos declared in a dialogue with Kontra Daya that the Comelec would not be able to implement Section 39 of RA 9369 due to "lack of funds." But the group insists that compliance with the law is "not merely optional or subject to the vagaries of availability of funding."

Kontra Daya has also questioned why the Comelec could shell out P23 million to fund a much-criticized non-binding Internet voting for overseas absentee voters but claims to have no funds to implement a legally mandated requirement. — Alecks P. Pabico


Email us your comments about this article, or post them in our blog.



Copyright © 2007 All rights reserved.
PHILIPPINE CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM