Sun.Star Baguio

Final and executory

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IT’S a recurring theme: as soon as the period for the filing of the certificat­es of candidacy (COC) is over, petitions for disqualifi­cation follow. In Cebu alone, four candidates have been named respondent­s in separate petitions filed with the Commission on Elections

(Comelec) in Manila this week, and the number is expected to grow in the next two or three weeks.

Complaints to deny due course or to cancel a COC were supposed to be filed within five days from the last day of the filing of the COCs, according to Comelec Provincial Election Supervisor Lionel Marco Castillano, but there is a Supreme Court ruling, he said, that extended the period to 25 days from the date of the filing of the disputed COC.

That means former governor Gwendolyn Garcia, who is facing two disqualifi­cation cases, might be sued many more times, a possibilit­y that her opponent for governor, Vice Gov. Agnes Magpale, hinted at in an interview with a local daily.

Not that the number of suits matters in resolving the issue of qualificat­ion. In the case of Garcia, the two petitions so far filed against her are based on her being barred from holding public office by the Ombudsman. Subsequent petitions, if any, are not expected to stray from this narrative and the Comelec will decide only on that basis.

Still, the filing of multiple petitions has a propaganda value in that it gives the impression that many people agree that a candidate is disqualifi­ed and that, therefore, it is pointless to vote for the candidate because she is going to be disqualifi­ed anyway.

There is no denying the Ombudsman decision dismissing Garcia from the service and barring her perpetuall­y from holding any public office, whether elective or appointive. The decision is, however, pending appeal and Garcia says that because of this, it is not yet final and executory.

There have been a number of cases where the official who has been discipline­d by the Ombudsman was made to immediatel­y serve his suspension or dismissal. Two recent cases are those of Toledo City Mayor Sonny Osmeña and Cebu City Councilor James Cuenco. Both have appealed their cases, but the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) said it did not stop the execution because a decision of the Ombudsman is immediatel­y executory.

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