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2022 polls vote-buying: Comelec asks e-wallet firms ‘to do something’

- By Manuel T. Cayon @awimailbox Mindanao Bureau Chief

DAVAO City—officials of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) are asking electronic wallet operators to help them track electronic vote-buying that, they admitted, posed a more challengin­g work as digital transactio­ns have become the norm after the Duterte administra­tion imposed lockdown measures.

Comelec Spokesman James B. Jimenez, however, did not disclose the detail of what these companies would likely do but he hopes for cooperatio­n to make prosecutio­n easier.

He said the Comelec would likewise tap Facebook’s “ads library” to help them track dedicated campaign advertisem­ents of political candidates. He admitted though, that the array of social media applicatio­ns available online would be a challenge in monitoring.

“Unfortunat­ely, monitoring campaign ads on [online] social media [platforms] is only in the downstream; meaning, the final tracking would happen only after the campaign period has finished,” he said. “This ‘ads library’ [feature] would help us do back-checking when the candidates have submitted their election spending and campaign posting on the social media.”

‘Non-trollish’ use

THE challenge of tracking politician­s’ ads on social media was also due to the lack of laws regulating its use during election campaign period, according to Jimenez.

“Our role is to regulate spending on social media,” he said in a presentati­on during the US Embassyspo­nsored seminar on “Pandemic Polls: Election Reporting in the Covid-19 Era.” “This is where the greatest growth [in use] is seen.”

Sans regulation­s on the use of social media, he said the Comelec “is partnering with third-party [players] to provide tutorials on the effective, ‘non-trollish,’ use of social media for campaignin­g,” he said.

While the Comelec expects an increase in the use of mass media as politician­s gear up for the polls, Jimenez said the rules for these remain unchanged.

Guidelines sought

RONA Ann Caritos of the nongovernm­ent group Legal Network for Truthful Elections said Facebook would provide a better tracking of the campaign advertisem­ents with viewers being able to know who posted the advertisem­ents and “how that supporter is related or linked to the candidate.”

Caritos appealed to the Comelec to issue the guidelines soon to allow Filipino voters “to go out more confidentl­y and vote.”

“As of now, Filipino voters are not yet ready; and the final guidelines from the Comelec would greatly help increase voters’ participat­ion in next year’s elections,” she added.

The guidelines on the conduct of the May 2022 elections have been generally firmed up except for final work on the side of complying with health protocols, according to Jimenez.

“Restrictio­ns will be applied on attendance, venue capacities and in-rally behaviors,” he added.

Looking closely

JIMENEZ also emphasized there would still be restrictio­ns on permits issued by the Department of the Interior and Local Government as well as by local government units.

“We would be looking closely at the gatherings at the barangays because this is where the campaign rallies are being held and where the likely infection [could] happen,” he said.

According to Jimenez, fundamenta­l guidelines were changed to suit the mobility restrictio­ns. These include the reduction in the number of voters per precinct: from 1,000 in the 2019 elections to 800 next year. To do this, the Comelec increased the number of precincts: from 84,000 in 2019 to 110,000 next year.

The number of voters would be approximat­ely 61 million.

Some 18,000 elective positions are at stake, from the President down to members of the municipal council. Some 80 posts are at stake in the local government­s under the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, despite Congress’s move to defer the elections there, which would cover only the posts in the autonomous government.

Local government elective positions, from governors and mayors, to members of the town and provincial councils, are still covered by the 2022 elections.

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