The Manila Times

The party-list system is utterly absurd, a mockery of democracy

- trapos RIGOBERTO TIGLAO On Monday: How provincial political clans extend their reach through the party-list system.

as well as expenses in the amount of about P2 billion per year.

Instead of powerless sectors— “labor, peasant, urban poor, indigenous cultural communitie­s, women, youth, and such other sectors” as the Constituti­on put it— it has only given political clout to multi- millionair­es, even two billionair­es, so they could defend or expand their business interests. It has also given additional seats in Congress to provincial or regional political clans, for them to increase their political clout.

Most ironically, the party-list system has put cadres of the Communist Party in the House of Representa­tives giving them additional resources, taxes—to advance their agenda to violently overthrow our democracy.

The communist atheists are colleagues in Congress of two bible- quoting religious partylist representa­tives.

The Constituti­on’s Article VI, Section 5 ( 2) categorica­lly excludes the “religious sector” from having a party- list representa­tive. Yet “Brother” Mike Velarde who heads the huge born-again Christian group El Shaddai set up his Buhay party- list ( Buhay

Hayaan Yumabong) in 2001 and since 2004 has had two to three representa­tives in Congress. Buhay’s incumbent representa­tives are the preacher’s son Michael Velarde, Jr. and former Manila mayor Jose “Lito” Atienza.

Religiosit­y

In this country steeped in religiosit­y, we’re lucky other religious groups aren’t as hungry for political clout, or as unscrupulo­us, or half of the party- list representa­tives will be from the Iglesia ni Cristo, Philippine Aglipayan Church, Eddie Villanueva’s “Jesus is Lord,” the fiercely pro-Duterte Christian Restoratio­nist church of Apollo Quiboloy, Eli Soriano’s Dating Daan and several others with followings probably bigger than El Shaddai. ( If ever though, I’ll certainly even vote for the bishop-backed National Transforma­tion Council just so my articulate and fiery colleague Kit Tatad gives those in Congress hell.)

Buhay’s Atienza practicall­y has been the Catholic Church’s representa­tive in Congress for its doctrinair­e anti- contracept­ion and anti- abortion stand. But a situation like that is precisely what the framers of the Constituti­on wanted to prevent by banning religious sectors from having party-list representa­tives.

However, the perfect example of how scandalous the system has become is the fact that the purportedl­y richest member of the present Congress— both of the Senate and the House of Representa­tives, that is—is a party- list representa­tive: Michael (“Mikee”) Romero, who has reported his net worth at P7 billion. It is astonishin­g that this 45-year-old businessma­n reports that he is richer than property magnate Manuel Villar’s wife, Sen. Cynthia Villar ( with a net worth of P3.6 billion) and world boxing immortal Sen. Manny Pacquiao ( P3 billion).

Who is Romero? He and another congressma­n represent the party “1- Pacman,” a name which is as ridiculous as it is a travesty of our system of representa­tive democracy. 1- Pacman doesn’t have anything to do with our boxing hero ( and now senator) Manuel Pacquiao.

The party’s name is intended to fool careless, hurrying, or even ignorant voters that they are electing their hero Manny “the Pacman” Pacquiao. What the name stands for mocks our representa­tive system. 1- Pacman purportedl­y is the acronym for: “One Patriotic Coalition of Marginaliz­ed Nationals.”

The “1” in this outfit’s name – just as a dozen other groups have done – is there so it would be higher up in the list of the ballot form, so its chances of being picked are enhanced.

1- Pacman doesn’t even pretend to be representi­ng any marginal group, and merely says that “among its platform is to prioritize sports developmen­t.” Romero owns GlobalPort Batang Pier, a team in the commercial Philippine Basketball Associatio­n league, which even has three expensive Americans as players.

Game of kings

Romero’s preferred sport is the “game of kings,” polo, and he even owns a polo team he captains. His team competes in internatio­nal polo events, which reportedly costs the billionair­e at least P50 million to participat­e in each time because of the astronomic­al costs of transporti­ng his prized stallions.

While the US Forbes magazine lists him as the country’s 47th richest billionair­e with a net worth of $ 137 million ( or roughly equivalent to the P7 billion he himself claims), there is a huge doubt that he has been such a great businessma­n to have amassed that much.

The bulk of his claimed assets is in his holdings in Harbour Centre Port Terminals, the monopoly in break- bulk handing at the Port of Manila, which his father, constructi­on magnate Reghis, founded in 1996. ( He is also vice chairman of budget airline AirAsia Philippine­s, which many believe is controlled by Malaysian Anthony Francis Fernandes.)

But his father Rhegis claims that after he let the son run the papers that assigned his father’s shares to him, and that he had run the company to the ground because of his mismanagem­ent and billionair­e lifestyle, which includes buying a private jet and competing in polo competitio­ns all over the world. Mikee though claims that after building up the company, his father who had become impoverish­ed wants the company back and is demanding P1 billion from him. The case is still in the courts.

The father- son feud has become so bitter that Reghis got a court to order his son’s arrest for the alleged theft of P3.4 million in company funds last year. Mikee ran from the law and became a fugitive even after he was elected 1- Pacman representa­tive, and surfaced only in November last year when the case was ordered dismissed by a higher court.

That is the kind of party- list representa­tive we have.

Romero’s case though would explain why somebody like him born with a silver spoon, fond of a luxurious lifestyle, who never thought of helping the “marginaliz­ed,” would want to be a party- list representa­tive.

Political clout

Being a party- list representa­tive obviously gives him the political clout to win against his father in their billion- peso feud. If he loses his fight, his father reportedly has been so incensed with his son that he has vowed to put him jail.

Other multi-millionair­es who have become party-list representa­tives though aren’t as in such deep trouble as Romero. They, or their clans, probably calculate that a seat in Congress gives them clout for their business interests.

The second richest member of the entire Congress is another party- list representa­tive Emmeline Aglipay- Villar, who reported a net worth of P1.4 billion in her 2017 statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth ( SALN). She is the nominee of the DIWA party, which stands for Democratic Independen­t Workers’ Associatio­n.

Has the 35- year- old Aglipay-Villar ever been a leader or organizer or counsel for a union or federation?

No. She is the wife of Public Works Secretary Mark Villar, son of one of the richest real-estate magnates in the country, Manuel Villar. Her P1.4 billion net worth is probably her estimated conjugal share in her husband’s wealth as shareholde­r and executive of his father’s conglomera­te.

She is also the daughter of retired police general who became Philippine National Police chief during President Arroyo’s administra­tion, Edgardo Aglipay. The latter is chairman of DIWA whose treasurer is of course Mrs. Aglipay. ( The accompanyi­ng table shows the 25 richest partylist representa­tives with their net worth, based on their SALN.)

How do such multi- millionair­es get to be party- list representa­tives? Believe it or not, it is unbelievab­ly easy, as long as one has no scruples in trampling democratic values, and of course if one sees the invest- ment as a worthwhile one.

A party-list gets a seat in Congress, if it gets 2 percent of total votes, with another seat given if it gets an additional 2 percent to a maximum of three seats, with 20 percent of Congress seats required by the Constituti­on to be allocated to such representa­tives.

In the 2016 elections, 59 seats were allocated to partylist representa­tives. To fill up these number, 33 out of the 46 party- list winners which got less than 2 percent of the votes were given congressio­nal seats. Thus, the party which got the lowest number of seats, Agbiag got only 240,000 votes— just 0.7 percent total votes— to get a representa­tive in Congress. An Ilocos- based “party- list,” Agbiag is represente­d by another millionair­e, Michelle Antonio.

Romero’s 1-Pacman party got 1.3 million votes, so it got him and another representa­tive, multimilli­onaire Enrico Pineda, into Congress.

Fake parties

How do artificial, really fake “parties” get the votes needed to win a seat in Congress?

One, they piggy- back on the electoral campaign of a local political boss and its network – of course after a huge payment – so the party- list is “carried” in their campaign for the traditiona­l territoria­l- based representa­tives. As will be discussed on Monday, this is the reason why many party- list representa­tives are in reality mere extensions of provincial and regional political clans.

Second, I was told by many sources in the past several years that most party- lists get to have their numbers by sheer manipulati­on of returns by corrupt Comelec officials. The going rate in the 2016 elections, I was told, was from P20 million to as high as P30 million to ensure that a party- list wins.

Several years ago, I nearly fell off my seat when a Chinese-Filipino businessma­n mentioned over dinner that he was celebratin­g as his “party- list” won two seats in Congress, and he spent only P5 million.

It has been actually the easiest form of graft income in the Comelec, as the operators need not worry that a losing candidate would protest, as the party- list with nearly every party-list aware that it is after all a bidding game.

That is how depraved the party- list system has become, which had been billed by the Left and the Yellow Cult in 1987, when the Constituti­on was being drafted, as Cory Aquino’s legacy to give political power to marginaliz­ed sectors and weaken the traditiona­l pulitiko parties.

As with all of the Yellow Cult’s noble ideals, the reality is so rotten.

 ??  ?? Representi­ng marginaliz­ed sectors? The 20 richest party-list representa­tives and their wealth. *Roque resigned his post to become presidenti­al spokespers­on last October. Source: House of Representa­tives
Representi­ng marginaliz­ed sectors? The 20 richest party-list representa­tives and their wealth. *Roque resigned his post to become presidenti­al spokespers­on last October. Source: House of Representa­tives
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