Panay News

Religious leaders, Robredo backers pick Espinosa

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ILOILO City – Representa­tives from one of Iloilo City’s biggest church groups pledged to support Atty. Joe III Espinosa’s congressio­nal bid, along with a significan­t number of Vice President Leni Robredo’s loyalists who have voiced concerns over the trustworth­iness and honor of Espinosa’s main electoral rival.

The Alliance of Religious Ministers includes, among others, the Bible Baptist

Church, the United Pentecosta­l Church, Full Gospel Church and the New Life Baptist Church. These churches and other Protestant groups represent about 5% of the Iloilo City population, compared with 2% for Iglesia ni Cristo and 90% for the Roman Catholics.

In a series of personal meetings in the past few months, representa­tives from the Alliance of

Religious Ministers pledged their support to Espinosa’s bid for the city’s lone congressio­nal district. They endorsed Espinosa’s brand of clean, honest, responsive, progressiv­e and i nclusive governance when he was the city’s vice-mayor and mayor.

Meanwhile, a significan­t n u mbe r s o f s u p p o r t e r s of Robredo and Sen. Kiko Pangilinan have expressed disgust at emerging reports that incumbent Rep. Julienne “Jamjam” Baronda, who is supposedly

allied with Robredo’s group, has been secretly meeting up with Robredo’s political rivals. Robredo and Pangilinan are running for the presidency and the vice presidency, respective­ly.

Recently taken photos that flooded social media showed Baronda with vice presidenti­al candidate Sara Duterte, Ilocano politician Luis “Chavit” Singson, as well as Sen. Bong Go and President Rodrigo Duterte himself.

Singson, mayor of Narvacan in Ilocos Sur, and president of the League of Municipali­ties of the Philippine­s, is a known ally of Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., who is running for the presidency,

with Duterte as his running mate.

According to unconfirme­d reports, Baronda had been asking the cited individual­s to fund her campaign. This has shocked many Robredo supporters, with many of them fearing Baronda has sold out or could no longer be trusted.

“I will not vote for that woman,” said a high- profile Robredo s upporter upon confirming reports that Baronda had been meeting up with Sara Duterte and emissaries of Marcos.

Political analysts warned that the backlash could cost Baronda dearly, if not the congressio­nal contest itself.

“The Kakampinks [Robredo

supporters] now suspect Baronda of being a traditiona­l politician after all, sacrificin­g her ideologica­l principles just to secure funding even from tainted sources,” said the analyst, who requested anonymity due to his sensitive position at a state university.

“These intelligen­t voters will likely abandon Baronda and back Espinosa, who is seen as a much cleaner candidate,” he added.

Supporters of Espinosa are confident that the unfolding wave of voters shifting from Baronda to Espinosa, along with genuine endorsemen­ts from religious, community and civic leaders, bode well for his candidacy.

“S i r J oe I I I will bring to Congress his decades of experience as a t rue and dedicated public servant,” said a barangay captain from Molo, who requested anonymity to avoid the ire of city hall.

Espinosa’s s upporters point to his well- thought- out legislativ­e platform as one of the main attraction­s among I l oilo City’s educated and sophistica­ted voters. Espinosa’s legislativ­e plan includes the filing of a bill to institutio­nalize his highly- regarded “PagUlikid” program, which brought representa­tives of the various department­s of city hall to communitie­s, allowing seniors, persons with disability and busy homemakers the chance to avail themselves of much- needed services.

Espinosa is also espousing the setting up of a regional children’s hospital, along with a generous and comprehens­ive scholarshi­p to enable poor but deserving students to realize t heir dream of becoming doctors, lawyers or engineers. He hopes to push for legislatio­n to ensure free medical check-up and laboratory tests for seniors, among other proposals in his legislativ­e program./

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ESPINOSA

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