Philippine Daily Inquirer

New DQ case filed vs Poe in Comelec

- By Christine O. Avendaño, Jocelyn R. Uy and Marlon Ramos

THE CAMP of Sen. Grace Poe yesterday decried the “dirty tactics” being employed by her opponents to scupper her presidenti­al candidacy as an ally of her late father brought a petition to disqualify her from next year’s race for Malacañang.

Former Sen. Francisco Tatad filed a petition for the disqualifi­cation of Poe in the Commission on Elections (Comelec) yesterday, alleging that Poe was not a natural-born Filipino citizen and that she did not meet the 10-year residency requiremen­t for presidenti­al candidates.

It was the second petition for disqualifi­cation filed against

Poe in the Comelec, citing the same grounds raised in the first case brought against the senator by former Department of Justice Prosecutor Estrella Elamparo on Oct. 16.

Tatad served in the Senate from 1992 to 2001 and made a comeback bid as part of Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisa­ng Pilipino of Poe’s father, the late movie actor Fernando Poe Jr. (FPJ), in the 2004 general elections but lost.

He was also the press secretary of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos who read the proclamati­on of martial law on national television on Sept. 23, 1972.

Although brought by an ally of FPJ, the case filed by Tatad did not surprise Poe’s camp, which said it expected her opponents to try to eliminate her from next year’s presidenti­al race.

Poe, 47, leads mainstream candidates Mar Roxas of the ruling Liberal Party and Vice President Jejomar Binay of the opposition United Nationalis­t Alliance in the latest voter preference polls for the presidenti­al election.

Her running mate, Sen. Francis Escudero, said yesterday that he would not be surprised if one of her rivals turned out to be behind the disqualifi­cation cases brought against her.

‘Dirty tricks’

Valenzuela Mayor Rex Gatchalian, a spokespers­on for Poe, said Tatad’s petition was “baseless” and part of “dirty tricks” employed by Poe’s opponents to thwart her presidenti­al candidacy.

Gatchalian said the disqualifi­cation cases were the handiwork of “sinister minds” responsibl­e for the “premeditat­ed and concerted efforts to condition the minds of the public that [Poe] will be disqualifi­ed.”

A petition seeking Poe’s ouster from the Senate is awaiting resolution by the Senate Electoral Tribunal (SET). Also questionin­g her citizenshi­p and residency, the petition was brought by Rizalito David, who lost the 2013 senatorial election and is one of the 130 candidates for President in next year’s elections.

Poe’s camp has said it knows who is behind the attacks on her. Reminded about it yesterday, Escudero said Poe’s lawyer, George Garcia, was “looking into it.”

“But I will not be surprised probably if one of the foes of Senator Poe in the presidenti­al race will be shown to be behind this harassment,” Escudero said.

He underscore­d the importance of discoverin­g who was behind the attacks on Poe, saying that while the question of her citizenshi­p was a small issue for voters as shown by the polls, it could lead to the withholdin­g of support by some political leaders, who may be waiting for the resolution of the cases.

Going to high court

That will not come soon. Escudero said the Comelec could either suspend proceeding­s on the disqualifi­cation cases and wait for the resolution of the case in the SET or proceed with the two cases since the petition in the SET was a separate case.

But whoever loses in the SET or in the Comelec will surely go to the Supreme Court, which has the “final say” on the matter, he said.

“I’m sure these cases will go to the Supreme Court before the elections,” he said.

Tatad’s lawyer, Manuelito Luna, said Elamparo’s petition may be dismissed, as it was filed at the close of the five-day registrati­on of candidates in violation of Comelec rules of procedure.

Elamparo wants Poe’s certificat­e of candidacy (COC) for the presidency to be canceled because she allegedly lied about her citizenshi­p and residency.

Under the rules, such petitions must be filed any day after the last day of candidate registrati­on but not later than the date of proclamati­on.

The offensive against Poe centers on uncertaint­y about her parentage. She was found in a church in Jaro, Iloilo province, shortly after she was born in 1968 and was adopted later by FPJ and his wife, movie actress Susan Roces.

She married a Filipino-American and became a US citizen but renounced her American citizenshi­p when she returned to the Philippine­s after the death of FPJ in 2004. She says she has been living in the Philippine­s since 2005.

Breach of Constituti­on

In his petition, Tatad said the Comelec would uphold a “grievous violation of the Constituti­on” if it did not disqualify Poe from the presidenti­al election.

“Anyone who aspires to be President should first of all be a candidate of the Constituti­on,” Tatad told reporters after filing his petition at the Comelec.

“As President … you should at the very least be truly and absolutely loyal to the Filipino nation and one test of loyalty is being, from birth, a Filipino citizen,” he said.

Luna said Tatad’s petition, if sustained by the Comelec, would have a more serious consequenc­e—Poe would be permanentl­y barred from running for any public office.

“There’s a world of difference between a petition for cancellati­on of COCand a petition for disqualifi­cation in so far as the effects are concerned. Ours would be a deeply impacted result if ever we will win the case as compared to the petition filed by Attorney Elamparo,” Luna said.

He said the cancellati­on of COC was not a “substantia­l remedy” as Poe may raise the defense of “good faith” in claiming that she was a natural-born Filipino.

“But in this particular case, good faith or bad faith is immaterial because she herself admitted that she is a foundling,” said Luna, who is also a lawyer for David, who wants Poe ousted from the Senate.

Bloodline unknown

In his petition, Tatad said Poe could not be considered a natural-born Filipino because her parents were unknown.

“Considerin­g that respondent’s bloodline is unknown, it is incumbent upon her to prove that she is a Filipino, that is, a natural-born citizen of the Philippine­s, as mandated under the Constituti­on,” Tatad said.

He also pointed out that based on Poe’s COC submitted to the Comelec for the 2013 senatorial election, the senator would have a residency of “nine years, five months and several days, shy of the minimum of 10 years” required by the Constituti­on.

“But if the [Comelec] were to consider the period she actually acquired her new domicile in Quezon City—the [United States] was her old domicile of choice—which was sometime in 2010 or 2011, it would only reach five or six years,” he said.

“In any event, even if her residency claim is sustained, she would still be disqualifi­ed to run for President on account of lack of citizenshi­p,” he said.

Asked if he was working for someone for the disqualifi­cation of Poe, Tatad replied: “This is a constituti­onal act. This is also a political act. But … from the very beginning, I was the one who raised this issue. For a long time, I was virtually alone until [David] came into the picture.”

‘Unfounded accusation­s’

Gatchalian said the “unfounded accusation­s” against Poe were evidently aimed at derailing her presidenti­al candidacy.

He said Poe would present documents proving that she had satisfied the requiremen­ts for presidenti­al candidates.

“These documents will answer these suits on all fours and will bear her out,” Gatchalian said.

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