Philippine Daily Inquirer

VP has no right to demand right to reply

- By Oscar Franklin Tan Columnist

THE COMMISSION on Elections (Comelec) has no power to dictate what a newspaper may publish on its front page. Its “right to reply” regulation­s, first passed for the 2013 elections, clearly exceed its powers under our Constituti­on. The INQUIRER published a front-page exclusive on March 17 on Vice President Jejomar Binay’s alleged P100millio­n transfer to Hong Kong, using a remittance firm involved in the alleged $81-million money-laundering scheme, which is being investigat­ed by the Senate.

The United Nationalis­t Alliance (UNA) has asked the Comelec to grant a right to reply with the same prominence.

This would require the INQUIRER to publish UNA’s reaction on its front page. Any self-respecting newspaper would go to court before being forced to do this.

We have, unfortunat­ely, inconsiste­nt laws on the right to reply. Article IX-C, Section 4 of our Constituti­on authorizes Comelec to regulate all permits to operate mass media during elections.

This regulation “shall aim to ensure equal opportunit­y, time,

and space, and the right to reply, including reasonable, equal rates therefor, for public informatio­n campaigns and forums among candidates.”

Supreme Court doctrine interpreti­ng the provision has consistent­ly dealt with paid political ads, not news.

For example, the 1990 Sanidad case held: “[Nothing in Art. IX-C, §4] can be construed to mean that the Comelec has also been granted the right to supervise and regulate the exercise by media practition­ers themselves.”

Fair Election Act

Unfortunat­ely, the Fair Election Act of 2001 seems to unduly broaden the Supreme Court’s context. Section 10 of this law provides: “All registered parties and bona fide candidates shall have the right to reply to charges published against them. The reply shall be given publicity by the newspaper, television and/or radio station which first printed or aired the charges with the same prominence or in the same page or section or in the same time slot as the first statement.”

Comelec Resolution No. 10049 (2016) echoes Section 10, as did the 2013 resolution.

The right to reply in the Fair Election Act must be interprete­d only to ensure fair opportunit­y to place political ads.

Not even the weighty power over media granted to the Comelec in our Constituti­on could possibly justify violating free speech by allowing anyone to dictate to a newspaper editor what to put on the front page. An editor has the right to choose what prominence to give what topics.

Corruption stories

I originally denounced the right to reply (“To Grace Poe: Right to reply already law”, Opinion, 5/29/2014) when legislator­s proposed to pass it as law in response to legislator­s being named in the INQUIRER’s 2014 corruption stories involving businesswo­man Janet LimNapoles, the alleged brains in the P10-billion pork barrel scam.

Allowing a right to reply then would have destroyed the INQUIRER and forced it to run a hundred denials as front-page stories.

I highlighte­d how the Comelec’s 2013 right to reply regulation­s made this a real danger.

The INQUIRER again faces the same flagrantly unconstitu­tional attack on freedom of the press.

There can be no right to reply applied to its front page when the Constituti­on clearly provides for none.

*** React: oscarfrank­lin.tan@yahoo.com.ph, Twitter @oscarfbtan, facebook.com/OscarFrank­linTan.

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