Philippine Daily Inquirer

Perverting the elections

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Lawmakers filed this week several bills seeking to amend specific provisions in the Omnibus Election Code, in the wake of the chaos and confusion generated by political figures who filed certificat­es of candidacy (COC) but were widely seen as mere standins or “placeholde­rs” for their party’s official late-breaking candidate. Cagayan de Oro Rep. Rufus Rodriguez filed House Bill No. 10380, which aims to prohibit the substituti­on of any candidate except in cases of death or disqualifi­cation; the current law is more liberal, allowing substituti­on due to withdrawal. The Makabayan bloc also filed a similar bill seeking to stop politician­s from trifling with the substituti­on provision in the election law.

“… [S]ubstitutio­n because of withdrawal, or what others call voluntary substituti­on, may pose serious questions and may lead to the manipulati­on and mockery of the election process,” said Rodriguez. “Withdrawal­s could lead the voting public to believe that the candidate who withdrew, or even the political party or substituti­ng candidate, is not really serious.”

The lawmaker from Mindanao likewise filed HB 10381, which seeks to reinstate an old provision in the election law that declared an incumbent official resigned ipso facto upon filing of candidacy for another position. This provision was scrapped by Republic Act No. 9006 or the Fair Elections Act of 2001. Rodriguez said the reinstatem­ent of this provision would “force aspirants to take running for higher office seriously and to stop manipulati­ng and mocking the electoral process,” and level the playing field by preventing incumbents from using their office, public funds, and property to promote their candidacy.

These bills deserve merit, especially after the sordid spectacle that attended the opening of the May 2022 election season. Sen. Bato dela Rosa surprised the public when he showed up at Sofitel in Pasay City on Oct. 8, the last day of filing of COCs, to present himself as a candidate for president. Dela Rosa, the former chief implemento­r of President Duterte’s bloody drug war, filed his candidacy while wearing a T-shirt that had the logos of PDP-Laban, the President’s party, and Hugpong ng Pagbabago, the political party of presidenti­al daughter Sara Duterte. It was not his personal decision to run, Dela Rosa glibly admitted; he was asked a mere two hours before to rush to the Sofitel to file his papers, where he indicated that his party was PDP-Laban. But when asked if Sara Duterte—who is not his partymate— would eventually substitute for him, Dela Rosa said: “Eh ’di mas maganda. By all means, I will give way.”

Rodriguez has the right antidote for such a manifestly shameless attempt to game the elections: “Any person who has no real intention to run and only filed for candidacy as a placeholde­r (for another aspirant) should be declared a nuisance candidate.”

Commission on Elections spokespers­on James Jimenez, however, said such admission was not enough ground to disqualify any candidate.

Thus, amending and putting more teeth to the law has become even more imperative to prevent the trivializa­tion of the election process. In the previous Congress, several such bills were filed, including three that sought to penalize nuisance candidates and one bill that wanted to exclude withdrawal of candidacy as a means for substituti­on. All of them languished at the committee level. Last August, the House of Representa­tives approved on third and final reading HB 9557, which lays out a procedure for declaring nuisance candidates and imposes penalties of up to P100,000 on them. The bill is awaiting its counterpar­t at the Senate.

Exploiting the substituti­on provision in the Omnibus Election Code has seemingly become the favorite election ploy of many politician­s, for one reason: In the 2016 elections, a “reluctant” Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte deployed it to spectacula­rly successful effect in his run for president when he substitute­d for his party-mate Martin Diño at the last minute, even if Diño’s submitted papers said he was running for “mayor.” This time, Melvin Matibag, secretary general of the PDP-Laban Cusi faction led by Mr. Duterte and under which Dela Rosa filed his COC, justified what appears to be yet another crass attempt at belated substituti­on by labeling it as “political strategy.”

“[The] Filing (of COC) should be a conscious, voluntary and selfless act to offer to the ‘altar of the ballot’ for the sole purpose of serving the people,” reminded former senator Chiz Escudero in a tweet on Oct. 12. “It is not done to please any one person/ group/party, much less to ‘play’ with and circumvent the intent of electoral process.”

It’s way past time to fix the laws that have opened the floodgates for buccaneeri­ng politician­s and their proxies to manipulate and pervert the system.

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