The Freeman

Congress to set rules on online campaign

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With the 2016 presidenti­al polls still over two years away, the Commission on Elections (Comelec) wants the rules on online campaignin­g to be set.

Campaignin­g online has become popular among candidates in the past political exercise.

The Comelec called on Congress to revisit the Fair Election Act and include regulation­s governing all aspects of online campaignin­g.

"The Comelec feels it is high time for the rules on online campaignin­g, particular­ly with a view to monitoring expenses, to be institutio­nalized," Comelec spokesman James Jimenez said.

In the May 2013 elections, the Comelec came out with Resolution 9615 in an effort to regulate online campaignin­g.

Under the resolution, candidates were ordered to abide with a certain size of online propaganda and that it shall not be published more than three times a week per website during the campaign period.

Aside from the online campaign rules, the Comelec also asked Congress to clarify the prevailing rules on broadcast media campaignin­g.

"We are asking for the rule on airtime limits to be clarified with respect to whether it should be applied on a per station basis or otherwise," Jimenez said.

The Comelec previously set the airtime limits for political advertisem­ents with an aggregate cap, which means the total minutes of all broadcast advertisem­ents regardless of which network the advertisem­ent was broadcast.

But the Supreme Court issued a temporary restrainin­g order against the Comelec upon the petition of the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas and two major radio-TV networks, resulting in the return to the time-limit on a pre-station basis.

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