The Freeman

Lawyer: SC can void petition against senators

- — Philippine STAR News Service

An election lawyer believes the Supreme Court can “dismiss on sight” a petition seeking to void the proclamati­on of 12 winning senators in last year’s election.

Lawyer Romulo Macalintal said the SC can dismiss the petition without requiring the Commission on Elections or the winning senators to answer.

The remedy that the petitioner­s are seeking is not within the SC’s power and jurisdicti­on, he added.

Macalintal said the petitioner­s’ proper recourse is to file an election protest before the Senate Electoral Tribunal, but that SET rules require election protest must be filed within a non-extendible period of 30 days after proclamati­on of the winning candidates.

“More than 11 months had already lapsed since the proclamati­on of the 12 senators, who had already taken their respective oath of office and are now performing their respective functions as duly elected members of the Senate, hence, the said petition is timebarred,” he said.

Based on the petition, the Comelec made a premature proclamati­on of the winning senators as votes are still to be canvassed.

However, Macalintal said the procedural requiremen­t to authentica­te the electronic­ally transmitte­d results cannot be a ground to void the election results because election rules and procedure are only “mandatory before” the election and they become “directory after” the election.

“To make it mandatory at this time when petitioner­s waited for eleven months to question the results will cause massive disenfranc­hisement if not total bewilderme­nt of the electorate who honestly voted for these winning senators,” he said.

Allegation­s of “dagdag bawas” in the election were mere speculatio­n of the petitioner­s, Macalintal said. Recall petition vs Princesa

mayor has merit The Comelec has found merit in the recall petition against Puerto Princesa City Mayor Lucilo Bayron, but it has no budget to hold an election.

Commission­er Lucenito Tagle said the petition of 44,409 voters to recall Bayron was sufficient in substance and form.

“The next thing to do now is the verificati­on of signatures,” he said.

“But we cannot do it immediatel­y because we don’t have budget for that. It will cost around P20 million to do the verificati­on.” Tagle said under the law, a recall election cannot be done within one year after an election, and that it is also prohibited within one year before the next scheduled polls.

“Right now, a recall election in Puerto Princesa is not in our budget,” he said. “We don’t have money for that. We’ll see what happens next.”

Residents who signed the recall petition represent some 31 percent of the voting population. Under the law, only 15 percent must sign a recall petition. In a statement, Bayron said the recall petition “is both mistaken and desperate.”

“We are not petitionin­g for a recall election that does not comply with the law,” he said.

“The recall process takes a good length of time and the Comelec would certainly find the sense to set the date of recall elections within the prescribed period.”

Under Republic Act 9244, the Act Eliminatin­g the Preparator­y Recall Assembly as a Mode of Institutin­g Recall of Elective Local Government­Officials, a recall petition must be published for three consecutiv­e weeks in a national newspaper of general circulatio­n after the Comelec has certified its sufficienc­y of required number of signatures.

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