The Philippine Star

Propped by rich clans, big donors

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Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Teodoro ‘Teddy’ Casiño ranks 283 out of 284 members of the Lower House in terms of declared net worth. That may be why among the five current district representa­tives who are running for a Senate seat in the upcoming elections, Casi–o - or to be more exact, the organizati­on he had been representi­ng in Congress - received the most contributi­ons during the 2010 polls.

Bayan Muna also spent the highest amount in 2010 national and local elections when compared to the four other members of the House who now want to be senators. One, party-list groups are elected by all voters, and thus, they campaign on a national level. Two, these four are not only wealthy, based on their own declaratio­ns of net worth, but also have surnames that already have considerab­le political cache, some of which are decades-old.

Aurora Representa­tive Juan Edgardo ‘Sonny’ M. Angara, Cagayan Representa­tive Juan ‘Jack’ C. Ponce Enrile Jr., San Juan City Representa­tive Joseph Victor ‘JV’ G. Ejercito, and Zambales Representa­tive Ma. Milagros ‘Mitos’ M. Magsaysay all belong to political families. Angara is the son of Senator Edgardo ‘Ed’ J. Angara, Ponce Enrile is the only son and namesake of Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, Ejercito is a son of deposed President Joseph Estrada, while Magsaysay is the daughter-in-law of Zambales Gov. Vicente Pulido Magsaysay. These four lawmakers also have at least three relatives each running for public office in the May 2013 elections.

Unlike Casi–o, who had a declared net worth of only P91,000 in 2011, Angara, Ponce Enrile, Ejercito, and Magsaysay are multimilli­onaires. In fact, they were among the top 50 richest members of the House in 2011, based on a summary list from the House Records Office, which provides

the totals of real assets, personal assets, liabilitie­s, and net worth of the legislator­s.

Aside from easier name recall, this could help explain how Angara, Ejercito, and Magsaysay were able to win Congress seats in 2010 without receiving any contributi­on, according to documents they submitted to the Commission on Elections (Comelec). They also spent well under P1 million at the time, with Magsaysay listing a total of P650,00 as her election expenditur­es in 2010, Ejercito P438,512, and Angara a measly P210,500. Enrile, meanwhile, spent P541,462, with P109,468 worth of contributi­ons.

In contrast, Bayan Muna spent more than P1.2 million to snag a House seat, with contributi­ons amounting to P1.26 million. Of that pool of donations, P1 million came from a single individual, Jose Enrique Africa, executive director of the think tank IBON. (Casiño’s father, lawyer Amador Casiño, donated P500,000 and P200,000 to Bayan Muna during the 2007 and 2004 elections, but he is not listed as among the organizati­on’s donors in the 2010 polls.)

Landed, affluent

Based on available data, Casiño, like his four House colleagues now gunning for the Senate, was already landed by the time he first assumed public office. But unlike the four, Casiño would remain to have only one real estate property - a 2.5-hectare agricultur­al land in Infanta, Quezon - from 2004 to 2010.

Then again, the SALNs that PCIJ has on file for Casiño and his colleagues are incomplete. The latest it has on Casiño is his 2010 SALN; for Angara, Ejercito, and Magsaysay, 2009; and for Ponce Enrile, 2004. The Center’s request for copies of the 2011 SALNs of all congressme­n remains pending at the House.

Neverthele­ss, the documents on hand show that apart from Casiño, all the House members who have now joined the Senate race have real properties located in their own bailiwicks or provinces that are popular vacation destinatio­ns, or wealthy cities in Metro Manila. Two even owned property abroad.

Angara owned the most number of real properties. In his July 2004 SALN, Angara declared having two land parcels and another two with buildings, one condominiu­m, and one and half of a townhouse that were acquired between 1995 and 2003. He declared three new entries in his 2007 SALN, namely, two land parcels in Aurora and one condominiu­m purchased in 2007 and 1999, respective­ly. The condominiu­m, though, was not declared in his 2004 and 2005 SALNs.

As of 2009, Angara declared a total of eight and half real properties located in Aurora, Batangas, Baguio City, Makati, Manila, and Pasig City.

Condos, cribs abroad

Magsaysay owned the most number of condominiu­ms by far. In 2008, she purchased six condominiu­ms that cost P24.1 million in total. One is located in Makati City, two in Pasig City, and three in Taguig City. The year after, in 2009, she purchased two other condominiu­ms located in Pasig City and Batangas that cost P6.6 million in total.

Aside from the condominiu­ms, Magsaysay had declared since 2004 her acquisitio­n of a townhouse in Xaviervill­e in 1997 and a house and lot in Katipunan Avenue in 2000. She also inherited a lot in Davao City and townhouses in Philam Homes in 2004.

Enrile and Ejercito, similarly, had owned only three pieces of real estate each as of 2004 and 2009, respective­ly, including properties located in the United States.

By the time Enrile came to office in June 1998, he had three residentia­l properties: one in Nasugbu, Batangas, one in Aparri, Cagayan, and another in San Francisco, California. He stated in his SALN that the purchase of this California property is “still being determined.” He did not enroll his property in California beginning 1999 in his SALN and acquired a residentia­l property in Urdaneta Village, Makati City in 2000.

For his part, Ejercito declared three residentia­l house and lots in his 2001 SALN. The one in Addition Hills, San Juan City was bought in 1994, while those in Bel-Air, Makati City and Redwood Shores, California were bought in 2000. He did not enroll his property in Addition Hills in his 2007 SALN, but declared another residentia­l property in Garfield Street, San Juan City in his 2008 SALN.

Teddy a tad richer

And then we have Casiño, who was first elected to Congress in 2004 as Bayan Muna party-list representa­tive and declared a wealth of P307, 900. But the party-list representa­tive turned out to have something in common with at least two of his other colleagues who are eyeing Senate slots: a substantia­l decrease in net worth since assuming public office (based on their oldest and latest available SALNs).

Casiño’s net worth fell from P307,900 in 2004 to P91,000 in 2011 or by 70.44 percent in seven years. His 2010 SALN is the latest on file with PCIJ in which he declared a net worth of P91,000. The reason for the decrease is both a matter of disparity in computatio­n and additional liability.

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