The Philippine Star

Bets to Comelec: Proclaim Senate 12

- By Sheila Crisostomo

Lawyers and representa­tives of leading senatorial bets yesterday asked the Commission on Elections ( Comelec), sitting as the National Board of Canvassers (NBOC), to proclaim the 12 winning senators, with only three certificat­es of canvass (COCs) left to be tabulated.

Donnah Camitan, lawyer of former justice secretary Leila de Lima, said votes from the three COCs would no longer affect the ranking of the top 12 senators.

“We are, of course, after accuracy, but based on our computatio­n, the

votes from these three provinces will not matter anymore. That’s why we already moved for an early proclamati­on,” she said in an interview.

The three COCs, which have yet to be tabulated, are from Antique (322,861), Lanao del Sur (484,435) and Northern Samar ( 386,163), covering some 1.193 million votes. There are 165 COCs for this year’s elections.

Based on the canvass report of the Comelec from the votes in 121 of 164 COCs, De Lima was in the 12th slot with a total of 13,894,048 votes against her closest rival Francis Tolentino, who had 12,604,848. This represents a difference of 1,289,200 votes.

The others who sought the proclamati­on were lawyers of re-electionis­t-senators Ralph Recto and Tito Sotto, Francis Pangilinan and former Technical and Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority director general Joel Villanueva.

Tolentino’s lawyer Wanda Talosig, however, had opposed the manifestat­ion, invoking discrepanc­ies in the votes that appeared on the Comelec’s transparen­cy server and central server.

Talosig added the Comelec should also investigat­e the alteration of the script or hash code of the transparen­cy server.

Based on the canvass report, Villanueva was overtaken by re-electionis­t Frank Drilon, with 18,307,801 to 18,212,639 votes.

Meanwhile, former Comelec commission­er Rene Sarmiento urged the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsibl­e Voting (PPCRV) not to aspire for 100 percent in its quick count, as it might usurp the responsibi­lity of the NBOC and violate the Constituti­on.

Sarmiento advised the PPCRV to leave the counting of votes for president and vice president to the NBOC.

“Under the Constituti­on, the PPCRV cannot complete the canvassing, especially for the president and vice president, because Congress is the NBOC. This happened in 2010, as our group was the first to implement the automated elections,” said Sarmiento, who was a Comelec official in 2010 and former member of the PPCRV.

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