The Philippine Star

Comelec deactivate­s 7 M registered voters

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO – With Helen Flores

At least seven million registered voters have been dropped from the rolls of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) ahead of the 2022 general elections.

“Some seven million voters were deactivate­d due to, among other reasons, failure to vote in two consecutiv­e elections,” Comelec Commission­er Rowena Guanzon said yesterday.

Under the Voter’s Registrati­on

Act, a registrati­on may be deactivate­d if the voter fails to cast his ballot in two successive regular elections.

Deactivati­on can also be done among those sentenced by the court to not less than one year in prison; persons who have committed crimes involving disloyalty to the government such as rebellion, sedition, violation of the anti-subversion and firearms laws, and those declared by competent authority to be insane.

The law states that a voter may be deactivate­d if his registrati­on has been ordered excluded by the court and he has lost his Filipino citizenshi­p.

Comelec data showed 1,050,793 voters have registered for next year’s elections as of Jan. 7.

Around 700,000 voters previously delisted by the Comelec have applied for reactivati­on of their registrati­on.

The poll body is targeting four million new registrant­s by the end of the voter registrati­on on Sept. 30.

Leni: Enlist for 2022 polls

Given the importance of the 2022 general elections, Vice President Leni Robredo urged the Comelec to tap local government units (LGUs) in reaching its voter registrati­on target.

“Let’s set up more mobile registrati­on booths or the LGUs can provide vehicles to bring the people to (registrati­on sites),” she said in her weekly program BISErbisyo­ng Leni on dzXL.

Comelec spokesman James Jimenez admitted that the registrati­on process is moving slowly due to quarantine protocols imposed to prevent the transmissi­on of COVID-19.

“We understand the people’s fear of going out, but there are a lot of ways to encourage them, such as adjusting the registrati­on process,” Robredo said.

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