Showing posts with label 2010 election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010 election. Show all posts

EDITORIAL - Sore losers

8:23 PM

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In record time, the Commission on Elections proclaimed the other day nine of the 12 candidates who have won Senate seats. The nine, whose votes were tallied from precincts all over the country, are from different political parties. Neither the candidates nor their parties are complaining about electronic cheating, missing flash cards, disenfranchisement of their supporters, and human or mechanical errors.

Comelec officials have also proclaimed most of the winners in the local races. In the presidential race, the two candidates who were rumored before the elections to become the beneficiaries of an administration-engineered “automated Garci” - Sen. Manuel Villar and former defense chief Gilbert Teodoro - were the first to concede to Sen. Benigno Aquino III, whose wide winning margin was announced by Comelec Chairman Jose Melo. Aquino also emerged the winner in exit polls conducted by both Social Weather Stations and Pulse Asia, with Makati Mayor Jejomar Binay coming out as the likely winner, although by a narrower margin, in the vice-presidential race.
A day after the elections, the verdict was out: poll automation, despite glitches, was a success. Several foreign governments and international observers congratulated the country and the Comelec. The equally unprecedented gracious concession of Villar and Teodoro, together with the rapid proclamation of local candidates, contributed to post-election stability.

But old habits die hard, and certain quarters - mainly losing camps - are threatening to create trouble by using the smallest glitch to stop their rivals from assuming office. As the long wait to vote showed, the country’s experiment with poll automation was not perfect. The Comelec admitted human error and mechanical glitches in tallying. Violence and vote buying marred the process in some areas. The congressional calendar for canvassing is also out of sync with the digital age.
Every problem must be examined to prevent a repeat in the next elections. Candidates who are losing by narrow margins also have a right to keep the vote tally under close scrutiny. But accusations of cheating and questions about the credibility of the vote must be backed by evidence. Speaker Prospero Nograles, who has lost to his political nemesis in Davao, is threatening to conduct a House audit of the vote. The congressional canvassing cannot be prolonged for personal motives.
Without evidence, complaints of cheating are nothing but sour grapes. Sore losers are showing why they didn’t deserve to win in the first place.



source: (Philstar News Service, www.philstar.com)

Namfrel accreditation in May polls pushed

12:11 AM

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MANILA, Philippines – The Commission on Elections should reconsider its decision to deny the National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) from holding a parallel count of the votes in the May 10 elections, a poll watchdog official said Wednesday.

“Namfrel with its experience in holding quick count in manual polls would help Comelec in ensuring the transparency and accuracy of the results of the May 10 automated polls,” said Ramon Caspile, chairman of Bantay Eleksyon 2010.

Casiple said they were “monitoring negotiations” between Namfrel and the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV) for the sharing of the fourth copy of the election returns (ERs) “so that Namfrel can make [a] parallel count.”

But Casiple said that even if there would be no agreement, “Namfrel would still have the financial resources to do it [parallel count].”

“The parallel count will provide an independent count because right now, the law provides for a random manual audit that would direct the comparison of the votes in a ballot of selected poling precincts against the PCOS count, it would be done so that there is assurance that what is being reported and transmitted to the canvassing centers is actually the contents of the ballots,” he said.

Under Section 24 of Republic Act 9369 or the poll automation law, “there shall be a random manual audit in one precinct per congressional district randomly chosen by Comelec in each province and city. Any difference between the automated and manual count will result in the determination of root cause and initiate a manual count for those precincts affected by the computer or procedural error.”

Casiple added that an additional 2,000 precincts to be selected by PPCRV and Comelec would be included in the manual count after proclamation of results.

He said that with less than a month before election day, the Comelec has not yet released the guidelines for the random manual audit.

Casiple also criticized the Comelec for denying their proposal to put up large projectors in canvassing centers in all municipalities and provinces to allow the public to view the process, which was being done during manual polls.

“At the end of the day, it will all boil down to credibility issue and to the transparency of the results of this coming election,” said Casiple.

Source:Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC asks Comelec anew to exempt judges from gun ban

12:03 AM

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MANILA, Philippines – The Supreme Court has renewed its call for the Commission on Elections to exempt judges across the country from the election gun ban.

“I urge [Comelec] Chairman and Justice (Jose) Melo and Justice (Lucenito) Tagle to have a second look at our application to exempt judges from the gun ban,” Court Administrator Jose Midas Marquez said. Melo is a retired Supreme Court Justice while Tagle is a former Court of Appeals Justice.

Marquez heads the Supreme Court’s Office of the Court Administrator tasked with the supervision and administration of the lower courts and their personnel.

The office reports and recommends to the Supreme Court all actions that affect lower court management, personal and financial administration and administrative discipline. Complaints against judges and court personnel are also filed in this office.

Two regional trial court judges were attacked over the last two days.

On Tuesday night, the front of the house of Judge Leo Principe of Branch 1 of the Basilan regional trial court was bombed.

Principe had ordered the arrest of some 130 members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Abu Sayyaf in 2007 for the killing of 14 Marines, 10 of whom were beheaded.

This Wednesday morning, an explosion destroyed the vehicle of Judge Silvino Pampilo Jr. of Branch 26 of the Manila regional trial court.

Pampilo previously ordered the abolition of the Presidential Anti-Smuggling Group (PASG) and the opening of books of the “Big 3” oil companies. He also denied the plea of workers to stop the modernization of the North Harbor and handled the case of Silver Flores, accused of killing an activist upon orders of the military.

Marquez said early this year, he sent a request to the Commission on Elections asking for a gun ban exemption for judges.

“Initially, I submitted a list of 20 to 30 judges with confirmed threats,” Marquez said, adding that if not all the judges could be given exemption, at least exempt those with confirmed threats.

“Pero unang lista pa lang hindi na tayo napagbigyan [But we were denied on the first list],” Marquez said.

Marquez said he would send another letter to Melo and Tagle and reiterate their request for gun ban exemption.

“It is important that our judges be given exemption for their protection. It is not physically possible to provide protection, our judges have to have some protection,” Marquez said, especially with the upcoming elections.

The Municipal, Metropolitan and regional trial courts handles election protests of municipal and barangay (village) officials, as well as inclusion and exclusion of voters.

The RTC, on the other hand, has exclusive original jurisdiction to try and decide any criminal action or proceedings for violation of the Omnibus election Code, except those relating to the offense of failure to register or failure to vote which shall be under the jurisdiction of the metropolitan or municipal trial courts.

Source:Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gordon: Link was ex-gov’t exec

6:25 PM

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MANILA, Philippines—A former Cabinet secretary was the secret emissary who offered Sen. Richard Gordon a government post and reimbursement of his campaign expenses—if he would withdraw from the presidential race.

Aside from the hint, the Bagumbayan party’s standard-bearer refused to reveal any more details about the emissary supposedly sent to see him by one of his rivals, Nacionalista Party presidential candidate Sen. Manny Villar.

“Why should we believe you?” commentator Winnie Monsod asked Gordon during a live interview on Unang Hirit, the morning television program of GMA-7.

“Because I have a track record that does not include lying (while) Villar has a record of being a denial king,” Gordon replied.

“I can prove (that Villar made me an offer). In fact, I already told somebody in media (the emissary’s identity) in case something happens to me,” Gordon said.

“I’ll tell you this—the person is a high-ranking official, a former Cabinet secretary.”

Gordon said his withdrawal from the presidential race was really not the main concern of the emissary. The emissary was more interested in Gordon’s withdrawal of support from Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile.

That was the reason, Gordon said, the emissary asked him not to reveal his name to Enrile.

“That I was being offered a Cabinet post and reimbursement was secondary. Kabit na lang po iyon (That was just an add-on). The primary goal was to oust Senator Enrile so that he would not go on with the C-5 committee report,” Gordon said.

Gordon would have been the swing vote in the ouster of Enrile after the latter decided to release the report calling for Villar’s censure for “conflict of interest” in the C-5 affair.

The call stemmed from Villar’s alleged failure to disclose his involvement in the housing developments that benefited from the rerouting of the C-5 extension road in Parañaque and Las Piñas cities.

Source:Philippine Daily Inquirer

Cojuangco’s daughter backs Aquino-Roxas team

6:21 PM

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BACOLOD CITY—The youngest daughter of business tycoon and political kingmaker Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco Jr. is supporting the presidential candidacy of her cousin Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III and the vice presidential bid of his running mate Sen. Manuel “Mar” Roxas II.

Lisa Cojuangco-Cruz said she would not only support the “Noy-Mar ticket” as a personal decision but would also openly campaign for the Liberal Party tandem.

“I am not a politician,” she said. “But as a Filipino I am making a choice and the choice for May 10 is Noy-Mar,” she told the Inquirer in an e-mail on Monday.

Cojuangco-Cruz said she believed that the Aquino-Roxas tandem “is our best hope for a better Philippines.”

‘Honest government’

“I am not one to give you a complicated analysis of things. All we need is an honest, decent government and our hope for that rests on Noynoy and Mar,” Cruz said.

She said she is campaigning in Negros Occidental, where her family owns farms and where she has spent many vacations, and in Iloilo, where she has also lived.

She said she is hitting the campaign trail on Thursday in Iloilo where she will be joining Kris, Aquino’s celebrity sister.

Lupus patient

Cruz, a lupus erythematosus patient, is known for her advocacy of raising awareness of the disease.

Diagnosed with the disease more than a decade ago, she currently spearheads The LUiSA Project of the Philippine Rheumatology Educational Trust Foundation. LUiSA stands for Lupus Inspired Advocacy.

Now based in Manila, Cojuangco-Cruz described Noynoy as more than just a cousin: They share the same birthday and were born just seven hours apart on Feb. 8, 1960.

Noynoy’s father, the martyred Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., was also her godfather, she said.

Lisa is married to Dr. Nick Cruz, one of the country’s top cardiologists who is the director of the Heart Institute of St. Luke’s Medical Center-Global City.

Mum on ‘Gibo’

Cojuangco-Cruz, however, was tightlipped on what she thought of her other cousin, Gilbert “Gibo” Teodoro Jr., the standard-bearer of the administration party Lakas-Kampi-CMD.

Teodoro, the son of Danding’s younger sister Merceditas, had a falling out with Danding after the former bolted the Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC), the party founded by Danding, in favor of Lakas-Kampi.

Danding has yet to announce whom he will support in the May presidential election. His wife Gretchen Oppen-Cojuangco, however, earlier said she would support “anybody but Gibo.”

Gretchen has been very vocal against Teodoro and about how Gibo had purportedly “betrayed” his uncle by leaving the NPC without first talking to Danding about it.

She also claimed that Danding had great plans for Teodoro but that the latter “left without even a word of goodbye.”

Source:Philippine Daily Inquirer

Comelec Disqualifies Presidential Candidate

9:19 PM

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Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines (AHN) - Now on its first month, the campaign period for the May 10 national election in the Philippines is heating up. On Thursday, the Commission on Elections disqualified a presidential candidate.

On the same day, the Senate President pointed to a fellow senator as the emissary to a presidential bet from one of the leading candidates for the former to drop from the race.

The Comelec disqualified en banc Kilusang Bagong Lipunan standard bearer Vetellano Acosta for putting the electoral process in mockery. Among the reasons the Comelec cited in declaring Acosta a nuisance candidate was he did not know the party's vice presidential and senatorial candidates. The Comelec also observed that Acosta has made himself scarce since the start of the campaign period, and is not even a registered voter.

Acosta's disqualification leaves nine presidential candidates for the May 10 poll.

Meanwhile, Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile identified Sen. Edgardo Angara as the alleged broker sent by Nacionalista Party candidate Sen. Manuel Villar to convince Bagumbayan bet Sen. Richard Gordon to withdraw from the race. Gordon claimed in a radio interview on Tuesday that Villar sent an emissary to offer him money in exchange for Gordon backing out of the race. Gordon did not identify the Villar emissary.

Villar and Angara denied Enrile's charges. To compound matters, Gordon said in a radio interview on Wednesday, Villar's middleman was not a senator.

Election Trash

1:50 AM

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Another year of choosing and deciding for our country. Every candidates is busy preparing for the 2010 election. Lots of money will go to the ads and fliers. We are all aware of the things that's happening to our surroundings during the campaign period of each candidates. Their faces and names will be post everywhere.

Aren't they aware that they're making our buildings and parks dirty? This won't really be a problem if they will clean it up after the elections. How can we attract more visitors if we are surrounded of trash?

Even though our government have set a designated area where they can post their fliers, still lots of candidates doesn't follow. We should be aware of this, why choose them to lead our country if they can't even follow a simple rules.

regalweb09