Polls may be orderly, peaceful, but vote-buying still a problem

MON

AN ELECTORAL REFORM GROUP predicted that Monday’s mid-term elections will likely be relatively orderly and peaceful, but raised concerns that vote-buying and padded voters’ lists remain as persistent problems in Philippine elections.

The Institute on Political and Economic Reforms (IPER) and the Consortium on Electoral Reforms (CER) gave this assessment in a briefing for media groups in the run-up to the May 13, 2013 mid-term elections on Monday.

CER Chairman Ramon Casiple said that all indications point to the orderly conduct of the elections on Monday, with the same precinct count optical scan (PCOS) machines that were used in the 2010 elections being used again. Casiple said that while some have raised many concerns over the failure of the Commission on Elections to undertake an independent review of the source code, or the PCOS software, this is not a major issue as the source code had worked well enough in the 2010 elections.

What is important, Casiple says, is that the source code was already certified as working by SysTest Lab, Inc.

However, Casiple expressed concerns that the voters’ list has not been fully purged of multiple or fake registrants. An indication of just how questionable the voters’ list may be is shown by last year’s reregistration of voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM). In that reregistration, the Comelec trimmed the ARMM voters list by half a million voters, from 1.7 million voters to only 1.2 million voters. The half million cancelled voters were found to be either multiple registrants, or ghost registrants.

Casiple said this is a sign of just how unreliable the current voters’ list is. The last general registration of voters was conducted in 1997, or 16 years ago.

“Yung ganung kalaki na natanggal only confirmed the suspicions sa problema sa ARMM before,” Casiple said. “Pero sa ARMM lang iyun. What about the rest of the country?

(The huge number of cancelled voters in ARMM only confirmed all the suspicions of the problems in ARMM. But that is only in ARMM. What about the rest of the country?)

“The rest of the country still has that old registry still dating back to the 1997 general registration,” he said.

The other persistent problem, Casiple said, is the prevalence of vote-buying. Casiple said that their reports from the field indicate that the average price of a vote is now at P 1,500.

The amount however varies from region to region, also depending on how heated the local contest is. For example, Casiple said that some reports peg the price of a vote at only P500 in Manila, while it could go as high as P2,000 in Pasig City. In parts of Mindanao, the price appears to have skyrocketed, with votes being bought at P7,000 in Lanao and up to P10,000 in Monkayo, a municipality in Compostela Valley which also plays host to the gold-rich area of Mount Diwalwal.

Reality bites: The Comelec in NCR

IT’S THE HOMESTRETCH to the May 13, 2013 midterm elections, and the field personnel of the Commission on Elections (Comelec) are now feeling the pressure of the last of its pre-election preparations.

These include the final testing and sealing (FTS) of the precinct count optical scan (PCOS) machines, and coordinating and training the Board of Election Inspectors (BEIs) who will mainly administer matters on election day.

These tasks go alongside their continuing responsibility to instruct voters on what should be done before, during, and after the elections; monitor campaign activities; and enforce campaigning and campaign finance rules.

Recently, a team of PCIJ fellows did a series that revealed how, in 39 Comelec field offices in Luzon and the Visayas, Comelec field personnel suffer from poor working conditions and a shortage in basic resources — personnel, funds, office space, supplies and equipment — that prevent them from fully performing their duties in an effective and efficient manner.

Intending to do a follow-up to that report, six PCIJ interns from April 22 to 29 visited 17 Comelec district offices in five cities in the National Capital Region or NCR: Manila (six district offices), Quezon City (six district offices), Pasay City (two district offices), Makati City (two district offices), and Marikina City (one office covering the city’s two districts).

They found that unlike their counterparts in the regions, the Comelec field offices in the NCR do not seem to suffer from a shortage of manpower.

This report was supervised by PCIJ Training Director Che de los Reyes as part of the internship program that PCIJ offers to senior students of journalism and communication schools.

This summer, the PCIJ staff is pleased to assist our interns from Silliman University in Dumaguete City; the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Los Banos in Laguna, and Miag-ao in Iloilo; and St. Paul University-Quezon City.

Read the PCIJ interns’ reports here:

* MANILA: Not enough staff, too many voters
By KEZIA GRACE JUNGCO and GABRIELLE NICOLE ILYCH MANA-AY

* QUEZON CITY: Local government as source of succor
By LAVILYN HYSTHEA MALTE

* MAKATI: ‘Conjugal toilet’ for ‘fire station’ crew
By MA. JOSEBELLE S. BAGULAYA

* MARIKINA: Public market tenant, halo-halo work
By MAYA ANGELIQUE B. JAJALLA

* PASAY CITY: Pressure mounts as poll day nears
By CRISTINA CELINE AQUINO

The wealth of public officials, the weal of voters: Mismatch?

WHO ARE THE RICHEST elective officials of the Philippines, and who, the poorest?

Did they rise to greater affluence or fall to greater penury over the years?

And, is there a match or mismatch between the wealth of public officials, and the weal of the people they serve?

We have 10 days to go before the vote on May 13, 2013 so we better check it out now.
MoneyPolitics, a citizen’s resource tool on elections, public funds, and governance in the Philippines, may be of some assistance.

Click on its Public Profiles tab to learn about the numbers enrolled in the Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) that top elective officials had filed, and subscribed and swore to as the facts of their wealth.

This tab offers full profiles on the wealth of the president, vice president, and senators.

Just as important this tab reveals the net worth of the party-list and district representatives, and the governors and vice governors of Philippine provinces.

These data came from the SALNs that PCIJ secured from the Office of the Ombudsman and other repository agencies.

But another tab, Elections and Governance will lead you to the lists of candidates in the 2013 elections and the voter turnout in the 2010 elections that PCIJ obtained from the Commission on Elections.

A page within this tab offers the latest socio-economic stats for the provinces, based on data from the National Statistical Coordination Board and the National Statistics Office, among other public agencies.

Why tap into these tabs?

The first, Public Profiles, might give us an initial KYC (Know Your Candidate) experience. Nothing wrong per se about candidates being rich but it is absolutely wrong in law for public officials to enrich themselves while in office.

The second, Elections and Governance, could give us our composite picture as communities, the living and working conditions of our people. It points to some bright spots, and many dark corners, in our country. It tells us what those aspiring to get elected on May 13, 2013 should address or speak about.

More than song and dance routines, perhaps we should demand that candidates tell us exactly how they intend to serve us better.

MoneyPolitics, a data journalism project of PCIJ, is just a click away.