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Bill
postponing ARMM election approved by House;
faces opposition in the Senate
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March 28, 2011
from
NAMFREL Election Monitor Vol.2, No.5
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Just
before it went into recess this week, the House of
Representatives on March 22 approved on third reading House
Bill no. 4146, postponing the election in the Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) scheduled for August of
this year, to synchronize it with the 2013 national and
local elections. With 191 votes against 47 and 2
abstentions, the House also voted to authorize President
Aquino to appoint caretakers in elective positions for the
ARMM until May 2013.
The bill was already transmitted to the Senate on Wednesday;
however, the earliest possible date that the Senate could
deliberate on the proposed postponement will be on May 9
when it resumes its session, which is also a week after the
May 2 deadline for filing of certificates of candidacy for
the ARMM elections. The President has already said that he
need not call for a special session for this priority bill
before May 9.
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However, in spite
of the President's confidence that the Senate will also
approve of the postponement, it is expected that the bill
will face opposition from the Senators. Several senators
have already voiced out through the media their disapproval
of the ARMM election postponement, especially during the
lead up to the House voting. Sharing the sentiments of civil
society organizations opposed to the postponement, some
senators contend that the idea of the national government
appointing a caretaker government in the ARMM runs counter
to the idea of autonomy. Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago
questions the constitutionality of the proposal. “If we are
going to empower the executive branch of government to
appoint so-called officers-incharge starting this year to
2013 in the next elections then, in effect, Mindanao is not
autonomous to the national government," she said. Senators
Santiago and Francis Escudero also share the view that any
amendment resetting the ARMM election can only be made
effective and valid through a plebiscite duly called for
that purpose. "It is my opinion that the bill postponing the
ARMM election, including appointing OICs, is an amendment of
the ARMM Organic Law, which requires two-thirds vote of
Congress, with both chambers voting separately," Escudero
said in an interview. In another interview, Senator Joker
Arroyo said, “My position is very simple. The Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao is autonomous. Why is the national
government interfering with its affairs?...When will we ever
let them alone? To judge and decide for themselves? Again
they will use the guise of synchronized elections so that
they can appoint an OIC. OIC would not be the choice of the
ARMM people." Senator Miguel Zubiri, in a privilege speech,
went even further to say that the postponement not only
means "the temporary suspension of the people's right to
suffrage but... the suspension of the democratic process of
which people have the right to choose their leaders who then
decide the fate of 4.5 million people." With regard the
synchronization of polls, the author of the ARMM Organic
Act, former Senator Aquilino Pimentel, Jr., said in a forum,
“The ARMM law was created to have their own elections,
independent to the regular national elections." He
maintained that any deferment of the August 8 election would
constitute an amendment of the ARMM charter, which would
need approval in a referendum to be legal.
Sen. Bongbong Marcos said there are many issues involved in
the proposed postponement, including the legality of
appointing officers in charge. Marcos, who heads the Senate
Committee on Local Governments, also said that his committee
would need to hold a series of consultations in the ARMM to
know the sentiments of the people. Senate Majority Leader
Vicente Sotto III said they have very limited time to act on
the measure, with the Senate expected to prioritize the
impeachment of the Ombudsman when it resumes session.
On the same day the approved House bill was transmitted to
the Senate, Sen. Franklin Drilon filed before Sen. Marcos'
committee Senate Bill 2756, calling for the deferment of
elections in the region’s five provinces, and giving
President Aquino the power to appoint officers-in-charge
until new officials are elected in 2013. Drilon said
postponing the ARMM elections will make the government save
up to P1.8 billion, which he said can be used “for urgent
social services and physical infrastructures needed in the
region." “It is opportune time for the new administration to
be more prudent and discerning in its current
expenditures…The synchronization will allow for government
to reduce its expenditures on the frequent conduct of
various elections," the measure read.
Meanwhile, Comelec chairman Sixto Brillantes urged the
Senate to expedite the holding of deliberations on the
postponement so that the Comelec will be guided whether to
go full blast in preparing for the ARMM elections in August,
although he said the Comelec is operating as if the election
will take place as scheduled. However, as the days and weeks
pass, the Comelec would need to spend more money on its
preparations and resources may go to waste if the elections
are postponed. Brillantes clarified that they have not spent
for anything major for the ARMM elections yet. On March 21,
the Comelec started a 10-day special registration of voters
in the ARMM provinces. Reports said the registration has
been peaceful so far, but the turn-out has been low. Comelec
spokesperson James Jimenez said that "even if the elections
were deferred, the registration will not be an exercise in
futility because the registered voters could still cast
their ballots in other elections." (Various news sources) |
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