BAYOMBONG, Nueva Vizcaya – The elections are
still about six months away but the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) here
seemed to have lost the race for this province’s lone congressional district
seat.
This, after the certificate of candidacy
(COC) of Gov. Luisa Cuaresma has been “deemed not filed” by the Commission on
Elections which said that she failed to have her signature in the logbook of
the Comelec provincial office when she filed her COC.
Cuaresma said she would exhaust all legal
remedies to contest the denial of her candidacy even as her camp has yet to
receive an official copy of the decision.
“Amid the crisis now besetting my candidacy,
I reiterate my strong desire to serve as your representative in Congress. We
assure you that this humble representation will not stop at anything in serving
you to the best of her ability,” she said in a statement.
Now on her third and final gubernatorial
term, Cuaresma is also bidding to become the province’s first congresswoman.
She is up against long-time Rep. Carlos Padilla of the Nacionalista Party.
The official campaign has yet to start about
three months from now, Cuaresma said, “but our battle has just begun. We will
fight to the end fair and square. You have asked us to run, and I am now
running, you have asked us to win and we will win.”
Cuaresma rushed to the Comelec office here
last Oct. 3 after aides notified her that she needed to be there since the
authorization letter she gave to them for filing her COC was not notarized, a
violation of Section 3 of the poll body’s Memorandum 9518.
“Her personal presence at the Comelec office
was not duly noted in the logbook, however. But (the provincial election
supervisor) had said he was willing to testify that the governor was personally
present there when she finalized her filing of candidacy,” said partymate Vice
Gov. Jose Gambito, her anointed successor to the governorship.
Other candidates also attested that they were
not made to sign a logbook which was the reason the Comelec nullified
Cuaresma’s candidacy.
“I was the last one to file my certificate of
candidacy but nobody told me to sign a logbook, not even during my earlier
candidacies. What they showed was a list being signed by Comelec personnel of
those who already filed their candidacy,” said re-electionist board member Theo
Daniel.
Another re-electionist board member, Filma Dulay,
also attested that she was not made to sign any logbook. “What I remember is
that the Comelec personnel were the ones writing down our names in a notebook,”
she said.
According to lawyers here, Cuaresma’s
candidacy being “deemed not filed” meant that UNA could not file a substitute
candidate for her, as there no candidacy filed. If Cuaresma was disqualified,
UNA could name a substitute.
The Comelec order was signed by Chairman
SixtoBrilliantes and five of the six commissioners.
Commissioner Grace Padaca, who hails from
this region, failed to have her signature affixed in the order, as she was
reportedly on “official business.”
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