Elections
>> Monday, April 27, 2015
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY -- Good news for politicians.
Commission on Elections: Elections next year would definitely push through.
Comelec however adds: But it (elections) might be done manually. Better news
for politicians who have mastered the art of winning manu-manu without
Smartswitik, according to our neighborhood drunken philosopher in another of
our roadside talks.
Political
aspirants can now lay groundwork to land posh jobs to “serve the people,” he
says, adding – “and of course tapnu met a adda maSOP.Apay agtaray dagita nu
piso sweldo da?Mabalin a nuni Paquiao ta adulaunayen kwarta na.”
He continues
his litany: “Kitaem dagita kalsada, apay kunam maddaddadael dagita uray napintas da
paylang nu awan pagsayaatan dagita nga apo mangiturturong ti gobyerno?”
A passersby
who hears him says, “Haan mo met a kailangan ibaga ti nasisita nga aramid da ta
sumakit laeng panunut tayo – awan bingay tayo,hehehe,” then he walks away.
***
Lest we
stray. According to Comelec spokesman James Jimenez, there would be elections
even after the Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled against its contract with
Smartmatic-Total Information Management (TIM) to refurbish its precinct count
optical scan (PCOS) machines which our philosopher calls “HocusPCOS.”
Jimenez said
while Republic Act provides automation of the country’s elections, some
quarters believe there is jurisprudence supporting a reversion to manual polls.
Several
lawmakers disagree, saying RA 9369 expressly prohibits a return to full manual
elections. Others are suggesting a combination: manual voting and automated
count.
Here in this
summer capital last Tuesday, the SC unanimously invalidated the Comelec’s
P268.8 million contract with Smartmatic-TIM, raising fears that the 2016
elections will not push through. The SC holds its summer session in Baguio
every year.
The
contract, awarded without public bidding, is for refurbishing and replacement
of more than 81,000 PCOS machines to be used in 2016.
***
Following
the CS ruling, Jimenez said they would not allow the PCOS machines to be used
in next year’s elections without undergoing diagnosis, maintenance and
refurbishment.
According to
Jimenez, the Comelec is now looking at alternatives, including use of the
23,000 optical mark reader (OMR) machines that the agency intends to buy and
the transparent credible election system (TerEs) recommended by former
commissioner Augusto Lagman.
Gatangmanen,
awan pay public bidding na? I could see our philosopher grinning.
He said OMR
machines could be used as central count optical scan (CCOS) system in which the
voting machines would be placed in voting centers instead of polling precincts.
In the TcrES
system, the voting and counting would be done manually while the transmission
and canvassing of ballots would be automated.
***
Presidential
spokesman Edwin Lacierda said it would be up to the Comelec how to go about the
May 2016 elections, but which have to push through as scheduled. Sen. Francis
Escudero meanwhile said the law requires regular automation of elections and
called on Comelec to bid out poll machines at once to make the system available
on time for May 2016. He said postponement of elections would be impossible,
illegal and unconstitutional.
Some
lawmakers are saying the SC ruling does not mean that the Comelec could not use
its 80,000 PCOS machines.
According to
Isabela Rep. Rodolfo Albano the poll body could tap its own personnel and
private information technology volunteers to test and prepare its machines and
come up with software for next year’s voting, counting and tabulation.He said
there is still a great chance for a largely automated balloting next year.
***
Meanwhile,
Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares said the Comelec and Smartmatic_TIM “must be
held accountable for the series of irregular and graft-ridden contracts, for
deliberately and illegally discarding vital safeguards, including source code
reviews and for massive malfunctioning of PCOS machines and electronic
cheating.”
He said
“With Smartmatic’s PCOS system afflicted with anomalies and bereft of vital
safeguards, the 2016 presidential elections would be prone to cheating and
might lose credibility.”
Meanwhile,
where is former Comelec chair Brilliantes? “Apay haan da kaskasuan,” our
philosopher is asking.
***
Sen. Alan
Peter S. Cayetano has criticized the Land Transportation Office’s refusal to
postpone “No Plate, No Travel” policy implementation. “We need a
government that will make a real change in people's lives, not make their lives
harder,” he said in an email sent by his office. “It is,
therefore, regrettable that LTO chooses not to help itself and in the
process relieve the public of the stress and inconvenience caused by its
officials' inefficiency and failure to serve the agency's mandate.
“We all know
there is the law and our people also know that it's LTO that created the
problem because it could not provide the plates within 7 days early on. And LTO
is being given a chance to put its house in order through the suggested
moratorium. The insistence of LTO officials to make law abiding taxpayers
suffer for their inefficiency, will not be taken lightly by our people.
If LTO
insists on punishing taxpayers, then our people have the right to hear LTO
officials explain their inefficiency to them “Our people also have the right to
know who created this problem, who must face the administrative cases, and who
decided not to provide our people the relief they deserve.
“We'll also
wait for their explanation during the budget hearing to determine what kind of
budget it deserves given what the taxpaying citizens are made to suffer, from
late delivery of plates to late issuance of license cards, because of LTO
officials' inefficiency and incompetence.”
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