Vote-buying: its impact on buyer and seller
>> Wednesday, May 11, 2016
EDITORIAL
Vote-buying is still the practice of some if not most politicians in winning. If this country is a mess, it is because for one, people accept bribes from corrupt politicians and vote for them.
We would like to share
a short essay which appeared in the Philippines Free Press in 1961 written by
the late Aparri Councilor Reymundo F. Balisi. Vote-buying was perceived to be rampant
at the time.
Apparently things have
changed little since. The essay goes:
“When you sell
something, the buyer acquires the right to dispose of it as he pleases. He may
sell it in turn to another, at a profit, or even destroy it.
“When you sell your
vote, the same principle applies. The buyer is absolved of any obligation to
serve you if he wins in the elections. By the sale
of your vote, you give him the ‘right’ to do what he pleases in office. He may
promote his interests, not yours. And have no doubt about it, he will.
“Under the democratic
principle, he is supposed to be your representative; he holds office as a
public trust; he should promote your interests, not his. He assumes this
obligation when you give him your vote—but not when you sell it to him. When
you sell your vote, it is no longer democracy but commerce. The whole
relationship between the people and the official changes. You no longer have
any moral right to complain if he enriches himself at your expense; he has paid
for the privilege.
“Those who buy votes
do so in order to win, though they may not be qualified for office, though they
had enriched themselves in. They buy votes so that they could go on using their
office to get even richer. Certainly, they do not buy votes to retain the honor
of the position, for how could honor be gained or kept dishonorably?
“To win, by buying
votes, involves the expenditure of tremendous sums of money. It is an
investment and a gamble. The financial returns must be commensurate to the
risk. Nobody would gamble, would invest in a speculative stock for a mere 10
percent dividend. There are safer ways of investing the money if one were
satisfied with a modest dividend. To risk millions for so modest a return is
stupid. It would not be worth the risk.
“Having risked
millions and won, the winner may be expected to get the money back somehow, and
10 times more. He may be expected to help himself to the resources of the
nation. He will make himself even richer than he is, and his associates, and
you poorer.
“The more he spends,
the more he will take. Why shouldn’t he? You sold your vote. He paid for
it.”Now the question is, are we going to expect the same in the May 9 mid-term
elections? According to Tamayo’s grandson Reginald B. Tamayo, assistant city
council secretary of Marikina City, between 1961 and 2016, we should have
learned some very important lessons.
So for the elections
tomorrow -- vote wisely. Some people advocate taking the briber’s money and
voting for somebody else who is more deserving. But then, when you get it, you
are part of the process of corruption. We give our one-cent worth of advice: Don’t
take the money and vote for the worthwhile candidate, period.
0 comments:
Post a Comment