Party-list election postponement
>> Monday, April 29, 2013
EDITORIAL
If the political
system is in disarray, blame the system or the people running the system. Take for example the appeal of concerned
groups to postpone the party list elections from May 2013 to October 2013, to
coincide with the barangay and sangguniang kabataang elections.
Two
more party list groups---the Apila ng Bayan Inc. and the Urban Poor Development
Services asked the Supreme
Court for the postponement.
1 ANG BATAS
Party List formally petitioned the high court for the postponement of the party
list elections, on the ground that the Commission on Elections will have to
review the qualifications of all party list groups---those already accredited
by the poll body to run in May, and those it had disqualified earlier but which
went to the Supreme Court contesting the Comelec’s decision against them---and
this will take time.
Alberto Ong
Jr., the first nominee of the Apila ng Bayan Inc. and Ronnie Dellamas, also the
first nominee of the Urban Poor and Development Services, expressed support for
the petition of 1 ANG BATAS, through its general counsel, lawyer Maribel G.
Alvarez Domado. Both Ong and Dellamas are filing their parties’ petitions for
postponement one after the other.
In its
urgent motion seeking the postponement of the party list elections from May to
October 2013, 1 ANG BATAS argued that the holding of the elections in October
is made necessary by the new ruling of the Supreme Court.
This is so
because postponing the party list polls is “a necessary step towards
rationalizing the party list system of representation, as provided for by the
1987 Constitution and Republic Act 7941, because the qualifications of party
list organizations shall already be determined according to a definite set of
guidelines coming from this Honorable Court itself”.
ANG BATAS
said the postponement will not derail the entirety of the May 13 elections, as
the election for other positions can proceed as scheduled. The party list also
argue that the postponement and the holding of the party list elections in
October 2013 will not be an additional financial burden for the government
since the barangay elections is going to be held in the month anyway.
This postponement of the party list
elections was sought much earlier by election lawyer Romulo Macalintal, in an
interview with ABS CBN. Macalintal’s position was featured in report in ABS
CBN’s news website, abs-cbnnews.com, which says in its pertinent parts:
“Since the Supreme
Court has issued ‘new guidelines’ in determining whether an organization may
register under our party-list system, all existing party-list groups, including
those already previously qualified by the Comelec, have to undergo the same
summary evidentiary hearing to determine their qualifications under these new
parameters prescribed by the Supreme Court,” he said. This would necessitate a
postponement of the elections for party-list groups, he said.
“The better rule would have been for
the Supreme Court, if indeed it believes in its guidelines to qualify a
party-list group, to directly resolve this issue without remanding the cases to
the Comelec to prevent a ‘circuitous route’ of these cases,” he said.”
Their appeals may have gone to waste
since the Supreme Court, which held summer session in Baguio the past weeks,
has gone into recess for over a month, leaving slim chances for appeals on
election-related cases, including the party-list system to prosper. This, considering that the next full court session
of the SC will be on June 4 – way after the elections have passed.
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