BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
The disqualification cases against Sen. Grace
Poe started it all. Now, all over this Banana Republic, such cases are being
filed left and right by protagonists aspiring for government positions so they
can waylay their rivals and get the plum posts. The cases are being filed with
the Commission on Elections whose decisions can be overturned by the Supreme
Court, being the highest judicial body in the land. Come to think of it,
shouldn’t these cases be filed directly with the SC so cases would be been
settled with finality earlier?
***
Are lawyers
to blame for this, so they can bleed more money out of their clients? In the
case of Poe, if the cases did not have to go to the Comelec, ballot printing
would have started by now, with no doubts about qualifications at least of
those running for president. It would have saved this blighted nation a lot of
political uncertainty, and the Comelec could have attended to pressing matters
in preparation for the May polls.
***
As political
pundits say, whatever decision is reached by the Comelec, either the candidate
or the petitioner in a disqualification case goes to the SC anyway. The SC
disregards Comelec rulings. So why waste time, effort and people’s money for
useless Comelec deliberations?
All Comelec
divisions were unanimous in their decision to disqualify Poe. The cases went to
the SC anyway, where Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno is arguing for the case
of foundlings.
Even Davao
Mayor Rodrigo Duterte is not yet off the hook despite unanimous decision by a
Comelec division to junk all disqualification cases against him. Lawyers say
petitioners can still seek reconsideration of this ruling, after which the
cases will go to the full Comelec, whose decision will also be open to a motion
for reconsideration. Then the cases can go to the SC, regardless of the entire
Comelec’s decision.
***
By the time
all legal remedies have been exhausted and the SC comes up with a ruling that
is final and executory, the May elections would have long been over.
And because
the SC some years ago reversed its own supposedly final, executory decision,
there is a possibility that the disqualification cases could become bogged down
in litigation.
***
Pundits are
saying there is a dilemma Poe and Duterte could be included in the ballot but
lose with the disqualification cases still awaiting final SC ruling. The
tribunal may just archive the cases, explaining the candidates’ defeat has
rendered the cases moot, as the SC did in the disqualification case filed
against presidential candidate Joseph Estrada in the 2010 race. Erap placed
second in that race. Without legal machinations, he might have won, according
to his minions.
Now, both
Poe and Duterte are strong contenders. What if anyone of them wins and is later
disqualified. Our neighborhood perennially drunk philosopher says since the
Comelec is inutile in deciding qualifications of candidates, it should stop
doing the work since it is a waste of time and public resources.
***
In the local
level, disqualification cases on account of citizenship have been reported in
Northern Luzon.
In Basista,
Pangasinan, only a month before the start of the campaign period for local
candidates, the Comelec is set to proclaim the new mayor of this town.
Comelec
Chairman Andres Bautista signed a writ of execution on Jan. 27 declaring
Jocelyn Perez as the mayor and directing Manolito de Leon to relinquish his
post.
Perez will
take her oath at the Comelec office in Intramuros on Feb. 12.
***
On Nov. 10,
the Supreme Court affirmed a full Comelec resolution issued on Oct. 9, which
annulled the proclamation of De Leon over his citizenship.
The Comelec
resolution said De Leon lost his citizenship when he was naturalized as an
American citizen.
De Leon
defeated Perez in the 2013 elections by only 67 votes.“At this time, he is
qualified to run and seek a local elective position. However, his acts of using
his American passport on Sept. 10, 2010 and June 26, 2011, or before the 2013
elections effectively barred him from running and holding public office. He reverted
to his earlier status of being a dual citizen,” the Comelec resolution stated.
***
In the
province of Kalinga, Gregory FarnawClaver, a gubernatorial aspirant filed a
counter-affidavit with the Comelec saying he is
eligible to run considering the Comelec has “not yet decided” on merits
of a case on allegations of his citizenship.Claver is the son of former Kalinga
Rep. Wiliam “Billy” Claver.
Henry
Gupaal, executive assistant of incumbent Kalinga Gov. Jocel Baac earlier petitioned
the Comelec alleging Claver was a U.S. and Filipino citizen.
In his
complaint to the Comelec, Gupaal said Claver should be disqualified because the
latter’s renunciation of his American citizenship in October 2015 is invalid
because he was merely sworn in by a notary public and not a public officer
authorized to administer an oath.
***
Claver
reportedly became a naturalized U.S. citizen in February 2007 after he joined
the U.S. Army in September 2005.
But twice,
Claver said, he has renounced his foreign citizenship under oath first in
October 2012 and in October 2015.
Claver said
in a counter-petition, with this, he reverted to his Filipino citizenship four
years ago under Republic Act 9225, or the Citizenship Retention and
Re-acquisition Act of 2003.
Gupaal,
however, claimed that Claver remains a dual citizen because in American laws,
his renunciation of American citizenship must have to be approved first by the
U.S. State Department to be effective.
***
The two main
issues raised by Gupaal, Claver said, were answered by the Supreme Court in two
cases decided in 2012 and 2009, when the High Tribunal ruled that RA 9225 only
requires compliance with two requirements for a natural born Filipino, who has
re-acquired citizenship, to qualify as a candidate for public office.
The
requirements are for the candidate to take an oath of allegiance to the
Republic of the Philippines and to execute a personal and sworn renunciation of
foreign citizenship, which Claver, said in his petition, was complied with.
He also
cited the Supreme Court decision on Arnado vs. Comelec that the two
requirements to qualify as a candidate for an elective position does not
require anything else such as additional affirmative action or
processes imposed by the relevant foreign laws or foreign governments to render
such foreign citizenship renunciation effective.(See page 1 for more details.)
***
The Comelec
has not yet acted on Gupaal’s petition even as Claver has filed his
counter-affidavit. It is status quo in the meantime – meaning Claver can still
run considering the Comelec has not yet acted on the matter. The case could
reach all the way to the Supreme Court. If the Comelec or the SC would still
not make a decision on the case on electionday, what will happen? That, our
neighborhood philosopher would say, calls for another drink.
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