Annoying candidates
>> Wednesday, April 6, 2016
EDITORIAL
If you are annoyed by the traffic jams and
noise pollution caused by campaigning candidates, don’t vote for them.
This was the advice of
Commission on Elections Chairman Andres Bautista, who reminded the public that
judgment day for irritating candidates is on election day.
“At the end of the
day, if (people) are annoyed by these noises from the campaign, then they
should not vote for the candidates,” Bautista told reporters when asked for
comment on the practice of many local candidates who drive in convoys around
neighborhoods while playing loud campaign jingles.
Bautista said this is
a form of noise pollution, which the public should not be made to suffer. He
noted that voters being inconvenienced by the closure of roads should not vote
for the candidates behind them.
“I think it’s the
local government that closes the roads. If it is causing inconvenience to
the public, then the voters should also not vote for the candidates behind
them,” he added. The public has been experiencing such nuisances since campaign
period for local polls started on March 26.
Sen. Aquilino Pimentel
III recommended Thursday to the Comelec to consider using the P26-million
budget for the compensation of tutors and their staff, instead of buying shirts
for teachers doing election duties.
“I have not heard a
clamor or even a request for these (shirts) from any BEIs (Board of Election
Inspectors) member or from the ranks of the public school teachers. Hence the
question is: why are we going to spend for these items?” Pimentel said.
Pimentel, chairperson
of the Senate committee on electoral reforms, questioned the move of the poll
body to allocate more than P26 million to purchase “bib vests” for the BEIs and
support staff to wear as uniforms at the polling places.
“Grabe, ang Comelec di
na alam anong gagawin sa pera nila (Wow, the Comelec don’t know what to do
with their money)… P20 million to be spent for something to be used for just
one day? Such an additional layer of clothing might even make an already very
warm day a lot hotter,” he added.
“Comelec should
abandon this plan and simply add the P20 million to the total compensation
package for all those serving in the elections. Simple,” Pimentel said.
The poll body has
started the bidding contract for a total of 354,053 bib vests, with PiliPinas
logo and initials “BEI” in front and “Comelec” and Board of Election Inspector”
at the back.
The Comelec will also
be buying 6,158 collared shorts for its employees for a contract pegged at
P1,231,600 or P200 per shirt.
This, as the alleged
hacking incident that defaced the website of the Comelec on March 27 would not
affect the outcome of the May 9 polls, an official of the National Bureau of
Investigation said.
NBI Cybercrime
Division chief Roland Aguto said the website does not contain crucial data
related to the upcoming election, aside from the voters’ master list which is
located in the website’s precinct finder database.
“The voters’ list is
public record anyway,” he said. He explained that even if the hackers got the
entire precinct finder database and added or deleted names, the Comelec has the
master list that could not be changed.
“Unless it would be
uploaded on a fake website, it might sow confusion. But as I said, the Comelec
still has the original master list,” said Aguto.
He also allayed doubts
that the hacking would cause disenfranchisement or deprive some voters of their
right to vote.
NBI and Comelec
officials held a briefing at the agency’s headquarters which included the submission of the website’s
activity log.
The NBI is trying to
identify and locate the hackers and find out if they downloaded or tampered any
data. Aguto gave assurance that the NBI and the Comelec are closely
coordinating with each other.
In the meantime, Aguto
advised the Comelec to review its website after the incident, check their
databases and strengthen its firewall, or a software program that prevents
hackers from infiltrating a website or a computer system. Even with government
officials’ pronouncements that there wouldn’t be cheating during the elections,
the public is skeptical with some saying even a candidate who is down in
surveys could come out as winner.
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