Low turnout, vote buying hound barangay polls | Inquirer

Low turnout, vote buying hound barangay polls

By: - Reporter /
/ 07:22 AM May 15, 2018

POLL CROWD Voters look for their polling precincts at Corazon Aquino Elementary School on Batasan Road, Quezon City. GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE

The barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) polls on Monday may be vastly different from national elections, but the same problems as with the big-time polls hounded them: vote buying, violence, names missing from voter rolls.

Acting Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair Al Parreño, however, said that there was no failure of elections because all the 177,574 polling precincts opened and conducted balloting.

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“We are able to open all precincts, 100 percent,” he said.

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The Comelec received reports, however, that some polling precincts did not open on time.

These included polling precincts in Mansalay town, Mindoro province; Tagoloan, Lanao del Norte; Turtle Island, Tawi-Tawi; and Bacolod-Kalawi, Masiu, and Binidayan, Lanao del Sur.

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Low voter turnout

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The Comelec had projected that the elections would draw up to 75-percent voter turnout, but there were widespread reports of thin crowds at polling centers.

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Parreño said the Comelec was still validating the turnout.

“Impression is good but we don’t have the number yet,” he said.

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Vice President Leni Robredo, who voted in her hometown, Naga City, described the turnout as disheartening.

“I noticed that there were not many people. There was almost no queue [and] there weren’t many voters,” Robredo told reporters.

The National Citizens’ Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) declined to issue an initial assessment, but observed that the “same old problems” marred the balloting, including names missing from the voter rolls, vote buying and vote selling.

Eric Alvia, Namfrel secretary general, said the group would release an assessment once the bulk of field reports had been collated, adding that “generally it’s been peaceful.”

Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Albayalde was at the Comelec briefing and he said election-related violence this year was down compared to the level during the 2013 barangay elections.

“In 2013, we had 33 deaths. This 2018, our confirmed cases that had something to do with the barangay and SK elections were 13,” Albayalde said.

As of Monday afternoon, policemen on the field had not communicated “untoward incidents,” he said.

‘Peaceful and orderly’

More than 20,000 officers were deployed to polling centers across Metro Manila, making the elections “generally peaceful and orderly,” according to Director Camilo Cascolan, National Capital Region Police Office chief.

The Department of Education (DepEd) also observed that the elections were generally peaceful.

Marcelo Bragado Jr., head of the DepEd Election Task Force Operations and Legal Support, reported that some teachers from Cupang National High School in Antipolo City, Rizal province, were slightly injured in a vehicular accident.

VOTE BUYING Policemen arrest Teofilo Banares Jr. for alleged vote buying in Taguig City. —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ

The teachers, however, still managed to serve as election volunteers, Bragado said.

Namfrel noted confusion over voter lists, as many voters had trouble finding their names on the rolls.

“Some of the names on the voter lists may have been shuffled to other clustered precincts, since the precincts, which were originally designed to accommodate four regular precincts, housed only two regular precincts,” Alvia said.

Vote buying

He said Namfrel advised voters to be patient in looking for their names on the lists, but many gave up.

“They ended up being disenfranchised and didn’t pursue it anymore,” he said.

The barangay and SK elections are nonpartisan, but many candidates reportedly behaved like members of political parties: They tried to influence the results of the balloting using their money.

A suspected vote buyer in Aklan was reportedly caught in the act of distributing envelopes containing cash and sample ballots on the eve of the elections, according to Comelec spokesperson James Jimenez.

He said authorities caught the suspect “in flagrante delicto.”

Jimenez, however, did not disclose the identity of the alleged vote buyer nor the candidate the suspect supported.

Apart from the arrest in Aklan, Jimenez said multiple reports of vote buying were also recorded across the country. The Comelec, he said, was still verifying the reports.

Albayalde said reports of vote buying came from many places, including Taguig City, Calauag and Lucena in Quezon, and Calamba in Laguna.

Election day campaigning

Despite Comelec warnings against campaigning on election day, campaign materials were distributed at polling places on Monday.

At Heneral Pio del Pilar Elementary School in Makati City, for instance, flyers and sample ballots carrying the name of a candidate littered the halls on the ground floor, just steps away from the polling precincts.

Jimenez said giving away sample ballots was considered campaigning, hence a violation of the election law.

Albayalde reported that more than a thousand policemen served as election tellers.

Areas that required the PNP to take over electoral boards were in Sulu, Basilan, Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Cotabato City and North Cotabato.

Under Comelec Resolution No. 10330, uniformed police officers may be deputized as Board of Election Teller members if prevailing circumstances require it.

SENIOR VOTER A senior citizen is carried to her precinct in a wheelchair on the upper floor of Ramon Magsaysay High School building on España Avenue in Manila. —EARVIN PERIAS

Such circumstances, the Comelec said, include threats to peace and order and that there are no other qualified, willing and available people to render election service in the affected areas.

Bring complaints

Comelec Commissioner Rowena Guanzon urged the public to file complaints against perpetrators of poll offenses or violence.

Guanzon cited a report from Bacolod City where children below 10 years were allegedly used to distribute campaign leaflets inside polling premises.

“This is one tactic of candidates that they think they can get away with. We have those leaflets and in my opinion the names that appear on those leaflets are liable under our election law,” she said.

“Complaints should be filed against them by any person, by any citizen or motu proprio by our election officer,” she added.

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Guanzon also said that there were reports of intimidation, including use of threats to force candidates to withdraw their candidacies. —With reports from Julie M. Aurelio, Matthew Reysio-Cruz, Jhesset O. Enano, Jovic Yee and Rey Anthony Ostria

TAGS: Al Parreno, barangay elections 2018, Comelec

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