The Liberal Party (LP) is inviting rival parties to form a movement
that would protect the ballot and allay fears the country’s first
automated election on May 10 has been designed to fail.
But the LP has not discussed this offer with Sen. Manuel Villar,
standard-bearer of the Nacionalista Party (NP) and strongest rival of LP
presidential candidate Benigno Aquino III, said Avelino Cruz Jr., who
chairs the Bantay Balota Movement.
Cruz, a former defense secretary and an Aquino supporter, said on
Sunday that the Catholic Church, which has formed a movement to monitor
the elections, would likely discuss the campaign with Villar.
Cruz was in Baguio City on Sunday with Florencio Abad Jr., LP
campaign manager, to organize party members into a local Bantay Balota
chapter.
In Lucena City, Villar said his party would do everything that it
could to thwart attempts to sabotage the elections.
“We’ve started to train watchers and lawyers as well as colleagues on
the automated elections. We are doing everything that we could to stop
any attempt to disrupt the elections,” Villar told reporters on Sunday
on the sidelines of the NP’s free concert rally.
Work together
Villar also urged other political parties and organizations to do the
same and expressed hope that all could work together to have clean and
honest elections.
Villar reiterated his call for the public to remain vigilant amid
fears that the automated elections would fail.
Certain quarters have warned that a failure of elections in which no
winner in the presidential election is proclaimed by June 30, the last
day of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in office, could lead to a
military takeover.
They said glitches in the automated counting machines and possible
massive power outages, among other things, could delay the release of
election results.
Summon prophets of doom
An election lawyer, however, has suggested that the Commission on
Elections (Comelec) summon and challenge the “prophets of doom,” who
speak ill of the automated polls.
Romulo Macalintal, Ms Arroyo’s election lawyer, said that if the
naysayers failed to support their claims, the Comelec could file charges
against them.
Macalintal is one of three election lawyers who will appear in a TV
commercial in which they will proclaim their support for the automated
elections to help boost the public’s confidence in the exercise. The
others are Sixto Brillantes and George Garcia.
“We believe that we should give automation a chance,” Macalintal told
reporters.
The Comelec has intensified its campaign to educate voters about the
new system, conducting demonstrations on how the ballot machine works
even in far-flung communities.
Voters will be using for the first time a machine called the Precinct
Count Optical Scan (PCOS) into which completed ballots are fed and
scanned. Results are expected within 2 hours at the local level and 36
hours at the national level.
Subpoena naysayers
Macalintal also urged the Comelec to subpoena naysayers and ask them
to back up their statements.
If there is evidence, the Comelec can still lay down additional
measures to address the causes of a possible failure of elections. But
if there is none, the Comelec should cite these people in contempt or
file election cases against them, Macalintal added.
The Omnibus Election Code punishes those who make false information
that could affect the elections, he pointed out.
Election Commissioner Gregorio Larrazabal said the poll body en banc
had yet to discuss Macalintal’s proposal, but he welcomed the idea.
Glitches, bugs
In Dagupan City, a senatorial candidate of the Pwersa ng Masang
Pilipino said automation could encounter glitches and elections could
fail.
Jose de Venecia III, the man who blew the whistle on alleged
anomalies in a government broadband contract with a Chinese firm, said
even a simple program for a bank took him a year to perfect.
“The same thing would happen [in the program for the voting
machines]. There will be bugs,” De Venecia, son of Pangasinan Rep. Jose
de Venecia Jr., told reporters Monday.
Open source code
The young De Venecia said there was a need to know the source code of
the program that runs the election machines. The code is the heart of
the software that gives instructions to the computer.
“We hope the election program is tested first, for example, in Metro
Manila. If there are problems, these could be remedied [immediately],”
he said.
While De Venecia said he was one of the few people who understood the
repercussions of using an untested computer program, he joined the
senatorial race “on a leap of faith.”
This is because it is easy to cheat in automated elections, according
to De Venecia.
Cruz said the LP had asked the Comelec to fulfill its obligation to
open up the source code of the PCOS machines for inspection by political
parties.
When the Comelec relented, the LP could not access every detail about
the source code given the tight restrictions which the poll body
enforced, Cruz said.
Give automation a chance
Amid the apprehensions, a Catholic bishop in Southern Mindanao has
urged voters give automated elections a chance, saying a fast and smooth
election “has been a long-time dream of Filipinos.”
“For a long time, we have been hoping for a fast election where we
could right away determine the will of the people,” Bishop Wilfredo
Manlapaz of the Tagum diocese told a congregation of over a thousand
during the signing of a peace covenant by local candidates at Christ the
King Cathedral here on March 21.
Manlapaz said automation “could [contribute to the holding of] a
violent-free, clean and credible election.”
Lawyer Marlon Casquejo, assistant Davao regional elections chief,
said the Comelec was on track in its education and information campaign.
“Even the education campaigns at the GKKs (Gagmay’ng Kristohanong
Katilingban or Basic Ecclesial Communities) are very much welcome,”
Casquejo said, adding the commission “is now 90 percent ready.”
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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