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Showing posts with label COMELEC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COMELEC. Show all posts

LEAKED: COMELEC Chair Baustista Admitted to Duterte Won for 21 Million Votes, 16 Million Votes counted, 5 Million went to Roxas

Leaked- Rumors exposed Mar. 14, 2017 Duterte Got 21 Million Votes but 5 Million were deducted and moved to Roxas
Leaked- Rumors exposed Mar. 14, 2017 Duterte Got 21 Million Votes but 5 Million were deducted and moved to Roxas

By: Ramon Tulfo - @inquirerdotnetPhilippine Daily Inquirer / 12:01 AM March 14, 2017

My sources in Malacañang say Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair Andy Bautista visited the Palace recently and talked with President Digong.

What did Bautista want from the President since the elections are over and done with?

Hmm.

Did the conversation Bautista have with the President touch on rumors—allegedly spread by disgruntled Comelec insiders—that candidate Rodrigo Duterte garnered 21 million votes instead of 16 million?

Yes, the rumors are no longer important or worth discussing since Digong won anyway.

But they should not be disregarded for the sake of clean and honest elections in the future.

If the rumors that Digong got 21 million votes, instead of 16 million, have a grain of truth, then Bongbong Marcos probably won the vice presidency instead of Leni Robredo.

What about another rumor—still coming from inside the Comelec—that Bautista wants out as Comelec chair and is seeking another government post?

If this is true, was it taken up during Bautista’s secret and recent visit to the Palace?

A poster in one of the government offices I once visited reads:

Rules of the house.

Rule No. 1: The Boss is always right.

Rule No. 2: When in doubt, (whether he is right or wrong) refer to Rule No. 1.

Members of President Digong’s Cabinet should read the “rules of the house” over and over again until these are ingrained in their minds.

If memory serves me right, then President Joseph “Erap” Estrada once scolded a close adviser for insisting that he was wrong in one of his public pronouncements.

Erap told his adviser: “Mag-presidente ka muna bago mo pilitin na mali ako (You should become President first before you insist that I am wrong).”

And yet, the adviser didn’t announce to the public that Erap was wrong; he just told the President in private.

Contrary to what many think or believe, President Duterte listens to advice. But it must be given in a manner that neither humiliates nor embarrasses him in public. Otherwise, one risks stirring a hornet’s nest. To paraphrase Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, advice is seldom welcome because those who are perceived to need it the most like it the least.

The words above are not mine. They were written by Assistant Executive Jesus Melchor V. Quitain in his View from the Palace column in this paper’s opinion page yesterday.

Some more excerpts from Quitain’s column:

“At the risk of being repetitious, I say that advice must be given with care so that it does not irritate the President.

“The President need not be told twice. He listens, he remembers and he acts accordingly and appropriately. In rare instances, it may take some time for him to act, but act he will.

“That has always been his norm of conduct during the almost 16 years that I was privileged to work as a public official in Davao City under his leadership.”

I have reprinted some of Quitain’s words so people who missed his column yesterday would be able to read parts of it now. -Source:  Inquirer

Supreme Court APPROVED Bongbong Marcos VP Protest vs Robredo "Election Cheating"

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The Supreme Court (SC) has allowed the electoral protest of former senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr. against Vice President Leni Robredo to proceed, rejecting her plea to have the case dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Photo: philSTAR

SC gives green light for Bongbong protest


PHILSTAR: The Supreme Court (SC) has allowed the electoral protest of former senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr. against Vice President Leni Robredo to proceed, rejecting her plea to have the case dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

The SC, convened as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), said it has jurisdiction over the case as mandated by the Constitution.

In questioning PET jurisdiction over the electoral protest, Robredo said the matter should have been raised before Congress when it was still acting as the National Board of Canvassers.

Robredo had also sought the dismissal of the case for “being insufficient in form and substance.” She also cited failure of the Marcos camp to specify in detail her questionable acts or omissions.

But the PET pointed out that under Article VII, Section 4 of the Constitution pertaining to PET rules, “the tribunal shall be the sole judge of all contests relating to the election, returns and qualifications of the President or Vice President of the Philippines.”

In an eight-page resolution dated Jan. 24 but released only yesterday, the PET ruled that the sufficiency in form and substance of Marcos’ election protest is beyond question.

Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1

“On the matter of the sufficiency of the protest, the same [is] already beyond dispute. With the issuance of the summons, the Tribunal has found the protest to be sufficient in form and substance,” the ruling read.

“The protest contained narrations of ultimate facts on the alleged irregularities and anomalies in the contested clustered precincts, which the protestant needs to prove in due time,” the PET ruled.

Marcos filed the case last June 29 to contest the result of the vice presidential race allegedly won by Robredo through cheating. Marcos lost to Robredo by over 260,000 votes.

He asked the PET to annul about a million votes cast in Lanao del Sur, Basilan and Maguindanao. Robredo filed her response last August seeking the dismissal of the protest.

“We are hoping that with this resolution, there will be an end to all these delays and we can finally move forward. There is a need to ferret out the truth as to what really transpired during the vice presidential race last May,” Marcos spokesman Victor Rodriguez said. “We just want the truth to come out. It’s that simple.”

Procedure

Robredo’s camp brushed aside the PET ruling, saying it’s part of procedure.

Her lawyer Romulo Macalintal said the ruling does not prove Marcos’ allegations that last year’s automated election was rigged.

“It only means that the PET will proceed with the case. It does not in any way reflect the validity or merits of any allegation of fraud or irregularity contesting the proclamation of Vice President Leni Robredo,” Macalintal said.

“The case would still go through the usual tedious and lengthy process of revision and recount of the ballots. The ballot boxes and their contents would be retrieved from various provinces to be brought to the PET for the recount,” he added. He said PET simply declared the complaint of Marcos sufficient in form and in substance.

“It should be emphasized that the purpose of assailing the substance of Marcos’ protest is to verify its compliance with the strict requirements of the rules as applied by the Supreme Court in various election protest,” Macalintal said.

“Our aim is to expedite an early resolution of the case in order to avoid further speculations on its status,” he stressed.

Sen. Francis Pangilinan said the PET decision was a big disappointment. Pangilinan is president of the LP, which is chaired by Robredo.

He lamented that despite a sound counter-protest by Robredo, PET emphasized the “sufficiency” of Marcos’ protest and it’s “already beyond dispute.”

“However, we wonder how the protest was found to be sufficient in form and substance when, until now, no discrepancy in the election results have been presented?” Pangilinan said in a statement.

He said there appears to be “a disconnect between the supposed sufficiency in substance and the blatant lack of evidence to support their claims.”

He appealed to the PET to exercise the highest discretion in making decisions as any mistake or misjudgment could affect the integrity of the “greatest exercise of democracy,” which is the election.

The senator also urged Filipinos to remain vigilant and steadfast in protecting and supporting Robredo.

Not bothered


Meanwhile, Interior and Local Government Secretary Ismael Sueno said he is not bothered by reports that Marcos would eventually replace him.

Sueno said he has been going around the country to disseminate information about President Duterte’s anti-poverty programs and his plan to shift to federalism.

“We serve at the pleasure of the President. It is within his power, wisdom and discretion to appoint members of his Cabinet,” Sueno added.

“With the information being floated about the change at the helm of DILG, I take no offense whatsoever. It is business as usual for me as I dispense my duties and functions, with the blessings of President Duterte,” he explained.

Marcos was reportedly set to return to the political scene soon as the new DILG secretary.

Duterte is reportedly making preparations for Marcos’ entry into the Cabinet after the year-long ban on appointing losing candidates in the May 2016 elections.

As interior secretary, Marcos is expected to wield tremendous influence over local politicians as the DILG has jurisdiction over the Philippine National Police, Bureau of Fire Protection and Bureau of Jail Management. - With Janvic Mateo, Paolo Romero, Marvin Sy, Cecille Suerte Felipe, Perseus Echeminada from philSTAR
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