E-Day ‘generally peaceful’ but marred by ‘usual problems’

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QUEZON CITY – Voters scrambled looking for their names and their precincts on Monday, election day, in schools that had been turned temporarily into virtual billboards by local and national candidates.

While the elections appeared generally peaceful and orderly so far, there were still the usual problems and complaints.

The entire perimeter fence of the Quezon City High School was strewn with campaign posters. Other voters still gamely posed showing their fans printed with the faces and names of candidates.

Curiously, a long queue of people was observed snaking into a certain house at least a hundred meters away from the polling center.

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Persons with disability (PWDs) had a hard time voting because there was not a single assistant manning the supposed PWD holding area at the Quezon City High School, Scout Ybardolaza St., this city.

Stroke survivor Ed Lacanlae, 60 years old, Scout Limbaga said he was disappointed when he arrived at the polling precinct at 8am and found out there was no one to assist him since he could not climb the flight of stairs in his condition.

“Pagdating ko rito ni isang assistant wala man lang. Dapat meron,” Lacanlae lamented. He claimed he was one of the authors who wrote the department memorandum on PWD voting having worked at the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG).

He said he even witnessed one senior citizen who opted to go home without voting because of the same predicament.

Another stroke survivor, Selerina Mendoza, 56 years old, Scout Fuentebella Ext., complained that “assistants wearing Commission on Elections shirts” did not assist her even when her precinct is on the second floor of the building.

“Ang husband ko ang naglilibot para hanapin kung saang presinto ako ngayon boboto,” Mendoza said.

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The stars bankroll elections, too

WHICH CELEBRITIES from the glitzy world of movies, music, and sports have made donations to the candidates in the last five elections?

The “Mega Star”, the “Star for All Seasons”, and the “Queen of All Media” — they count among the pool of celebrities who have helped bankroll the campaign of national candidates and the major political parties in the last five national and midterm elections since 1998.

Kris Aquino, “Queen of All Media”, had donated P20 million and P15 million to her brother Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III when he ran for senator in 2007, and for president in 2010, respectively. Kris had also contributed P5 million to the Liberal Party and P10 million to party-list group Akbayan in the 2010 elections.

“Mega Star” Sharon Cuneta, meanwhile, has twice supported the campaign of her husband, Senator Francis ‘Kiko’ Pangilinan. In 2001, Sharon, along with mother Elaine (sister of actress Helen Gamboa) donated P3 million each to Pangilinan. In 2007, Sharon contributed P2 million for Kiko’s re-election bid.

In the 2001 elections, “Star for All Seasons” Vilma Santos gave P5 million to her husband Senator Ralph Recto’s campaign.

In 2010, a donor from Koronadal City who is a namesake of retired professional basketball player Kenneth Duremdes made a P3-million donation to Senator Pia Cayetano’s campaign.

Also in 2010, donors who are namesakes of musicians Vincent Frederick Dancel (Twisted Halo/Peryodiko) and Kristina G. Dancel (Fatal Posporos/Cambio/Duster) gave P250,000 each to the campaign of Akbayan.

Singer Imelda Papin contributed P5,000 to Bangon Pilipinas, the party of presidential candidate Eddie C. Villanueva in 2010.

For more information about the donors to the candidates in the last five elections, check out PCIJ’s MoneyPolitics Online.

Quick Quiz: Which senator reports an unchanged net worth in 20 yrs?

NOT ANY POORER OR RICHER since 1993?

Which senator of the 15th Congress has not reported any increase or decrease in wealth from 20 years ago?

a. Miriam Defensor-Santiago
b. Manuel M. Lapid
c. Joker P. Arroyo
d. Panfilo M. Lacson

Unlike many of his colleagues, Senator Joker P. Arroyo’s net worth has remained unchanged in all the Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth (SALN) that he has filed in the last two decades.

For some inexplicable reasons, Arroyo said his wealth did not rise or fall, despite his long years in politics and the growth in the national economy.

His SALN for 1993, the earliest copy that the PCIJ has on file, listed his net worth at P11.05 million.

Since then, Arroyo has been declaring the same amount until 2011, according to his latest SALN that PCIJ has on file.

See the SALNs and wealth timeline of Arroyo and the other senators in PCIJ’s MoneyPolitics Online.

By the Numbers: P50 vs P100M

HOW MUCH have people donated to get candidates elected? What was the upper limit? What was the lower limit?

Fifty pesos was the lowest amount in cash donation ever that was reported to the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

This was received by candidate Nicanor Jesus ‘Nicky’ Perlas III, who ran for president in 2010, from a donor named “Seth Jordan”.

It was also in 2010, however, when presidential candidate Benigno Simeon C. Aquino III and the Lakas-Kampi-CMD party received the highest amount of donation ever reported to Comelec.

Aquino received P100 million from cousin and businessman Antonio ‘Tonyboy’ Cojuangco.

Lakas-Kampi-CMD received P100 million in two tranches from businessman Emmanuel ‘Noel’ Oñate, who acquired AirAsia Airlines and renamed it Asian Spirit (now Zest Airways) in 1995, during the administration of President Fidel V. Ramos, Lakas-Kampi-CMD chairman emeritus.

For more information on campaign donors, browse PCIJ’s MoneyPolitics.

Lanao Sur: Zero incident so far in seat of ‘Hello, Garci’ scandal

MARAWI CITY — Election reform activists and watchdogs, and election officials have expressed hope that the unusual calm in Lanao del Sur today, eve of election day, will not be the calm before the storm.

As of 4 pm Sunday, not a single election-related incident has been monitored by the Citizens’ Coalition for Electoral Reforms in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (C-CARE), except for an incident in Masiu town where supporters of a candidate for mayor tried to bar the transport of PCOS (Precinct Count Optical Scan) machines into one village.

Even then, no violent incident ensued.

On Friday, a woman in Marantao was wounded in a drive-by shooting but election monitors deployed in the town said that it was related to a rido case.

At the C-CARE election monitoring center, the incident tally sheets for 38 towns and one city in Lanao del Sur are empty. Only the Masiu incident was listed.

“We hope this trend continues until the end of the electoral exercise on Monday,” said women activist Samira Gutoc-Tomawis, a sectoral member of the Regional Legislative Assembly of the ARMM.

Gutoc-Tomawis credits the enhanced presence of military and police forces in the province for the unusual calm in the place that has been tagged among the areas of security concern in relation to Monday’s exercise.

C-CARE’s Salic Ibrahim told the Inquirer that five towns are the subject of intense security focus for the heated tension arising from the political contest. These are Kapai, Tugaya, Sultan Dumalondong, Lumbaca-Unayan and Butig.

Tensions rose in Butig after the reported presence of armed men in several areas of the town on Saturday, May 11.

The five towns are the same areas where security became a problem during the May 2010 general elections.

Violence and fraud had in past elections marred elections in Lanao del Sur, earning the province monicker of being “the cheating capital of the Philippines” following the “Hello, Garci” scandal where a top election official oversaw the rigging of the province’s presidential vote in 2004.

At the provincial capitol, the dispatch of election forms to the province’s 39 towns was very orderly, in contrast to previous periods when the atmosphered resembled that of a marketplace. The queuing for the forms was done per muncipality and supervised by policemen and soldiers.

By mid-afternoon, a total of 18 towns had already claimed the election paraphernalia. One concern related to the transport of the materials is the heavy rains that washed the province around late afternoon, expectedly delaying travel to the far-flung towns.

Another unusual feature of the elections here is the muted buzz of the vote-buying and vote-selling frenzy.

“This could be because many politicians are limiting spending owing to their losses in the investment scams,” according to Gutoc-Tomawis.

The province is ‘ground zero’ of the Coco investment scam that went bust middle of last year. This was followed by a similar racket, Aman Futures that also victimized many Maranao families.

However, in towns where narco-politics is believed to be present, by many accounts vote-buying remains as rampant as ever. In Marantao and Maguing towns, elections monitors have documented vote-buy offers in the thousands of pesos per voter.

In a bid to enter polling centers with the same privilege as accrredited poll monitors, election watchdog groups said some parties have resorted to “faking” their uniforms.

Zeny Ibrahim of C-CARE said they noticed that the design of the group’s T-shirts issued to its field monitors have been copied and worn by persons identified as partisan campaigners.