Mindanao: Bringing
all of this Out Into the Open' ; about the 'Disqualifications' and
about what some marginalized groups can get if they succeed in
representative government . {Mikey Arroyo now in a long list of
disqualifications for 2013 / expectable 70 M in so called 'pork barrel'
to each sitting Representative}. Very, Very Interesting and obviously
still Developing , TC Say's .
TC Say's ; this is the most interesting thing
happening anywhere in Elections and especially to every part of the
World that professes to have ' a Democratic' style of Government and
now the Success in the Philippines comes from their 'Bringing
all of this Out Into the Open' ; about the 'Disqualifications' and
about what some marginalized groups can get if they succeed in
representative government . {Mikey Arroyo now in a long list of
disqualifications for 2013 / expectable 70 M in so called 'pork barrel'
to each sitting Representative}. Very, Very Interesting and obviously
still Developing , TC Say's
According to Philippine Inquirer :
[?] Party-list representatives, like their
counterparts representing congressional districts, are each entitled to
P70 million in Priority Development Assistance Fund, a pork barrel,
every year for their pet projects.(?) [TC Say's ; in USA the 'Contenders' get some special Perks though most of the Populace have Never heard about what it is nor how to get some . Anyone might get a taste of something good but until everyone can 'Earn' what they need in life then Nothing is Fair in Elections . TC Said ]
{Following is ?Vital Info by Jocelyn Uy of Philippine Inquirer news. 01 November 2012
It’s all over for the group of Juan Miguel “Mikey” Arroyo, son of
former President and now Pampanga Representative Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo, which claims to represent security guards and tricycle
drivers, and an aspiring party-list group of journalists.
The Commission on Elections (Comelec) on Tuesday disqualified Ang
Galing Pinoy (AGP) and Alab ng Mamamahayag (Alam), bringing to 33 the
number of party-list groups it had so far dropped from the list of
organizations qualified to take part in the elections in May 2013.
Among the groups the Comelec earlier disqualified were Ako Bicol,
1st Consumer Alliance for Rural Energy and Association of Philippine
Electric Cooperatives, which have incumbent representatives in Congress.
No track record
In its ruling, the Comelec en banc officially dropped AGP,
currently represented in Congress by Mikey Arroyo, from the roster of
party-list groups reaccredited for the midterm elections because its
nominees had no track record in representing security guards and
drivers.
“They do not belong to the sector they want to represent and the
organization [in general] has no track record representing this sector,”
Election Commissioner Rene Sarmiento said in an interview.
The Comelec is purging groups from the party-list system
following criticisms that millionaires, scions of influential political
families and bogus organizations that pass themselves off as
representatives of marginalized sectors were using the party-list system
to gain seats in the House of Representatives.
Poll watchdog Kontra Daya earlier challenged the legitimacy of
AGP, questioning its set of nominees for next year’s elections
identified as Charlie Chua and Eder Dizon.
Lawyer, cosmetic surgeon
Kontra Daya noted that Chua was a member of the Sangguniang Bayan
of Lubao, Pampanga, and was a senior partner at the Chua and Munsayac
law firm. It said Chua was the “right-hand man” of Lubao Mayor Dennis
Pineda.
Dizon was identified as a cosmetic surgeon, a Pampanga-based
businessman who is president and owner of Suncove Corp., supposedly a
franchise holder of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office’s small
town lottery.
In August, Comelec Chair Sixto Brillantes Jr. gave hints of what
awaited the group after it failed to present evidence in a hearing of
its continuing compliance with the law on the party-list system.
P3M extort allegation
Sarmiento said that Alam’s allegations that the Comelec had tried
to extort P3 million from the group in exchange for the organization’s
accreditation played a major role in the final decision against the
group.
Alam claims to be a group of journalists that also represents
indigenous peoples, laborers, the urban poor, farmers and victims of
titling syndicates.
“They have no track record to show that
they have been really working for these multisectors they claim to
represent,” said Sarmiento, citing one of the reasons in the unanimous
decision issued by the Comelec en banc.
JR Rañeses
“Plus, the allegation about the bribery
[was a factor] because the motion for reconsideration said that there
was bribery committed but that was not proven during the meeting,” he
said.
In a motion for reconsideration filed last
month, Alam claimed that one of its members, Edwin Alcala, was
approached by a certain Rogelio “JR” Rañeses who supposedly offered an
assurance that the group’s accreditation would be approved in exchange
for P3 million.
Alam further alleged that Rañeses had
claimed that he had the authority of the Comelec’s second division,
currently presided over by Commissioner Lucenito Tagle with Commissioner
Elias Yusoph as member. But Alam did not name Tagle and Yusoph.
Absence of evidence
Alam filed the motion for reconsideration
in the Comelec en banc after the second division thumbed down its
request for accreditation for failing to meet the requirements of a
legitimate party-list organization.
The division’s decision was affirmed by the en banc in a unanimous vote, Sarmiento said.
“The allegations were a factor. It doesn’t
speak well of the organization to make a series of allegation of bribery
and to state openly that there is no evidence,” he said.
Alam was one of the 165 new groups seeking accreditation from the Comelec so it could participate in the party-list elections.
A total of 289 groups have filed applications for accreditation.
Of the 33 groups the Comelec has disqualified so far, 29 are existing party-list organizations.
Under the Constitution, 20 percent of the seats in the House of Representatives are reserved for party-list groups.
Party-list representatives, like their
counterparts representing congressional districts, are each entitled to
P70 million in Priority Development Assistance Fund, a pork barrel,
every year for their pet projects.} JU
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