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Make your voice heard

03/15/07

Posted under Announcements

UPDATE: Editor’s note: Readers who previously registered for the Eleksyon 2007 blog no longer need to sign up again for the Philippine Elections blog, and may continue using their existing usernames and passwords.

WHY should you let the candidates do all the talking?

Make your voice heard. With the launch of the Eleksyon 2007 Philippine Elections Blog, we are reserving virtual space for you to tell the whole world what you think are the important issues that should decide the outcome of the Philippine elections in May 2010.

What do you think of the candidates? Which issues should be tackled? How can we improve our ongoing coverage of Eleksyon 2007? Listen to our Eleksyon 2007 podcasts, and tell us which questions we should ask candidates in future sessions, or what points you would like them to expound on in future articles. We don’t want to just read your feedback. We want to give you the opportunity to keep the conversation going, not just by posting comments but also by writing your own entries on this blog.

To post Philippine Elections Eleksyon 2007-related entries here, you’ll have to register and create a user profile. Please don’t give out your username and password to other people. If you’d like to use the WYSIWYG Visual Editor when writing your blog posts, don’t forget to select this option in your user profile page.

All blog posts you write will not be published immediately but will instead be saved as drafts and subject to moderation. We hope you’ll understand our need to moderate posts, so please keep the conversation meaningful and your language clean. We hope you’ll respect the opinions of others, just as you expect others to respect what you think.

We’ll also feature Philippine election-related posts in the blogosphere and other online resources, so if you have an election blog or site, post a comment here so we can pay a visit.

Now tell us what you think.

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120 Responses to “Make your voice heard”

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  1. 110
    clipmaster Says:

    tapos na election, local, national eh 8-2-2 or 7-3-2, 12th spot na lang hindi pa sigurado sa senador…

    ano na gagawin ng taong bayan……

    bantayan ang mga nanalong politico kung tutuparin nila ang kanilang mga pangako….

    susme, bakit kailangan pang bantayan parang bata, yung mga anak ko nga hindi ko na binabantayan…….

    labo-labo na para sa speakership ng lower house…… puro naman daw kaalyado ni gloria…..

    eh pati rin naman sa senado eh labo-labo din ang opposition para sa senate president….

    hay wala kang tulak kabigin …. mapa administration o opposition… iisa ang kulay…. basta kapangyarihan…. walang kakampi o kasama….

    tandaan, lahat yan eh nanalo kasi ibinoto natin….. walang sisihan….

    ipagtanggol, ipaglaban ang mga ibinoto ninyo…… baka bukas, mamya dismayado na kayo sa kanyang gawa at asal…. nadengoy pala kayo…..

    akala mo ginto…. punong puno ka ng pag asa na ikaw uunlad…. yon pala ang idol mo ay isang tanso…. natanso ka ng kanyang mga matatamis ng pangako….

    umaray ka na lang ng walang nakakakita… mag antay… mag antay sa susunod na election….

    matuto ka sanang kumilatis….. para sa darating na election ay hindi ka matanga, maluko ng mga politico manloloko……

    amen…. amen

  2. 109
    gerry Says:

    The blogs have been limited to oust GMA, impeach GMA, GMA nag daya, etc.,etc., etc . But NOTHING about how we can make this country move again. The premise is always GET GMA out and things will be ok. That was the same premise we had when we ousted Marcos. Life after Marcos will be better. Did it become better? No! Its even worse now. Not because of only GMA but because we continue to gripe, gripe and gripe and do nothing.

    What do we do then?

    One thing i have been saying in all these blogs is: Let those who steal, cheat, etc., be ACCOUNTABLE! Lets punish them HARSHLY! Lets not treat them like kids but just forgiving and setting examples for all to follow: steal, cheat., etc.

    Lets EXTERMINATE those that are guilty. Set up courts that would DECIDED asap, not 5, 10 years after.

    It was the best chance we had under Marcos, with our Revolutionary status: BEHEADED the families of the cronies who did NOT return the loots they stole. We could start with their children, and grand children in the Luneta until they returned those that they stole. We could have started with the Romauldezes. That would have sent a strong message for those “FUTURE” thieves. But no, what did we do? We voted IMEE, BONG-BONG, DE VENECIA, and most cronies into office.

    NAKAKAHIYA! So what followed was the same pattern of stealing, cheating, etc.

    For so long as we continue to be CHRISTIAN daw, we will end up the LAUGHING stocks of the world, of Asia as the world’s most corrupt CATHOLIC country!

    We oust GMA, more corruption will follow because those that come into power will be begin stealing from scratch. Why? Because they know they will be able to get away from it. And there will be more Jose Velarde’s and Jose Pidal’s…

    It will never end. We can argue ourselves until the next elections, we can blame this and that person, him and her, but without making people - those in power ACCOUNTABLE, we will continue to live in this rut - looking pathetic to the rest of the world.

  3. 108
    maria Says:

    masyado namang bias reporting nyo dito sa inquirer. masyado ninyong pinalalabas na napakabuting tao ni grace padaca. nais kong ipaalam sa lahat ng tagasubaybay ng diyaryong ito ang tunay na ugali at panunungkulan ni grace padaca. ang alam ng mga tao siya ay mabait at mapagmahal na ina ng aming probinsiya ngunit puro kabaliktaran ang mga iyon. hindi nyo ba alam na mahirap lapitan yan si grace lalo na ang mga mahihirap. kailangan pang magpaschedule kung hihingi ka ng tulong, papaano kung life and death ang sitwasyon edi mamamataw nalang dilat ang mata ang mga taong nangangailangan ng tulong. hirap magpapirma sa kanya at lagi pang bugnutin. mabait siya pagnakaharap ang media pero pag wala ang media daig pa niya ang leon kung magalit sa mga empleyado niya kahit ipagtanong nyo pa sa mga empleyado ng kapitolyo. magaling magnakaw yang si grace. akalain mong gamitin ang intelligence fund ng isabela capitol para sa pangsariling kapakanan niya. at ang questionable dito ay mga executive assistant pa niya mismo ang nagcash advance ng milyon milyong pondo isa na dito si alma ang kanyang kapatid. kaliwat kanang reimbersement pati isang supot ng kendi, sibuyas 100 php worth of call card eh nirereimberse pa nakakahiya pangsariling gamit napakaliit na bagay kukunin pa sa gobyerno. netong neto si grace at ang kanyang pamilya simula ng naging gobernador na siya. paki imbestigahan ang asset ni padaca mga kapatid niya sapagkat kitang kita sa mga luho ng mga pamumuhay nila ngayon mga damit na gamit malaki ang pinagbago. pera ng mamamayang isabelino ang ginagamit nila sa luho nila= mahiya naman kayo grace padaca. kapal ng mukha ninyo. wag mong gamitin ang pagka lumpo mo upang pagtakpan ang mga kabulukan mo sa kapitolyo at para kaawaan ka ng mga tao. magising kayo mga isabelino wag magbulagbulagan. ginagamit lang ni padaca ang kanyang kapansanan. isa siyang magnanakaw kahit imbistigahan nyo pa. sana magising na kayong mga isabelino at itong inquirer maging patas sana kayo sa pagkomento wag pera lang ang tignan kungdi pati kapakanan ng mga mamamayan na lubos na nagtitiwala sa inyo. sana wag magpagamit sapagkat kayong mga media nalang ang natitirang institusyon na aming pinagkakatiwalaan, sana wag na kayong sumali sa kurap nating gobyerno. salamat

    ********maria************

  4. 107
    abegail tutuo Says:

    this is my comments in yesterdays election report of cebu daily News by V.P. Vamenta informing the public about the election winners in different province and municipalities. I object to the report that grace padaca won the gobernatorial race in the province of isabela. as far as i’m concern there were no proclamation yet for governor in the province of isabela. this report is misleading the people the truth about the election result. pls be fair in your report. any false report will destroy the credibility of this news organization.
    ****abegail*******

  5. 106
    Algamar A Latiph Says:

    The Root Cause of Electoral Fraud, Violence and Vote Vending in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao

    By: Atty. Algamar A. Latiph

    Once again we witnessed the nasty politics of violence and flood of allegations of vote rigging in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. What has been largely ignored is the region’s prevailing poverty, political and socioecomic inequalities where electoral fraud and violence are rooted. United Nations’ official Topfler Klaus said that “when people are denied access to clean water and air to meet their basic human needs, we see rise of poverty, ill-health and a sense of hopelessness. Desperate people can resort to desperate solutions.�

    Being consistently listed in the “Bottom 10 (2003)� of the Philippine Human Development Report 2005, the five provinces of ARMM confirmed their sorry state of inequalities and ebbing human development. They occupy PHDR’s “Bottom 10� in its category of the: Most Poor Provinces; Human Development Index (where Basilan, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi are in the lowest ranking); Per Capita Income (except Lanao del Sur); Basic Enrollment (except Tawi-Tawi), and; Gender Development Index (except Lanao del Sur).

    As regards life expectancy, they placed at the lowest with Tawi-Tawi at 51.2 years (PHDR 2005). The National Anti-Poverty Commission’s Summaries of the 40 Poorest of the Poor Municipalities disclosed that 65% of the municipalities are from ARMM of which three are among the 13 municipalities where election failed on May 14, 2007. The NAPC’s database, likewise, revealed that region’s 351,230 households have no access to water, this is equivalent to one-third of its registered voters.

    These inequalities result to 1.8 million migrants all over the country in search of opportunities. Beyond the region’s boundaries, discrimination and exclusion confront Muslims thereby narrowing their choices. Job hiring, school admission, house leasing among others are just few instances of discrimination. Out of the 663 inmates in Camp Karingal’s Women Jail Dormitory Facility, 94 inmates come from ARMM (2005 data from the Muslim Legal Assistant Foundation). This is 14% of the jail’s population which is sharply disproportionate with the Muslims’ less than 2% population in National Capital Region. None of the inmates finished secondary school; they found themselves living in slum areas and all are unemployed.

    The perception of the 47% of the Filipinos is that Muslims are terrorist/extremists according to the Pulse Asia Ulat ng Bayan March 2005. It also found that 55% believed that Muslims are prone to run “amok� and about 33% to 44% have anti-Muslim bias. It is surprising however that only 14% of the respondents had experience interaction with Muslims while 58% based their judgment from media. It show how media’s negative portrayal of Muslims unduly affect stereotyping. In the later part of the election candidates’ theatrics in the media highlighted their stereotyping, and derision of the region’s people as cheaters with their culture of violence.

    The region has experienced centuries of violent and painful history in defending their freedom from foreign domination. The 20th century was marred by exhaustion from struggle from the systematic policy of driving them out of their fertile ancestral land in which they are now a minority. The densely militarized region is host to 1.38 Million internally displaced persons brought about by armed conflict from 2000 to 2004. Since 1971, the armed conflict claimed 120,000 lives.

    As a body politic, ARMM meets the profile of a failed region where it did not only breed electoral violence but, to an extreme, a terrorist group�Abu Sayyaf Group. The current political violence is a sad reality of Moro versus Moro. It is a violence devoid of any political ideologue neither personal animosity. Owing to the absence of choices within the region, politicians are not motivated by power and prestige but a control of the limited wealth in the local units or districts�the Internal Revenue Allotment or Pork Barrel Fund. A victory in election will secure a three-year uninterrupted flow of millions of money. Politicians spend millions to buy votes since return-of-investment is assured. The scenario in the region’s politics is that the cost of violence is worth an investment. That is the reason that politicians’ drive to ensure victory and the sense of losing the election increase political tensions and, at times, result to bloodshed.

    In abstract, a ballot is more than a piece of paper; it is a paper where the highest expression people’s supremacy in governance is cast. But this exists only in law books. Rather the ballot is a material object treated as property which can be sold at the highest bidder or can be used as leverage in accessing basic human subsistence. In ARMM the ballot has yet to serve its constitutional utility of building a “just and humane society.� Though it lost its altruistic value, the ballot is not a meaningless paper but a commodity that can yield money worth more than the expected delivery of public goods and services.

    In The End of History and the Last Man, Francis Fukuyama described Philippines as “masks [by] enormous disparities in wealth, prestige, status, and power, which these elites can use to control the democratic process.� The region’s political and socioeconomic inequalities had given birth to political slavery where political dynasty gestated and, in exceptional cases, political warlordism evolved. In this system, open political participation is systematically eliminated denying the possibility of equal access to public office in order to institutionalize political monopoly. It is a process of selection among members of the family instead of free election. It is based on ones’ influence in the family rather than platform of government. Qualification, competency and character play no role. Public accountability succumbs to bloodline loyalty.

    Patronage politics thrived because of the political symbiotic-dependency between the politicians and the poverty-stricken majority. The former provide for basic human subsistence in exchange of the latter’s continued patronage. Supporters will be in a three-year payroll that would somehow satisfy basic human needs for job, food and health. Being of limited choice, one has no sufficient freedom to break the bond. Freedom and liberty is elusive to men with empty stomach whose faculties are too infirm to exercise freewill. A different scenario however exists in the case of political warlordism where fear and reign of terror is employed to assure political submission; the leverage of money-politics plays a minimal role. The will of the people is snatched by the barrel of the gun.

    Family kinship contributes to the perpetuation of warlordism where family members serve as foot soldiers. More often than not, the history of rido (clan feud) among the candidates fuels electoral violence. This is the underlying cause on the failure of election in the 13 municipalities in Lanao del Sur on May 14, 2007. Likewise, the technical aspect of the election aids dynasty and warlordism in preserving their political domination. Instead of modern electronic voting which is free from human intervention what is used is the Jurassic process of paper voting on the sheets of ballots, election returns, statement of votes, and certificate of canvass which can be physically hijacked and doctored. The current process gives election staff a wider latitude of discretion making it susceptible to bribery and intimidation.

    In terms of representation, political opportunities are reserved for the few elites. Philippines is “a society dominated by social elite, most often of large landowners, who are neither tolerant of other classes nor efficient entrepreneurs,� according to Francis Fukuyama. This is a bitter fact but its degree of impact is twice as worst in the ARMM.

    More than three quarters of the members of the House of Representative belong to political dynasty; the Senate is not an exception. While the Lower House is equalized by geographical representation, Senate’s (including the Senators-elect) balance of power is iniquitously tilted toward imperial Manila where half come from NCR (12% of national population) and each provinces of Cavite, Sorsogon, Iloilo, and Zambales have two. The ARMM which has 10% of the population has yet to have its Senator for a decade and without Sen. Pimentel, Mindanao would not have any representation.

    It may be argued that this unequal representation is tempered by the creation of ARMM. This is far from truth. The Office of the Regional Governor, has yet to be freely elected. At present, it is Malacanang anointment. Since its creation, elections were postponed eight times; and there were eight instances where ARMM officials’ term of offices were extended by the Congress without election. Apart from this, the Southern Philippines Development Authority was inactivated by virtue of Executive Order No. 149 for almost five years, it was activated only few months ago.

    It seemed that the root causes of the fraud and violence are not appealing to politicians as well as the media that it rarely have their equal attention. The region gets that extraordinary interest only when there is blood-letting during election and armed conflict. In this election the question on Moro Problem and inequalities have been hardly taken seriously. What was underscored in the media is the issue on who will control Congress rather than what Congress can do to the failing region. This political timidity is not surprising. Congress is dominated by northern politics, it members’ approach and perception to the region’s inequity is subjective than structural. “Dominant groups tend to be unaware of social inequalities… [they] tended to see person-related causes of war [in this case political violence], while non-dominant Muslims prioritized structural causes of the conflict.� (Montiel, C.J. and Macapagal, E.J., Effects of Social Position on Societal Attributions of
    an Asymmetric Conflict, Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 43, No. 2, 2006, pp. 219-227).

    When job, health care, education, food and water, and physical security are wanting people are shut of choices. The hapless marginalized people become vulnerable and exposed to exploitation aggravated by government’s impotence to guarantee human security. Nobel laureate W.A. Lewis in his Theory of Economics pointed out that increase in per capita income “gives a man greater control of his environment, and thereby increases his freedom.� But the State has failed to create a condition in which human development and security can be realized; where people choices and opportunities are much wider and where they could have greater control of their environment. Today’s politics however is not that encouraging: it is built on a high wall of intense and uncompromising political antagonism where constructive political cooperation is jettisoned.

    It is Congress’ constitutional duty to dismantle dynasty. Unfortunately conflict of interest exist, Congress itself is ruled by different species of political dynasties. Legislative measures to make IRA and Pork Barrel spending more accountable and transparent are far from its agenda. International development agencies, who are pouring billions of pesos in ARMM, are not that helpful in making the country and other institutions more accountable on fund they received to alleviate the region’s inequality. It is disturbing on how the visible political warlords exist in a society claiming to be governed by rule of law. It will not require a legislation to disarm private armies, with the military might of the State it is sufficient to destroy their existence. With these bleak scenarios and the political oblivion on the issues concerning the Bangsamoro, the ruling dynasties and warlords, therefore, will flourish while the cycle of electoral fraud, violence, and vending will
    persist.

    Be it stressed here that the region’s human development’s figures is not statistically improbable. It confirmed that Bangsamoro, for decades, has been cheated and rigged of their right to live with human dignity.

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