KANGAROO COURT
ZOMBIE PROTEST
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:08 AM October 24,
2019
So it IS true: In the matter of the election
protest defeated vice presidential candidate Ferdinand Marcos Jr. lodged against
Vice President Leni Robredo, and for which the Supreme Court, sitting as the
Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), undertook a lengthy manual recount of
votes in three provinces that Marcos said would “best exemplify” the supposed
fraud that robbed him of victory in the 2016 elections, the results proved, in
fact, what Robredo’s camp had been saying all along — that she won fair and
square, and that Marcos’ allegations are completely baseless.
For far too long, Robredo’s defense, and her
insistence that the PET release the results of the pilot recount promptly
because it would vindicate her position and clear the air, had stayed in the
realm of conjecture, as the PET appeared to be taking its own sweet time
resolving the suit.
But last week, it finally authorized the release of
the report on the recount, and its findings couldn’t be more crystal-clear:
“Thus, based on the final tally after revision and appreciation of the votes in
the pilot provinces, protestee Robredo maintained, as in fact she increased,
her lead with 14,436,337 votes over protestant Marcos who obtained 14,157,771
votes. After the revision and appreciation, the lead of protestee Robredo
increased from 263,473 to 278,566,” said the PET’s resolution dated Oct. 15,
2019.
In other words, Marcos lost. He himself chose the three provinces — Camarines Sur,
Negros Oriental and Iloilo — that he claimed would conclusively demonstrate his
allegations of fraud.
That didn’t pan out in his favor. This result should have led to the outright
dismissal of the protest. And yet, in a mystifying twist, the PET voted 11-2 to merely release the
recount results, and asked both camps to comment within 20 days on the
results favoring Robredo.
The majority of the justices cited “due process” in
directing both camps to submit their comments, so they could “confidently and
judiciously” rule on the three-year-old election protest.
But for the dissenting justices Alfredo Benjamin
Caguioa and Antonio Carpio, due process has already been followed as provided
by Rule 65 of the 2010 PET rules, which mandated that if the protestant
(Marcos) failed to show substantial recovery in the pilot provinces, “the
protest may forthwith be dismissed, without further consideration of the other
provinces mentioned in the protest.”
“The Tribunal invested countless number of hours
following the mandate of Rule 65,” argued Caguioa. “The Tribunal retrieved
thousands of ballot boxes from three provinces, revised millions of ballots,
and ruled on each and every objection and claim of the parties on these
millions of ballots. After all these, the Tribunal eventually arrived at a
final tally.”
“Numbers do not hold any feelings or political
leanings,” he added. “Numbers do not lie. They state things simply as they are.
And when the numbers reveal a definite conclusion, the Tribunal would do a
disservice to the public and to the nation not to heed the conclusion they
provide.”
That unavoidable conclusion, based on the
painstaking recount they had done, was that “the figures here confirm that
protestee (Robredo) indeed won by the slimmest of margins.” As for the
majority’s decision to prolong the process by kicking the moment of reckoning
down the road: “Directing the parties to comment on any matter or to conduct
any further proceedings achieves no purpose. These are all an exercise in
futility… The Tribunal cannot accommodate protestant at the expense of
violating its own rules.”
That is precisely what the PET appears to be doing
— bending over backward to accommodate
Marcos and keep his zombie protest
alive. Now the defeated candidate, desperate to overturn Robredo’s lead in
one blow, wants the PET to agree on a more drastic action: essentially nullify
the election results in certain provinces in the Autonomous Region in Muslim
Mindanao, allegedly because these were marred by terrorism and fraud.
Carpio was having none of that ploy. “(T)o allow
(Marcos) to designate more than three pilot provinces as he now demands, is to
change the Rules in the middle of the proceedings to accommodate him,” he
warned, in presumably his last major dissent in the Court before his retirement
this week. “The last thing that this Tribunal should do is to change its rules
in midstream to accommodate a party who has failed to comply with what Rule 65
of the 2010 PET Rules expressly requires.”
And the coup de grace: “(Marcos) will be playing
with the Rules of the Tribunal and in the process will make a mockery of the
election process.”
This entire suit has been, from the start, an
exercise in mockery — a nuisance complaint by a self-entitled candidate who
thought the vice presidency was his for the taking given his wily alliance with
the leading presidential candidate. But that was not to be, and the recount he
had instigated now reaffirms the election result: Marcos Jr. was not cheated,
he simply lost.
We need to take steps to depoliticize the Supreme
Court, to the extent that is at all possible. At least one prospective step is
to take the power of appointment out of the hands of the president and to assign the decision to a multisectoral body consisting of representatives who are
imbued with democratic principles and values and whose principal interest is to
strengthen the rule of law for the sake of the entire Philippine society. More
fair, accurate, and critical coverage by the free press of judicial decisions
and the promotion of democratic principles and values in the public education
system are other prospective measures.
Photo courtesy of Francesco
ReplyDeletePhoto link:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/spaceodissey/2671853880
Gonzalinho