Mar 042013
 

Liberal Party (LP) senatorial bet Risa Hontiveros and independent candidate Edward Hagedorn told the Commission on Elections (Comelec) that they have removed their “illegal” campaign posters.

“We received letters na nag-comply sila but whether or not they complied is another question,” lawyer Esmeralda Amora-Ladra, head of the Comelec law department, told reporters on Monday.

The notice for Hontiveros, who was found to have illegal campaign posters in Dumaguete City in Negros Oriental, was received on February 20 while the notice for Hagedorn, who allegedly has an illegal poster along Osmeña Highway in Manila, was received on February 21.

However, Ladra said the two claimed that they were not the ones who put these up.

“May letter but yung pagtanggal talaga is another matter that we have to check through the monitoring teams of the EID,” she said.

The Comelec’s Education and Information Department (EID) monitors the posting of campaign materials nationwide.

Punishment

Failure to remove illegal campaign propaganda constitutes an election offense that is punishable under Section 264 of the Omnibus Election Code. The provision states that any person found guilty of any election offense shall be punished with imprisonment from one to six years and shall not be subject to probation.

On the other hand, Section 6 of Republic Act 7941 (Party-list System Act) states that “the Comelec may motu proprio or upon verified complaint of any interested party, remove or cancel, after due notice and hearing, the registration of any national, regional or sectoral party, organization or coalition” that “violates or fails to comply with laws, rules or regulations relating to elections,” among other grounds.

Earlier in the day, Ladra announced that they will be issuing subpoenas to two party-list groups who failed to remove their illegal campaign materials within their three-day prescription.

Ladra could not immediately say how many candidates and party-list groups have so far been issued notices by the poll body.

“Every day nagpapadala kami ng notices,” she said.

Jamby, Maceda

Meanwhile, Comelec chair Sixto Brillantes Jr. said they are still waiting for the report of the law department on the case of  Liberal Party senatorial bet Jamby Madrigal, who is in hot water for holding an online contest with an iPad as prize.

“If there is a report we will take it up in the en banc,” Brillantes told reporters on Monday.

Madrigal’s camp has already apologized, saying her social media campaign was being run by young volunteers and that when she heard about the contest, she immediately ordered to stop it.
On the other hand, Ladra said they are just waiting for a copy of the video showing United Nationalist Alliance (UNA) bet Ernesto Maceda initiating a raffle during the Kabalikat ng Bayan sa Kaunlaran (Kabaka) meeting in Pandacan, Manila last week. 

Brillantes said that they have not yet received any official communication from Maceda.

But Maceda, a former Senate president, has said that it should not be an issue because he had stopped the raffle before the prizes were given out. — RSJ, GMA News

Feb 272013
 
Comelec to ask Maceda to explain 'raffle' during Kabaka meeting

Another senatorial candidate, this time from the United Nationalist Alliance, could get into trouble with the Commission on Elections for allegedly holding a raffle and offering P500 as a prize. Comelec chairman Sixto Brillantes Jr. on Wednesday said the poll body will be sending a letter to senatorial candidate Ernesto Maceda asking him to explain the raffle he held during the Kabalikat ng Bayan sa Kaunlaran (Kabaka) meeting in Manila last Tuesday. A video taken by GMA News showed Maceda, together with re-electionist Rep. Amado Bagatsing and candidate for councilor Ali Atienza, announcing a raffle to the members of Kabaka with a pile of P500 bills on the table. Maceda called out names but did not give the cash. He also announced his number on the May election ballot. The video was shown to Brillantes and lawyer Esmeralda Ladra, Comelec law department head. “Merong statement na parang may nagra-raffle at may perang involved, therefore we don’t really know kung ano ang circumstances, we have to investigate him, just to check kung anong nangyari. So to be fair to the candidate, we have to write him a letter so he can explain,” said Brillantes. He said he will make a conclusion and determine what course of action to be taken once he gets Maceda’s explanation. “Initially, there appears to be something wrong, it is a ground for us to investigate further the details. We always [give] a chance to the candidate because the penalty is serious, he could get disqualified as Read More …