Filipinos vote in midterm
polls
Voting in the Philippines mid-term election in Quezon (ANSA) |
The election is seen as a test for the popularity of
President Duterte's administration that is seeking control of the Senate in
order to be able to pass its legislative agenda.
By Robin Gomes
Filipinos went to the polls on Monday in the midterm
election that is seen as a test for the popularity of the administration of
President Rodrigo Duterte, especially his brutal war on drugs, after three
years in power.
Over 60 million voters from over 7,000 islands were expected
to choose from 43,500 candidates vying for about 18,000 national and local
posts, including 12 crucial seats in the 24-member Senate and 243 seats in the
House of Representatives.
The key issue for Duterte is to control the Senate,
the upper house of Parliament, where he does not currently have a majority to
pass his legislative agenda.
One of his main goals is to revise the country’s
Constitution to effectively lift term limits. He also intends to lower
the age of criminal liability of child offenders as well as bring back the
death penalty for some serious crimes.
The IBON Foundation, an independent think-tank, noted that
the midterm polls could be one of the last chances for Filipinos to try to
preserve freedom and democracy as Duterte’s administration implements harsh
neoliberal economic policies and undermines democracy.
The winners of the midterm election will take office on June
30, 2019.
Prayers for peaceful polls
On the eve of the elections, Catholic parishes held prayers
for "credible, honest and peaceful" polls.
In a statement, Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick
Pabillo called on voters to pray before voting so that they will not
select "a thief, dishonest person or one who promotes killing?"
“If we pray over our vote, will we not allow our vote to be
influenced by money, or much worse, sell it?" said the bishop.
"We are poor and people have already robbed us of basic
services in life, of our environment, of our jobs. Let them not rob us of our
dignity. Our one vote is our dignity, let us not sell it," he added.
The Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches also made a
similar call for prayers and discernment.
Church - partisan politics for the laity
Ahead of the polls, Archbishop Romulo Valles of
Davao, the President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines
(CBCP), refuted reports that the Church was endorsing senatorial candidates.
The archbishop explained that the CBCP did not make any such
endorsement. “Bishops and priests are not allowed to do that,” he said, explaining
partisan politics is left to the lay people.
However, he said that the CBCP appeals to all Filipinos to
vote wisely and “pray for peaceful, credible and honest elections.”
(Source: UCAN)
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