MANILA, Philippines—The party-list group of Juan Miguel “Mikey”
Arroyo, Ang Galing Pinoy, is the latest to get the axe along with Alab
ng Mamamahayag (Alam), the Commission on Elections announced Tuesday.
Comelec Chairman Sixto Brillantes Jr. said the two failed to meet
the requirements for representing marginalized sectors in the House of
Representatives.
Ang Galing Pinoy claims to represent security guards, tricycle
drivers, farmers and small businessmen. Its representative is Mikey
Arroyo, son of former president and incumbent Pampanga Representative
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who is among the wealthiest party-list lawmaker
in the 15th Congress.
Comelec Commissioner Rene Sarmiento, in a separate interview,
said that Ang Galing Pinoy was denied accreditation because its new
nominees did not represent the marginalized sectors.
Based on the documents submitted by Ang Galing Pinoy, it has five new nominees.
“This is a recognition that the nominees should belong to the
marginalized and underrepresented. Number two, you should prove your
track record,” Sarmiento said. He did not name the five.
The Comelec earlier barred from joining next year’s midterm
elections the following: Ako Bicol, 1st Consumers Alliance for Rural
Energy (1-Care) and the Association of Philippine Electric Cooperatives
(Apec), Aangat Tayo, and Kapatiran ng mga Nakulong na Walang Sala
(Kakusa).
It had also disqualified the following existing party-list
groups: AGRI, AKMA-PTM, AKO AGILA, AKO BAHAY, PACYAW, PASANG MASDA,
COFA, ARARO, KATUTUBO, OPO.
Aside from ALAM, three new applicants — RAM GUARDIANS, Alyansa
para sa Demokrasya, and Association of Airline and Airport Workers — had
also been denied accreditation.
Brillantes said that the formal resolutions on the disqualification of these party-list groups would be released Tuesday.
The decision of the poll body was final and appeals should be made at the Supreme Court, he said.
The Alab ng Mamamahayag party-list, meanwhile, did not have a
track record prior to its application to run for the 2013 polls. Alam,
whose top nominee is former National Press Club president Jerry
Yap, claims to represent professional media and that it has different
regional chapters in Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao.
Sarmiento said that Alam “alleged to represent the multi-sectors
but they have no track record in representing these multi-sectors.”
He also noted that alam figured in a
controversy with the Comelec when it alleged that two of the poll body’s
commissioners had asked for P3 million in exchange for its
accreditation. An investigation, however, revealed that two workers from
the Comelec, who claimed to be working for Commissioners Lucenito Tagle
and Elias Yusoph, were behind the alleged solicitation. Comelec
dismissed the erring workers.
“Plus the allegation of the bribery. That
there was bribery committed, but that was not proven in the hearing,
because there’s none really,” he said.
“It does not speak well of the party list
organization to make a serious allegation of bribery only to state
openly that there is none, there is no evidence. Be careful with your
allegations, names are involved,” Sarmiento said.
The Comelec has been reviewing the
qualifications of new and old party-list groups in a bid to cleanse the
party-list system, which has been criticized as being dominated by bogus
organizations or by groups whose nominees are either multimillionaires,
former government officials or members of powerful political clans.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Comelec disqualifies Mikey Arroyo’s Ang Galing Pinoy
2:58 AM