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House OKs bill on expeditious resolution of election protests

By Filane Mikee Cervantes

August 24, 2021, 3:13 pm

MANILA – A bill mandating the expeditious resolution of election protests against winning candidates, from the President down to barangay officers has hurdled third reading approval at the House of Representatives.

During Monday’s plenary session, a total of 213 lawmakers voted in favor of House Bill 9315 or the proposed Expeditious Resolution of Electoral Protests Act. No one voted against the bill or abstained from voting.

Deputy Speaker Rufus Rodriguez, author of the bill, said the early resolution of election protests “is one important electoral reform the country needs.”

“Interminable delays in the disposition of cases put a cloud of doubt on the victory and legitimacy of the declared winners. These also encourage unscrupulous candidates to cheat, knowing that protests take years to resolve,” he said in a statement on Tuesday.

He said in some previous instances, protests were decided when the terms of office of the incumbents whose victory was challenged were about to expire, giving the real victors only a few months or even days to occupy their posts.

To prevent this scenario from being repeated, the bill gives the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), Senate Electoral Tribunal (SET), House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal (HRET), appellate courts, and the Commission on Elections (Comelec) deadlines to resolve protests.

Under the bill, election cases against the President, Vice President or senator are to be decided within 24 months following their proclamation and assumption of office.

The deadline for resolving protests against House member, regional, provincial, city, and municipal officials is 12 months, while it is six months for cases against barangay officers.

For quo warranto cases or those questioning the qualifications of winning candidates, the deadline is six months for all officials.

Any appealed decision on an election protest or quo warranto case shall be resolved by the Comelec or the court exercising appellate jurisdiction within three months from the service of a notice of appeal. Such notice shall be served within three days from the filing of an appeal.

The bill also provides sanctions for violation of the mandatory periods. The salaries of the PET, SET, HRET, Comelec, and judges would be withheld until the protests are disposed of.

The Supreme Court may also impose sanctions on non-compliant judges.

The cost of revision and recount shall be borne by the PET, SET, HRET, the Comelec, and the courts, as the case may be.

Fees for revisors shall be borne solely by the protestant and protest who retained their services.

Fees and other costs paid to the PET, the SET, the HRET, the Comelec, and the court, as the case may be, and the fees and costs paid to the revisors, shall be reimbursed by the protestee to the protestant when the election protest is sustained and the election of the protestee is nullified.

Rodriguez hoped that Congress would approve the proposed law in time for next year’s combined national and local elections. (PNA)

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