Drilon not aware of ballot replacement in 2004 polls

BACOLOD CITY — The co-chair of the national canvassing board that declared Gloria Macapagal Arroyo winner of the 2004 presidential election said Saturday he wasn’t aware of an operation to replace genuine election returns with fake ones to ensure an Arroyo victory then.

Sen. Franklin Drilon, who was Senate president and co-chair of the national canvassing board in 2004, said the board’s role at that time was just to report out results of the election as given to them.

He said he wasn’t aware that there was an operation to cheat for Arroyo at that time.

Drilon headed the national canvassing board with then Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. that proclaimed Arroyo winner of the 2004 presidential election.

Drilon said, however, that anyone found guilty of cheating in that election should be punished to strike fear in the hearts of anyone who would attempt to do the same thing in the future.

He said at a news conference in E. B. Magalona town that he supports the investigation to be conducted by the Department of Justice and the Commission on Elections into the revelations of Senior Supt. Rafael Santiago that his team staged a series of break-ins at the Batasan Pambansa from January to February 2005 to switch election returns to ensure that the proclamation of Arroyo as winner would not be overturned by the Supreme Court, which as presidential electoral tribunal, was evaluating at the time an election protest filed by the late actor Fernando Poe Jr.

Drilon said the probe was part of a “cleansing process.” “I am confident that it will not be just another investigation with no conclusion as experienced in the past,” he said.

“In the past we did not have the environment that would lead to a successful prosecution. We easily forget that the past administration issued Executive Order 464 that effectively prevented the legislature from exercising its oversight functions,” he said.

EO 464, issued by Arroyo on Sept. 26, 2005, prevented Cabinet members, police and military generals, senior national security officials, and “such other officers as may be determined by the President” to attend congressional hearings unless granted permission by her. INQUIRER

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