MANILA, Philippines–Pork barrel lives on and the battle continues with the voters’ pen.
To end all forms of pork barrel, the People’s Initiative to Abolish the Pork Barrel System (PIAP) on Tuesday submitted to the Commission on Elections office in Quezon City folders containing the first 10,000 signatures from the city’s six districts.
“We gathered the signatures for two months from different communities, schools and factories in Quezon City since the launch of the campaign to abolish the pork barrel system,” PIAP-Quezon City spokesperson Malou Turalde said in an interview with the Inquirer.
The signature campaign for a people’s initiative to pass a law that would ban lump sums in the national budget was launched in Aug. 25 in Cebu province, a year after the massive protest against pork barrel at Rizal Park in Manila.
“If the people’s initiative becomes a law, all those who are guilty would be made accountable, even the President. After all, he has his own pork barrel,” she said.
The group needs at least 177,000 signatures from Quezon City to contribute to the target of 6 million signatures nationwide, Turalde said.
Immense challenge
“The immense challenge is to gather signatures of more than 10 percent of the total number of registered voters in the country, with at least 3 percent in all legislative districts,” she explained.
PIAP-Metro Manila coordinator Mark Lui Aquino said his group had gathered around 50,000 to 100,000 signatures in Metro Manila.
“Slowly but surely,” Aquino said. “But I think we have to gather more signatures. We are supported by the CBCP (Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines) and other groups so I think gathering of signatures will soon be faster. We really need the support of the people,” he added.
According to Turalde, what makes the gathering of signatures slow is they educate the people first before asking them to sign.
House-to-house campaign
Quezon City may not be the first to submit the signatures because others “just want to be quiet. We want to do it with a bang because it’s not just about the submission of the signatures but letting the people know, making them understand what the pork barrel system is about,” she said.
The PIAP holds house-to-house campaigns, mass gatherings and orientations in schools. Their goal is to reach the target of 6 million next year or before the elections.
The Comelec would need to verify and certify the sufficiency of the signatures. Then, the proposed people’s initiative bill would be put to a vote through a nationwide referendum.
“Our problem is the Comelec seems unready,” Turalde said.
Aquino added that based on PIAP’s monitoring, the Comelec offices in the different cities and municipalities “do not know what to do with the signatures.”