NAGA CITY, Philippines—The journey of Camarines Sur Rep. Leni Robredo to a probable victory in the vice presidential race has confirmed the existence of a “Bicol vote,” a solid support base from her home region, according to political analysts here.
Robredo, widow of former Naga City Mayor and Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo, rode on the “Bicol Express,” with 64.5 percent of voters in the region choosing her as Vice President in Monday’s national elections.
Rene Gumba, a political science instructor and former research associate at Ateneo de Naga University Social Science Research Center, said the Bicol vote became concrete after Robredo got the majority vote in the region.
But Gumba said a Bicol vote should not be equated with Bicolanos solidly voting for a particular candidate.
“We should equate a Bicol vote with the majority of Bicolanos campaigning and voting for a particular candidate,” he said.
But Christopher Dy-Liaco, a businessman and senior adviser to foreign companies in the Philippines, believed there was indeed a Bicol vote.
“If there were doubts about a Bicol vote before, Leni had proven [the nonbelievers wrong]. But the Bicol vote, per se, is not a regional vote. It’s not a command vote because Bicolano voters defied power broker impositions to vote for Chiz (Sen. Francis Escudero of Sorsogon province),” Dy-Liaco said.
In the unofficial count, Robredo polled 1,499,923 votes, or 64.5 percent of the 2,325,418 votes cast in the six provinces of Bicol. Trailing her was Escudero, who garnered 476,483, or 20.5 percent of the votes cast in the region.
Escudero, who placed fourth among six candidates for Vice President in the unofficial national count, conceded defeat a day after the elections.
The third-ranked candidate, Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano, whose wife’s family is from Tiwi town in Albay, conceded defeat to Robredo on Thursday.
Small slices
Other candidates rooted in or claiming affinity to Bicol got small slices of the Bicol pie. Cayetano, the running mate of the presumptive winner of the presidential election, Rodrigo Duterte, got only 3 percent of the vote; Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, whose roots are in Ligao City, also in Albay, had 2 percent; and Sen. Gregorio Honasan of Sorsogon received 1.5 percent.
Bicolanos put Sen. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., son of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, in third place with 8.1 percent of the total votes cast in the region. Marcos is trailing Robredo in the national count.
During the Liberal Party’s campaign rally in this city on May 6, Robredo made a final pitch to fellow Bicolanos and asked them to rally behind her and other administration candidates.
She said the Bicolanos’ dream of electing to high office a native of the region would be within reach if they would unite behind her candidacy.
“We are almost there. Our dream of having the voice of Bicol heard in the national government is within reach,” she said.
In that rally, Robredo said Bicol votes could help her beat her closest rival, Marcos, who was relying on the support of the “Solid North” or the Ilocano-speaking provinces in Northern Luzon, the bailiwick of the Marcos family.
READ: Robredo banks on ‘United Bicol’ to foil Marcos’ ‘Solid North’
According to Dy-Liaco, the Bicol vote is a “thinking vote,” because it selects the best candidate who represents Bicol or pushes the sentiments and aspirations of Bicolanos.
“It’s not a regional vote that’s based on localities, because if it is, Trillanes should have had more votes in Albay’s third congressional district (where his family hails from), or Gringo (Honasan) having more votes in Sorsogon. It is not a ‘blind vote’ that is based on mere regionalism,” he said. TVJ
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