Party-list wants voter listing extended
Apparently, a year and a half of voter registration is not enough.
Youth leaders yesterday asked the Supreme Court to stop the Commission on Elections (Comelec) from enforcing its Oct. 31 deadline for voters to enlist and register their biometric data for the 2016 elections, saying closing too soon was “illegal.”
In a 22-page petition filed late afternoon yesterday, Kabataan Party-list Rep. Terry Ridon and seven other youth leaders asked the high court to compel Comelec to extend voter registration to Jan. 8, 2016.
This developed just as last-minute registrants trooped to Comelec offices and designated malls to sign up and get their biometrics data recorded so they could participate in the presidential elections in May.
The Comelec opened voter registration in May 2014.
Illegally set
Article continues after this advertisementThe petition cited how Comelec Resolution Nos. 9853 and 9981 had “illegally set the deadline” for voter registration to Oct. 31, in violation of Section 8 of the Voter’s Registration Act.
Article continues after this advertisementThe law provides that “the personal filing of application of registration of voters shall be conducted daily in the office of the Election Officer during regular office hours,” and that “no registration shall… be conducted” 120 days or four months before a regular election, or 90 days or three months before a special election.
Ridon cited a 2009 ruling on a similar plea, where the high court held that Comelec “cannot prematurely terminate the continuing registration of voters before the prohibitive period of election registration defined under the law.”
“There is existing jurisprudence that proves that setting an Oct. 31 registration deadline is illegal,” Ridon said.
Urgent request
The certiorari and mandamus petition asked the high court to issue a temporary restraining order or preliminary mandatory injunction to stop the Comelec from imposing the Oct. 31 deadline.
It also asked the court to declare the assailed Comelec resolutions unconstitutional.
Ridon said he sent an urgent request to the Comelec en banc to extend the registration period.
“However, we feel that Comelec will again act on this request halfheartedly, that is why we seek relief before the high tribunal today,” he said in a statement.