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Thursday, May 9, 2024

Groups oppose Comelec-Rappler pact

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Several groups expressed opposition to the partnership between Commission on Elections and media firm Rappler on fact-checking.

At the weekly virtual press briefing of the National Task Force to End Local Communists Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) on Monday, the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) alongside the National Press Club of the Philippines (NPC) and a growing number of concerned retired officers and enlisted men of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), the Philippine National Police (PNP), the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), former government officials and employees expressed their disapproval over the said collaboration.

Comelec and Rappler recently signed a memorandum of agreement for fact-checking, poll-related content production, and voters awareness promotion during the election season.

Former Undersecretary Abraham Puruganan, speaking for the group calling themselves as “Warriors for Unity, Peaceful and Honest Elections” composed of some 235 former government officials and retired officers and enlisted men from the armed forces and the police, stated that “this arrangement endangers the credibility and integrity of the electoral process and puts the will of the people at risk.”

“We call upon COMELEC to immediately rescind this Memorandum of Agreement,” the group said, adding that they are backing the move of the OSG as the ‘People’s Lawyer’ in filing a petition before the Supreme Court to declare the MOA void for being unconstitutional, adding that “We should stand together and protect our electoral process, for the will of the people to prevail,” Puruganan said.

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Essentially, the OSG is asking the High Court that a foreign-funded Rappler should not be allowed to interfere or get involved in Philippine elections.  According to the OSG: “It is beyond belief that COMELEC has allowed a foreign non-registered entity to interfere the conduct of the country’s elections,” referring to the fact that Rappler is a “foreign mass media entity managed by an American citizen and whose operations are funded and/or controlled by foreign entities that include Omidyar Network Fund L.L.C.”

“Every Filipino deserves and aspires for a free, orderly, honest, peaceful, and credible elections. However, these constitutional goals cannot be attained if the COMELEC is allowed to continue its void and unconstitutional partnership with Rappler. The Rappler-COMELEC MOA must be declared null and void,” the OSG represented by Solicitor General Jose Calida said in their press statement read by Under Secretary Lorraine Badoy, NTF-ELCAC spokesperson, during the press briefing.

Paul Gutierrez, president of the NPC, one of the largest media organizations in the country, on the other hand said that while they were the first one to approach the COMELEC to help the agency in having a “transparent and credible” elections, COMELEC instead engaged Rappler.

Gutierrez pointed out that it was only now that lawyer James Jimenez, COMELEC spokesperson, wrote the NPC that it will also welcome a MoA with the organization.  “Para kaming biglang sinuhulan. The question here is the credibility of Rappler,” Gutierrez said.

In the interest of transparency, Gutierrez said that the COMELEC and Rappler should bare the contents of the MOA so the people can decide for themselves if the deal is good or bad for the nation.

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