Comelec Junks Ex-Bacolod Mayor’s Poll Protest

Monico Puentevella adds another item on his list of lost battles with Bing Leonardia.

Former Bacolod City Mayor Monico Puentevella’s list on lost battles with Mayor Evelio Leonardia is an item longer after the Commission on Elections (Comelec) First Division dismissed his election protest against his archrival.

The poll body maintained that Puentevella failed to show substantial evidence to prove fraud in the conduct of the May 9 elections where he lost with his challenger Leonardia.

Puentevella lost his reelection bid against Leonardia getting 97,993 votes to Leonardia’s 120,231 votes.

Monico Puentevella
Former Bacolod City Mayor Monico Puentevella.

Puentevella then filed an election protest before the Comelec’s Electoral Contests Adjudication Department to seek a manual recount of votes.

But in its resolution dated Thursday, August 18, the Comelec First Division said Puentevella’s protest was “based merely on his own suspicions” and he did not provide details of specific anomalous acts or irregularities.

“Without listing the actual facts or omissions that constitute election fraud or irregularity, the protestant aimed his sights on possibilities that the results transmitted and canvassed are not reflective of the results of the elections indicated in the paper ballots,” the resolution read.

Bacolod City Mayor Evelio Leonardia.
Bacolod City Mayor Evelio Leonardia.

Comelec cited Puentevella’s statement that he was unable to personally see how the ballots were tallied.

But the Comelec First Division pointed out that the the counting, tabulation, and computation of the total votes cast are automated, as stated under Republic Act No. 9369.

The former Bacolod mayor also complained about the proclamation of winners, saying it was based solely on electronically transmitted election results.

The Comelec First Division noted, however, that this is allowed under the law.

“As the law itself decrees that the election returns transmitted electronically shall be considered as official election results and shall be used as the basis for the canvassing of votes and the proclamation of a candidate, the protestant’s allegation then cannot be considered as election fraud or irregularity,” it said.

“Unusual and unexplained number of votes, high voter turnout, etc are, in themselves, not indicative or reflective of election fraud or irregularities. It is only when these are caused by specific election fraud, anomalies or irregularities that the same may be constitutive of manual recount,” the Comelec First Division said.

The resolution also stated that granting Puentevella’s demand for a manual recount would be similar to letting “fishing expeditions and baseless protests” prosper, and would open “the floodgates of frivolous and sham election protests.”

The resolution was signed by Comelec First Division Presiding Commissioner Christian Robert Lim and Commissioner Luie Tito Guia. The third member of the division, Commissioner Rowena Guanzon, inhibited herself from the case since she is a Negrense.

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