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Still without ballots, Filipino voters in US call for extension


MANILA, Philippines, April 20 ------ Representatives of Filipino communities in vote-rich United States called on the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to extend the deadline to vote for overseas Filipinos as many voters in the country reportedly had not yet received their ballots in the mail – more than a week since the voting period began. In a press briefing Tuesday, April 19 (Manila time), disgruntled Filipino voters in the US lamented how they had not received their ballots yet, and neither did many of the community members they knew.


The overseas voting period began on April 10 and will last until May 9. Voters in the US are availing of a postal mode of voting, where they receive their ballots in the mail, and also send them back by post. Some consulates have allowed the option for voters to pick up their ballots from the posts, accomplish them in their own time, and return to the consular offices. “Panawagan talaga natin would be reconsideration or a push for Comelec to extend our voting period, dahil hindi naman natin kasalanan ah? Sila naman ang nag-create ng kondisyon kung bakit mahirapan ang mga kababayan natin, ang ating mga botante dito sa US sa Philippine election na ito, dahil naman sa kanilang kakulangan,” said Nerissa Allegretti of 1Sambayan USA.


On Monday, April 18, Comelec Commissioner Marlon Casquejo had already thumbed down calls to extend overseas voting. “The elections cannot be extended beyond May 9, because that would be a violation of the Constitution,” said Casquejo, who heads the Comelec’s office for overseas voting.


On its Facebook page, the Philippine consulate in New York posted that its staff worked overtime on the post-delivery checks of the ballots for at least eight days, including on the Holy Week holidays.


"As we have been saying, we are not machines. The process of sending the ballots is not as easy as bringing them to the post office. We have to sort out the envelopes, check their contents, match the names on the envelopes and the voters list, place stamps, seal the envelopes, count, and then deliver. As a result, all of us are sleep-deprived and exhausted. But we will carry on and get the job done,” said consulate general Elmer Cato.


For Eric Lachica of US Filipinos for Good Governance (USFGG) the voters should make the effort to engage with consular officials on a regular basis so they can track the ballots’ deliveries. Meanwhile, Tabitha Ponciano from Malaya Movement USA said that Filipinos should go beyond relying on the Comelec to speed up the process for voters. Filipinos who can personally drop off their ballots at the consular offices should do this instead of mailing them. She also described how their community in Portland was safeguarding their ballots together by trying to organize a “ballot collection day,” when the community would come together and mail their ballots together and track them simultaneously.


Source: rappler.com

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