Comelec seeks P20B for 2013 polls; Senators shocked
| 08/17/2010 Getting congressional approval of an P11.3-billion budget for the 2010 presidential automated elections proved easy for the Commission on Elections (Comelec) commissioners by bringing up a rosy picture to a fraud free election through automated counting machines. So easy it was that the poll body is now calling for practically a doubling the budget, with the price tag of P20 billion. Senators,  during a Senate hearing were aghast at the audacity of the Comelec  officials’  estimated cost for the automated 2013 mid-term elections. Commissioner  Rene Sarmiento informed the Senate committee on local governments  headed by Sen. Ferdinand “Bong-Bong” Marcos  that the poll body is  expected to spend anywhere from P15 billion to P20 billion for the 2013  polls. The estimated cost does not include the barangay and Sagguniang Kabataan polls, which will be conducted on a manual mode. “Are you serious? That’s too big a budget for elections,”  Senator  Marcos said. “We managed to hold automated  elections  with  P11.3 billion in May, that included the buying of the machines  and the training of the people which we will no longer have to do, such  as the leasing of the machines and the training of the people,”  Marcos  said. To date, however, even with the P11.3  billion budget, the Comelec failed miserably to prevent electoral fraud,  and worse, took out all of the safety features that were required by  the election law. Comelec never even bothered to  makes its transactions transparent either, and to this day, there has  been no accounting of the P11.3 billion budget spent for the 2010 polls. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100817hed4.html | 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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