Vote buying is prohibited under the Omnibus Election Code, with penalties of imprisonment for one to six years, disqualification to hold public office, and forfeiture of one鈥檚 right to vote if found guilty.
And yet, vote buying still happens.
In this聽B-Side聽episode, Froilan C. Calilung, a political science professor at the University of Santo Tomas, talks about the legalities and loopholes that have allowed vote buying to become part of the Philippine political system, with structures built by those with power and money. 鈥淲e could simply say that poverty is one of the contentious issues why we have vote buying, and why it is still very much prevalent in our society nowadays,鈥 he tells聽大象传媒听谤别辫辞谤迟别谤 Alyssa Nicole O. Tan. 鈥淢any Filipinos actually see election time as a frivolous event 鈥 more like a carnival of sorts, if I may say.鈥
TAKEAWAYS
Utang na loob聽(debt of gratitude) has a dark side.
Many voters will come from the C, D, and E margins which include the lower middle class, working class, and the poor, making them susceptible to the pressure of accepting bribes in exchange for votes.聽
There are two schools of thought when it comes to vote buying, said Mr. Calilung: 鈥淥ne of which says that you vote according to your conscience which means鈥 you don鈥檛 accept the money at all,鈥 he explained, 鈥渁nd the other one is relevant to the idea of accepting the money but not voting for the candidates.鈥
He added that vote buying doesn鈥檛 even have to involve money; it can come in the form of canned goods, job placements, leisure opportunities, or whatever gains the candidate any sort of favor 鈥 this, in turn, leads to 鈥utang na loob,鈥 or a feeling of indebtedness.
Vote buying shouldn鈥檛 be 鈥榗ondoned, normalized, or romanticized鈥 no matter how widespread it is.
People have learned how to rationalize vote buying. 鈥淭he premise and the belief that this money is ours, this is taxpayer鈥檚 money that these politicians get, and they鈥檙e just trying to give it back to us,鈥 said Mr. Calilung.聽
Even better: when a preferred candidate buys a vote that was already theirs. 鈥淭hey are hitting two birds with one stone.鈥
However, Mr. Calilung said vote buying must not be condoned, normalized, or romanticized even if the Commission on Elections is unable to prevent it.聽
If you can鈥檛 reform politicians, reform the populace instead.
Appealing to the collective conscience to 鈥渄o the right thing,鈥 might work, said Mr. Calilung, who pointed to non-government organizations and the church as possible messengers.
Eliminating vote buying, he added, will 鈥渙pen the floodgates for more honest, competent, and highly qualified political aspirants to join the fray.鈥澛
鈥淚 think it all boils down to the kind of moral fiber that we have,鈥 Mr. Calilung said, but this reasoning only works for the privileged.聽鈥淧overty is still going to play a big role in the elections, and it will factor in the decision to accept money from the candidates.鈥
Recorded remotely in December 2021. Produced by Bront毛 H. Lacsamana, Jino D. Nicolas, and Sam L. Marcelo.
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