The Fort Worth Press - Money, power, violence in high-stakes Philippine elections

USD -
AED 3.673025
AFN 70.776276
ALL 86.345824
AMD 388.622254
ANG 1.80229
AOA 916.999714
ARS 1172.723296
AUD 1.542341
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.699618
BAM 1.722337
BBD 2.017172
BDT 121.386112
BGN 1.72474
BHD 0.376989
BIF 2971.775791
BMD 1
BND 1.287658
BOB 6.918233
BRL 5.644101
BSD 0.999075
BTN 84.275461
BWP 13.565233
BYN 3.269517
BYR 19600
BZD 2.006781
CAD 1.38054
CDF 2870.99985
CHF 0.823085
CLF 0.024619
CLP 944.749762
CNY 7.271598
CNH 7.196005
COP 4250.12
CRC 505.305799
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 97.102726
CZK 21.957964
DJF 177.90498
DKK 6.57953
DOP 58.790894
DZD 132.754999
EGP 50.715598
ERN 15
ETB 133.372815
EUR 0.88174
FJD 2.24775
FKP 0.753297
GBP 0.750725
GEL 2.739552
GGP 0.753297
GHS 13.886663
GIP 0.753297
GMD 71.500226
GNF 8654.836863
GTQ 7.694069
GYD 209.017657
HKD 7.750025
HNL 25.946017
HRK 6.6419
HTG 130.527057
HUF 356.525019
IDR 16431
ILS 3.614895
IMP 0.753297
INR 84.280103
IQD 1308.793096
IRR 42112.489175
ISK 129.319947
JEP 0.753297
JMD 158.460658
JOD 0.709303
JPY 143.872496
KES 129.130237
KGS 87.450025
KHR 4005.988288
KMF 434.491204
KPW 900
KRW 1371.219773
KWD 0.30659
KYD 0.832548
KZT 516.762802
LAK 21609.792612
LBP 89516.181586
LKR 299.27348
LRD 199.815068
LSL 18.29598
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.454626
MAD 9.216943
MDL 17.203998
MGA 4464.796795
MKD 54.267018
MMK 2099.564603
MNT 3572.990228
MOP 7.97543
MRU 39.653032
MUR 45.409789
MVR 15.40998
MWK 1732.376381
MXN 19.58805
MYR 4.195167
MZN 63.99992
NAD 18.29598
NGN 1604.379949
NIO 36.766325
NOK 10.39352
NPR 134.840386
NZD 1.670634
OMR 0.385008
PAB 0.999075
PEN 3.646603
PGK 4.081723
PHP 55.673503
PKR 281.336533
PLN 3.766599
PYG 7985.557659
QAR 3.641671
RON 4.38843
RSD 103.209898
RUB 80.505034
RWF 1414.909075
SAR 3.750441
SBD 8.340429
SCR 14.21778
SDG 600.497529
SEK 9.641165
SGD 1.288695
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.789776
SLL 20969.483762
SOS 571.000837
SRD 36.825013
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.742019
SYP 13001.866678
SZL 18.288054
THB 32.895498
TJS 10.390295
TMT 3.5
TND 2.989565
TOP 2.3421
TRY 38.58372
TTD 6.786139
TWD 29.213502
TZS 2697.503248
UAH 41.54172
UGX 3653.736075
UYU 41.92682
UZS 12902.998547
VES 86.73797
VND 25957.5
VUV 121.092427
WST 2.778524
XAF 577.655762
XAG 0.03084
XAU 0.000302
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.72166
XOF 577.655762
XPF 105.023997
YER 244.649959
ZAR 18.311135
ZMK 9001.197294
ZMW 27.548765
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    71.27

    -0.58%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    10.04

    -1%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.16

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    39.12

    +0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.0800

    54.94

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -0.2250

    59.475

    -0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    10.35

    +1.26%

  • BP

    0.4050

    28.525

    +1.42%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    21.19

    -1.23%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    9.55

    -0.63%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.27

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    0.1050

    43.275

    +0.24%

  • AZN

    -0.3100

    72.13

    -0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.0770

    12.993

    -0.59%

  • BCC

    -1.4950

    94.655

    -1.58%

Money, power, violence in high-stakes Philippine elections
Money, power, violence in high-stakes Philippine elections / Photo: © AFP

Money, power, violence in high-stakes Philippine elections

Philippines election hopefuls like mayoral candidate Kerwin Espinosa have to ask themselves whether the job is worth taking a bullet.

Text size:

The country's elections commission, Comelec, recorded 46 acts of political violence between January 12 and April 11, including the shooting of Espinosa.

At a rally this month, someone from the crowd fired a bullet that went through his chest and exited his arm, leaving him bleeding but alive.

Others have been less lucky.

A city council hopeful, a polling officer and a village chief were among those killed in similar attacks in the run-up to mid-term elections on May 12.

Comelec said "fewer than 20" candidates have been killed so far this campaign season, which it notes is a drop.

"This is much lower, very low compared to the past," commission spokesperson John Rex Laudiangco told AFP, citing a tally of about 100 deaths in the last general election.

Analysts warned that such violence will likely remain a fixture of the Philippines' political landscape.

The immense influence of the posts is seen as something worth killing for.

Holding municipal office means control over jobs, police departments and disbursements of national tax funds, said Danilo Reyes, an associate professor at the University of the Philippines' political science department.

"Local chief executives have discretion when it comes to how to allocate the funding, which projects, priorities," he said.

Rule of law that becomes weaker the farther one gets from Manila also means that regional powerbrokers can act with effective impunity, said Cleve Arguelles, CEO of Manila-based WR Numero Research.

"Local political elites have their own kingdoms, armed groups and... patronage networks," he said, noting violence is typically highest in the archipelago nation's far north and south.

"The stakes are usually high in a local area where only one family is dominant or where there is involvement of private armed groups," Arguelles said.

"If you lose control of... city hall, you don't just lose popular support. You actually lose both economic and political power."

In the absence of strong institutions to mediate disagreements, Reyes said, "confrontational violence" becomes the go-to.

- A 'grand bargain' -

Espinosa was waiting for his turn to speak at a campaign stop in central Leyte province on April 10 when a shooter emerged from the crowd and fired from about 50 metres (164 feet) away, according to police.

Police Brigadier General Jean Fajardo told reporters this week that seven police officers were "being investigated" as suspects.

Convictions, however, are hard to come by.

While Comelec's Laudiangco insisted recent election-related shootings were all making their way through regional court systems, he could provide no numbers.

Data compiled by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project show that in 79 percent of violent acts targeting local government members between 2018 and 2022 the perpetrators were never identified.

National-level politicians, meanwhile, reliant on local political bases to deliver votes, have little incentive to press for serious investigations, said Reyes.

"The only way you can ensure national leaders win positions is for local allies to deliver votes," he said.

"There are convictions but very rarely, and it depends on the potential political fallout on the national leaders as well as the local leaders."

It's part of the "grand bargain" in Philippine politics, Arguelles said.

Local elites are "tolerated by the national government so long as during election day they can also deliver votes when they're needed".

- Direct control -

Three days after Espinosa's shooting, a district board candidate and his driver were rushed to hospital after someone opened fire on them in the autonomous area of Mindanao.

Election-season violence has long plagued the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, known as the BARMM.

Comelec assumed "direct control" over the municipalities of Buluan and Datu Odin Sinsuat after municipal election officer Bai Maceda Lidasan Abo and her husband were shot dead last month.

Since last year, Comelec has held the power to directly control and supervise not only local election officials but also law enforcement.

Top police officials in the two municipalities were removed for "gross negligence and incompetence" after allegedly ignoring requests to provide security details for the slain Comelec official.

Their suspensions, however, will last only from "campaigning up to... the swearing-in of the winners," Comelec's Laudiangco said.

The commission's actions were part of a "tried and tested security plan" that is showing real results, he said.

But he conceded that the interwoven nature of family, power and politics in the provinces would continue to create a combustible brew.

"You have a lot of closely related people in one given jurisdiction... That ensures polarisation. It becomes personal between neighbours.

"We all know Filipinos are clannish, that's our culture. But we're improving slowly."

T.M.Dan--TFWP