Election Law Codal

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C.B No. 2 / 81 OG No. 49, 5659 (December 9, 1985)

[ BATAS PAMBANSA BLG. 881, December 03, 1985 ]


OMNIBUS ELECTION CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES

Be it enacted by the Batas Pambansa in session assembled:

ARTICLE I - GENERAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 1. Title. – This Act shall be known and cited as the “Omnibus Election Code of
the Philippines.” (New)

SECTION 2. Applicability. – This Code shall govern all elections of public officers and, to
the extent appropriate, all referenda and plebiscites. (Sec. 2 1978 EC)

SECTION 3. Election and campaign periods. – Unless otherwise fixed in special cases by
the Commission on Elections, which hereinafter shall be referred to as the Commission,
the election period shall commence ninety days before the day of the election and shall
end thirty days thereafter. (Sec. 6, Art. XII-C, Const.)

The period of campaign shall be as follows:

1. Presidential and Vice-Presidential Election – 90 days;


2. Election of Members of the Batasang Pambansa and Local Election – 45 days; and
3. Barangay Election – 15 days.

The campaign periods shall not include the day before and the day of the election.

However, in case of special elections under Article VIII, Section 5, Subsection (2) of the
Constitution, the campaign period shall be forty-five days.

SECTION 4. Obligation to register and vote. – It shall be the obligation of every citizen
qualified to vote to register and cast his vote. (Sec. 5, 1978 EC)

SECTION 5. Postponement of election. – When for any serious cause such as violence,
terrorism, loss or destruction of election paraphernalia or records, force majeure, and other
analogous causes of such a nature that the holding of a free, orderly and honest election
should become impossible in any political subdivision, the Commission, motu proprio or
upon a verified petition by any interested party, and after due notice and hearing, whereby
all interested parties are afforded equal opportunity to be heard, shall postpone the election
therein to a date which should be reasonably close to the date of the election not held,
suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect but not later than thirty days after the
cessation of the cause for such postponement or suspension of the election or failure to
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elect. (Sec. 6, 1978 EC)

SECTION 6. Failure of election. – If, on account of force majeure, violence, terrorism,


fraud, or other analogous causes the election in any polling place has not been held on the
date fixed, or had been suspended before the hour fixed by law for the closing of the
voting, or after the voting and during the preparation and the transmission of the election
returns or in the custody or canvass thereof, such election results in a failure to elect, and
in any of such cases the failure or suspension of election would affect the result of the
election, the Commission shall, on the basis of a verified petition by any interested party
and after due notice and hearing, call for the holding or continuation of the election not
held, suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect on a date reasonably close to the
date of the election not held, suspended or which resulted in a failure to elect but not later
than thirty days after the cessation of the cause of such postponement or suspension of the
election or failure to elect. (Sec. 7, 1978 EC)

SECTION 7. Call of special election. – (1) In case a vacancy arises in the Batasang
Pambansa eighteen months or more before a regular election, the Commission shall call a
special election to be held within sixty days after the vacancy occurs to elect the Member
to serve the unexpired term. (Sec. 5(2), Art. VIII, Const.)

(2) In case of the dissolution of the Batasang Pambansa, the President shall call an election
which shall not be held earlier than forty-five nor later than sixty days from the date of
such dissolution. (Sec. 13(2), Art. VIII, Const.)

The Commission shall send sufficient copies of its resolution for the holding of the
election to its provincial election supervisors and election registrars for dissemination,
who shall post copies thereof in at least three conspicuous places preferably where public
meetings are held in each city or municipality affected. (Sec. 8, 1978 EC)

SECTION 8. Election Code to be available in polling places. – A printed copy of this


Code in English or in the national language shall be provided and be made available by the
Commission in every polling place, in order that it may be readily consulted by any person
in need thereof on the registration, revision and election days. (Sec. 9, 1978 EC)

SECTION 9. Official mail and telegram relative to elections. – Papers connected with the
election and required by this Code to be sent by public officers in the performance of their
election duties shall be free of postage and sent by registered special delivery mail.
Telegrams of the same nature shall likewise be transmitted free of charge by government
telecommunications and similar facilities.

It shall be the duty of the Postmaster General, the Director of the Bureau of
Telecommunications, and the managers of private telecommunication companies to
transmit immediately and in preference to all other communications or telegrams
messages, reporting election results and such other messages or communications which
the Commission may require or may be necessary to ensure free, honest and orderly
elections. (Sec. 10, 1978 EC)

SECTION 10. Election expenses. – Except in barangay elections, such expenses as may be
necessary and reasonable in connection with the elections, referenda, plebiscites and other
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similar exercises shall be paid by the Commission. The Commission may direct that in the
provinces, cities, or municipalities, the election expenses chargeable to the Commission be
advanced by the province, city or municipality concerned subject to reimbursement by the
Commission upon presentation of the proper bill.

Funds needed by the Commission to defray the expenses for the holding of regular and
special elections, referenda and plebiscites shall be provided in the regular appropriations
of the Commission which, upon request, shall immediately be released to the Commission.
In case of deficiency, the amount so provided shall be augmented from the special
activities funds in the general appropriations act and from those specifically appropriated
for the purpose in special laws. (New)

SECTION 11. Failure to assume office. – The office of any official elected who fails or
refuses to take his oath of office within six months from his proclamation shall be
considered vacant, unless said failure is for a cause or causes beyond his control.

SECTION 12. Disqualifications. – Any person who has been declared by competent
authority insane or incompetent, or has been sentenced by final judgment for subversion,
insurrection, rebellion or for any offense for which he has been sentenced to a penalty of
more than eighteen months or for a crime involving moral turpitude, shall be disqualified
to be a candidate and to hold any office, unless he has been given plenary pardon or
granted amnesty.

This disqualifications to be a candidate herein provided shall be deemed removed upon the
declaration by competent authority that said insanity or incompetence had been removed
or after the expiration of a period of five years from his service of sentence, unless within
the same period he again becomes disqualified.

ARTICLE II - ELECTION OF PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT

SECTION 13. Regular election for President and Vice-President. – The regular election
for President and Vice-President of the Philippines shall be held on the first Monday of
May Nineteen hundred eighty seven (1987) and on the same day every six years thereafter.
The President-elect and the Vice-President-elect shall assume office at twelve o’clock
noon on the thirtieth day of June next following the election and shall end at noon of the
same date, six years thereafter when the term of his successor shall begin.

SECTION 14. Special election for President and Vice-President. – In case a vacancy
occurs for the Office of the President and Vice-President, the Batasang Pambansa shall, at
ten o’clock in the morning of the third day after the vacancy occurs, convene in
accordance with its rules without need of a call and within seven days enact a law calling
for a special election to elect a President and a Vice-President to be held not earlier than
forty-five days nor later than sixty days from the time of such call. The bill calling such
special election shall be deemed certified under paragraph (2), Section 19, Article VIII of
the Constitution and shall become law upon its approval on third reading by the Batasang
Pambansa. Appropriations for the special election shall be charged against any current
appropriations and shall be exempt from the requirements of paragraph (4), Section 16 of
Article VIII of the Constitution. The convening of the Batasang Pambansa cannot be
suspended nor the special election postponed. No special election shall be called if the
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vacancy occurs within seventy days before the date of the presidential election of 1987.
(Sec. 9, 3rd par. Art. VII, Const.)

SECTION 15. Canvass of votes for President and Vice-President by the provincial or city
board of canvassers. – The provincial, city, or district boards of canvassers in
Metropolitan Manila, as the case may be, shall meet not later than six o’clock in the
evening on election day to canvass the election returns that may have already been
received by them, respectively. It shall meet continuously from day to day until the
canvass is completed, but may adjourn only for the purpose of awaiting the other election
returns. Each time the board adjourns, it shall make a total of all the votes cast for each
candidate for President and for Vice-President, duly authenticated by the signatures and
thumbmarks of all the members of the provincial, city or district boards of canvassers,
furnishing the Commission in Manila by the fastest means of communication a copy
thereof, and making available the data contained therein to mass media and other
interested parties. Upon the completion of the canvass, the board shall prepare a certificate
of canvass showing the votes received by each candidate for the office of the President and
for Vice-President, duly authenticated by the signatures and thumbmarks of all the
members of the provincial, city or district board of canvassers. Upon the completion of the
certificate of canvass, the board shall certify and transmit the said certificate of canvass to
the Speaker of the Batasang Pambansa.

The provincial, city and district boards of canvassers shall prepare the certificate of
canvass for the election of President and Vice-President, supported by a statement of votes
by polling place, in quintuplicate by the use of carbon papers or such other means as the
Commission shall prescribe to the end that all five copies shall be legibly produced in one
handwriting. The five copies of the certificate of canvass must bear the signatures and
thumbmarks of all the members of the board. Upon the completion of these certificates
and statements, they shall be enclosed in envelopes furnished by the Commission and
sealed, and immediately distributed as follows: the original copy shall be enclosed and
sealed in the envelope directed to the Speaker and delivered to him at the Batasang
Pambansa by the fastest possible means; the second copy shall likewise be enclosed and
sealed in the envelope directed to the Commission; the third copy shall be retained by the
provincial election supervisor, in the case of the provincial board of canvassers, and by the
city election registrar, in the case of the city board of canvassers; and one copy each to the
authorized representatives of the ruling party and the dominant opposition political party.
Failure to comply with the requirements of this section shall constitute an election offense.
(Sec. 5, Art. VIII, Const.)

SECTION 16. Counting of votes for President and Vice-President by the Batasang
Pambansa. – The certificates of canvass, duly certified by the board of canvassers of each
province, city or district in Metropolitan Manila shall be transmitted to the Speaker of the
Batasang Pambansa, who shall, not later than thirty days after the day of the election,
convene the Batasang Pambansa in session and in its presence open all the certificates of
canvass, and the votes shall then be counted. (Sec. 5 Art. VII, Const.)

SECTION 17. Correction of errors in certificate and supporting statement already


transmitted to the Speaker. – No correction of errors allegedly committed in the certificate
of canvass and supporting statement already transmitted to the Speaker of the Batasang
Pambansa shall be allowed, subject to the provisions of the succeeding section. (BP 125)
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SECTION 18. Preservation of ballot boxes, their keys, and disposition of their contents. –
Until after the completion by the Batasang Pambansa of the canvassing of the votes and
until an uncontested proclamation of the President-elect and Vice-President-elect shall
have been obtained, the provincial, city or district board of canvassers under the joint
responsibility with the provincial, city or municipal treasurers shall provide for the
safekeeping and storage of the ballot boxes in a safe and closed chamber secured by four
padlocks: one to be provided by the corresponding board chairman; one by the provincial
or city treasurer concerned; and one each by the ruling party and the accredited dominant
opposition political party.

SECTION 19. When certificate of canvass is incomplete or bears erasures or alterations.


– When the certificate of canvass, duly certified by the board of canvassers of each
province, city or district in Metropolitan Manila and transmitted to the Speaker of the
Batasang Pambansa, as provided in the Constitution, appears to be incomplete, the
Speaker shall require the board of canvassers concerned to transmit to his office, by
personal delivery, the election returns from polling places that were not included in the
certificate of canvass and supporting statements. Said election returns shall be submitted
by personal delivery to the Speaker within two days from receipt of notice.

When it appears that any certificate of canvass or supporting statement of votes by polling
place bears erasures or alterations which may cast doubt as to the veracity of the number
of votes stated therein and may affect the result of the election, the Batasang Pambansa
upon request of the Presidential or Vice-Presidential candidate concerned or his party
shall, for the sole purpose of verifying the actual number of votes cast for President or
Vice-President, count the votes as they appear in the copies of the election returns for the
Commission. For this purpose, the Speaker shall require the Commission to deliver its
copies of the election returns to the Batasang Pambansa. (BP 125)

SECTION 20. Proclamation of the President-elect and Vice-President-elect. – Upon the


completion of the canvass of the votes by the Batasang Pambansa, the persons obtaining
the highest number of votes for President and for Vice-President shall be declared elected;
but in case two or more shall have an equal and the highest number of votes, one of them
shall be chosen President or Vice-President, as the case may be, by a majority vote of all
the Members of the Batasang Pambansa in session assembled. (Sec. 5, Art. VII, Const.)

In case there are certificates of canvass which have not been submitted to the Speaker of
the Batasang Pambansa on account of missing election returns, a proclamation may be
made if the missing certificates will not affect the results of the election.

In case the certificates of canvass which were not submitted on account of missing
election returns will affect the results of the election, no proclamation shall be made. The
Speaker shall immediately instruct the boards of canvassers concerned to obtain the
missing election returns from the boards of election inspectors or, if the returns have been
lost or destroyed upon prior authority from the Commission, to use any authentic copy of
said election returns for the purpose of conducting the canvass, and thereafter issue the
certificates of canvass. The certificates of canvass shall be immediately transmitted to the
Speaker of the Batasang Pambansa.

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Proclamation shall be made only upon submission of all certificates of canvass or when
the missing certificates of canvass will not affect the results of the election. (New)

ARTICLE III - ELECTION OF MEMBERS OF THE BATASANG PAMBANSA

SECTION 21. Regular election of Members of the Batasang Pambansa. – The regular
election of the Members of the Batasang Pambansa shall be held on the second Monday of
May, Nineteen hundred and ninety (1990) and on the same day every six years thereafter.
(Sec. 5(1) Art. VIII, Const.)

SECTION 22. Special election for Members of the Batasang Pambansa. – In case a
vacancy arises in the Batasang Pambansa eighteen months or more before a regular
election, the Commission shall call a special election to be held within sixty days after the
vacancy occurs to elect the Member to serve the unexpired term. (Sec. 5, Subsec. (2), Art.
VIII, Const.)

The Batasang Pambansa through a duly approved resolution or an official communication


of the Speaker when it is not in session shall certify to the Commission the existence of
said vacancy.

SECTION 23. Composition of the Batasang Pambansa. – The Batasang Pambansa shall
be composed of not more than two hundred Members elected from the different provinces
of the Philippines with their component cities, highly urbanized cities and districts of
Metropolitan Manila, those elected or selected from various sectors as provided herein,
and those chosen by the President from the members of the Cabinet. (Sec. 2, Art. VIII,
Const.)

SECTION 24. Apportionment of representatives. – Until a new apportionment shall have


been made, the Members of the Batasang Pambansa shall be apportioned in accordance
with the Ordinance appended to the Constitution, as follows:

National Capital Region: Manila, 6; Quezon City, 4; Caloocan, 2; Pasay, 1;


Pasig and Marikina, 2; Las Piñas and Parañaque, 1; Makati, 1; Malabon,
Navotas and Valenzuela, 2; San Juan and Mandaluyong, 1; Taguig, Pateros and
Muntinglupa, 1.

Region 1: Abra, 1; Benguet, 1; Ilocos Norte with Laoag City, 2; Ilocos Sur, 2;
La Union, 2; Mountain Province, 1; Pangasinan with the cities of Dagupan and
San Carlos, 6; Baguio City, 1.

Region II: Batanes, 1; Cagayan, 3; Ifugao, 1; Isabela, 3; Kalinga-Apayao, 1;


Nueva Vizcaya, 1; Quirino, 1.

Region III: Bataan, 1; Bulacan, 4; Nueva Ecija with the cities of Cabanatuan,
Palayan and San Jose, 4; Pampanga with Angeles City, 4; Tarlac, 2; Zambales,
1; Olongapo City, 1.

Region IV: Aurora, 1; Batangas with the cities of Batangas and Lipa, 4; Cavite
with the cities of Cavite, Tagaytay and Trece Martires, 3; Laguna with San
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Pablo City, 4; Marinduque, 1; Occidental Mindoro, 1; Oriental Mindoro, 2;


Palawan with Puerto Princesa City, 1; Quezon with Lucena City, 4; Rizal, 2;
Romblon, 1.

Region V: Albay with Legaspi City, 3; Camarines Norte, 1; Camarines Sur with
the cities of Iriga and Naga, 4; Catanduanes, 1; Masbate, 2; Sorsogon, 2.

Region VI: Aklan, 1; Antique, 1; Capiz with Roxas City, 2; Iloilo with Iloilo
City, 5; Negros Occidental with the cities of Bacolod, Bago, Cadiz, La Carlota,
San Carlos and Silay, 7.

Region VII: Bohol with Tagbilaran City, 3; Cebu with the cities of Danao,
Lapu-Lapu, Mandaue and Toledo, 6; Negros Oriental with the cities of Bais,
Canlaon and Dumaguete, 3; Siquijor, 1; Cebu City, 2.

Region VIII: Leyte with the cities of Ormoc and Tacloban, 5; Southern Leyte,
1; Eastern Samar, 1; Northern Samar, 1; Samar with Calbayog City, 2.

Region IX: Basilan, 1; Sulu, 1; Tawi-Tawi, 1; Zamboanga del Norte with the
cities of Dapitan and Dipolog, 2; Zamboanga del Sur with Pagadian City, 3;
Zamboanga City, 1.

Region X: Agusan del Norte with Butuan City, 1; Agusan del Sur, 1; Bukidnon,
2; Camiguin, 1; Misamis Occidental with the cities of Oroquieta, Ozamis and
Tangub, 1; Misamis Oriental with Gingoog City, 2; Surigao del Norte with
Surigao City, 1; Cagayan de Oro City, 1.

Region XI: Surigao del Sur, 1; Davao del Norte, 3; Davao Oriental, 1; Davao
del Sur, 2; South Cotabato with General Santos City, 3; Davao City, 2.

Region XII: Lanao del Norte, 1; Lanao del Sur with Marawi City, 2;
Maguindanao with Cotabato City, 2; North Cotabato, 2; Sultan Kudarat, 1;
Iligan City, 1. (Sec. 1, Ordinance Appended to Const.)

Any province that may hereafter be created or any component city that may hereafter be
declared by or pursuant to law as a highly urbanized city shall be entitled in the
immediately following election to at least one Member or such number of Members as it
may be entitled to on the basis of the number of the inhabitants and on the same uniform
and progressive ratio used in the last preceding apportionment. The number of Members
apportioned to the province out of which the new province was created or where the new
highly urbanized city is geographically located shall be correspondingly adjusted by the
Commission, but such adjustment shall not be made within one hundred twenty days
before the election. (Sec. 2, BP Res. 112, Id.)

SECTION 25. Voting by province and its component cities, by highly urbanized city or by
district in Metropolitan Manila. – All candidates shall be voted at large by the registered
voters of their respective constituencies. The candidates corresponding to the number of
Member or Members to be elected in a constituency who receive the highest number of
votes shall be declared elected. (Sec. 3, BP 697)
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SECTION 26. Sectoral representatives. – There shall be three sectors to be represented in


the Batasang Pambansa, namely: (1) youth; (2) agricultural labor; (3) industrial labor
whose representatives shall be elected in the manner herein provided. Each sector shall be
entitled to four representatives, two of whom shall come from Luzon, one from Visayas,
and one from Mindanao: Provided, That the youth sector shall be entitled to two additional
sectoral representatives who shall be elected from any part of the country. (Sec. 4, BP 697)

SECTION 27. Scope of the sectors. – The agricultural labor sector covers all persons who
personally and physically till the land as their principal occupation. It includes agricultural
tenants and lessees, rural workers and farm employees, owner-cultivators, settlers and
small fishermen. (Sec. 5, BP 697)

The industrial labor sector includes all non-agricultural workers and employees.

The youth sector embraces persons not more than twenty-five years of age. (Sec. 5, BP
697)

SECTION 28. Selection of sectoral representatives. – Not later than twenty days after the
election of provincial, city or district representatives, the most representative and generally
recognized organizations or aggroupments of members of the agricultural labor, industrial
labor, and youth sectors, as attested to by the Ministers of Agrarian Reform and of
Agriculture and Food, the Minister of Labor and Employment, and the Ministers of Local
Government and of Education, Culture and Sports, respectively, shall, in accordance with
the procedures of said organizations or aggroupments of members of the sector, submit to
the President their respective nominees for each slot allotted for each sector. The President
shall appoint from among the nominees submitted by the aforementioned organizations or
aggroupments the representatives of each sector.

In recognizing the most representative and generally recognized organizations or


aggroupments, the Ministers of Agrarian Reform and of Agriculture and Food, the
Minister of Labor and Employment, and the Ministers of Local Government and
Education, Culture and Sports shall consider:

(a) The extent of membership and activity of the organization or aggroupment


which should be national;

(b) The responsiveness of the organization or aggroupment to the legitimate


aspirations of its sector;

(c) The militancy and consistency of the organization or aggroupment in


espousing the cause and promoting the welfare of the sector consistent with
that of the whole country;

(d) The observance by such organization or aggroupment of the rule of law;


and

(e) Other analogous factors.

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The President of the Philippines shall, in writing, notify the Secretary-General of the
Batasang Pambansa of the appointment made by him of any sectoral representative.

Except as herein otherwise Provided, sectoral representatives shall have the same
functions, responsibilities, rights, privileges, qualifications and disqualifications as the
representatives from the provinces and their component cities, highly urbanized cities or
districts of Metropolitan Manila. (Sec. 6, BP 697)

ARTICLE IV - ELECTION OF LOCAL OFFICIALS

SECTION 29. Regular elections of local officials. – The election of provincial, city and
municipal officials whose positions are provided for by the Local Government Code shall
be held throughout the Philippines in the manner herein prescribed on the first Monday of
May, Nineteen hundred and eighty-six and on the same day every six years thereafter.

The officials elected shall assume office on the thirtieth day of June next following the
election and shall hold office for six years and until their successors shall have been
elected and qualified.

All local incumbent officials whose tenure of office shall expire on March 23, 1986 shall
hold office until June 30, 1986 or until their successors shall have been elected and
qualified: Provided, That they cannot be suspended or removed without just cause. (New)

SECTION 30. Component and highly urbanized cities. – Unless their respective charters
provide otherwise, the electorate of component cities shall be entitled to vote in the
election for provincial officials of the province of which it is a part.

The electorate of highly urbanized cities shall not vote in the election for provincial
officials of the province in which it is located: Provided, however, That no component city
shall be declared or be entitled to a highly urbanized city status within ninety days prior to
any election. (New)

ARTICLE V - ELECTION OF MEMBERS OF THE REGIONAL ASSEMBLY OF THE


AUTONOMOUS REGIONS

SECTION 31. The Sangguniang Pampook of the autonomous regions. – Region IX and
Region XII in southern Philippines shall each have a Sangguniang Pampook to be
composed of twenty-seven members and shall include seventeen representatives elected
from the different provinces and cities of each region, and a sectoral representative each
from among the youth, agricultural workers, and non-agricultural workers (industrial
labor) of each region to be selected in the manner herein provided whose qualifications
and disqualifications are the same as Members of the Batasang Pambansa.

The President shall appoint an additional seven representatives in each region whenever in
his judgment any other sector is not properly represented in the Sangguniang Pampook as
a result of the elections. (BP 229)

SECTION 32. Apportionment of members of the Sangguniang Pampook. – The Members


of the Sangguniang Pampook of Region IX and of Region XII shall be apportioned as
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follows:

Region IX: Basilan, one (1); Sulu, three (3); Tawi-Tawi, one (1); Zamboanga del Norte
including the cities of Dipolog and Dapitan, four, (4); and Zamboanga del Sur, including
the City of Pagadian, six (6); and Zamboanga City, two (2);

Region XII: Lanao del Norte, two (2); Iligan City, one (1); Lanao del Sur including the
City of Marawi, four (4); Maguindanao including the City of Cotabato, four (4); North
Cotabato, four (4); and Sultan Kudarat, two (2). (Sec. 6, PD 1618)

SECTION 33. Election of members of Sangguniang Pampook. – The candidates for the
position of seventeen representatives to the Sangguniang Pampook of Region IX and of
Region XII shall be voted at large by the registered voters of each province including the
cities concerned.

The candidates corresponding to the number of member or members to be elected in a


constituency who receive the highest number of votes shall be declared elected. (Sec. 1,
BP 229)

SECTION 34. Selection of sectoral representatives. – The President shall, within thirty
days from the convening of each Sangguniang Pampook, appoint the sectoral
representatives on recommendation of the Sangguniang Pampook and after due
consultation with the representative and generally recognized organizations or
aggrupations of members of the youth, agricultural workers and non-agricultural workers
as attested by the Ministers of Local Government and of Education, Culture and Sports
(youth), Ministers of Agrarian Reform and of Agriculture and Food (agricultural workers),
and Ministers of Labor and Employment (non-agricultural or industrial labor).

The President of the Philippines shall in writing notify the Speaker of the Sangguniang
Pampook of each region of the appointment made by him of any sectoral representative.

The sectoral representatives shall have the same functions, responsibilities, rights,
privileges, qualifications and disqualifications as the elective provincial representatives to
the Sangguniang Pampook: Provided, however, That no defeated candidate for member of
the Sangguniang Pampook in the immediately preceding election shall be appointed as
sectoral representative. (New)

SECTION 35. Filling of vacancy. – Pending an election to fill a vacancy arising from any
cause in the Sangguniang Pampook, the vacancy shall be filled by the President, upon
recommendation of the Sangguniang Pampook: Provided, That the appointee shall come
from the same province or sector of the member being replaced. (Sec. 5, BP 20)

SECTION 36. Term of office. – The present members of the Sangguniang Pampook of
each of Region IX and Region XII shall continue in office until June 30, 1986 or until their
successors shall have been elected and qualified or appointed and qualified in the case of
sectoral members. They may not be removed or replaced except in accordance with the
internal rules of said assembly or provisions of pertinent laws.

The election of members of the Sangguniang Pampook of the two regions shall be held
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simultaneously with the local elections of 1986. Those elected in said elections shall have
a term of four years starting June 30, 1986.

Those elected in the election of 1990 to be held simultaneously with the elections of
Members of the Batasang Pambansa shall have a term of six years.

ARTICLE VI - ELECTION OF BARANGAY OFFICIALS

SECTION 37. Regular election of barangay officials. – The election for barangay officials
shall be held throughout the Philippines in the manner prescribed on the second Monday
of May Nineteen hundred and eighty-eight and on the same day every six years thereafter.

The officials elected shall assume office on the thirtieth day of June next following the
election and shall hold office for six years and until their successors shall have been
elected and qualified.

SECTION 38. Conduct of elections. – The barangay election shall be non-partisan and
shall be conducted in an expeditious and inexpensive manner.

No person who files a certificate of candidacy shall represent or allow himself to be


represented as a candidate of any political party or any other organization; and no political
party, political group, political committee, civic, religious, professional, or other
organization or organized group of whatever nature shall intervene in his nomination or in
the filing of his certificate of candidacy or give aid or support, directly or indirectly,
material or otherwise, favorable to or against his campaign for election: Provided, That
this provision shall not apply to the members of the family of a candidate within the fourth
civil degree of consanguinity or affinity nor to the personal campaign staff of the candidate
which shall not be more than one for every one hundred registered voters in his barangay:
Provided, however, That without prejudice to any liability that may be incurred, no permit
to hold a public meeting shall be denied on the ground that the provisions of this
paragraph may or will be violated.

Nothing in this section, however, shall be construed as in any manner affecting or


constituting an impairment of the freedom of individuals to support or oppose any
candidate for any barangay office.

SECTION 39. Certificate of Candidacy. – No person shall be elected punong barangay or


kagawad ng sangguniang barangay unless he files a sworn certificate of candidacy in
triplicate on any day from the commencement of the election period but not later than the
day before the beginning of the campaign period in a form to be prescribed by the
Commission. The candidate shall state the barangay office for which he is a candidate.

The certificate of candidacy shall be filed with the secretary of the sangguniang barangay
who shall have the ministerial duty to receive said certificate of candidacy and to
immediately acknowledge receipt thereof.

In case the secretary refuses to receive the same, or in the case of his absence or non-
availability, a candidate may file his certificate with the election registrar of the city or
municipality concerned.
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The secretary of the sangguniang barangay or the election registrar, as the case may be,
shall prepare a consolidated list of all the candidates and shall post said list in the barangay
hall and in other conspicuous places in the barangay at least ten days before the election.

Any elective or appointive municipal, city, provincial or national official or employee, or


those in the civil or military service, including those in government-owned or controlled
corporations, shall be considered automatically resigned upon the filing of certificate of
candidacy for a barangay office.

SECTION 40. Board of Election Tellers. – (1) The Commission shall constitute not later
than ten days before the election a board of election tellers in every barangay polling
place, to be composed of a public elementary school teacher as chairman, and two
members who are registered voters of the polling place concerned, but who are not
incumbent barangay officials nor related to any candidate for any position in that barangay
within the fourth civil degree of affinity or consanguinity.

In case no public elementary school teachers are available, the Commission shall designate
any registered voter in the polling place who is not an incumbent barangay official nor
related to any candidate for any position in that barangay within the fourth civil degree of
affinity or consanguinity.

(2) The board of election tellers shall supervise and conduct the election in their respective
polling places, count the votes and thereafter prepare a report in triplicate on a form
prescribed by the Commission. The original of this report shall be delivered immediately
to the barangay board of canvassers. The second copy shall be delivered to the election
registrar and the third copy shall be delivered to the secretary of the sangguniang barangay
who shall keep the same on file.

SECTION 41. Registration of voters and list of voters. – Not later than seven days before
the election, the board of election tellers shall meet in every barangay polling place to
conduct the registration of barangay voters and to prepare the list of voters. Any voter may
challenge the qualification of any person seeking to register and said challenge shall be
heard and decided on the same day by the board of election tellers.

The final list of voters shall be posted in the polling places at least two days before
election day. The registration of any voter shall not be transferred without written notice at
least two days before the date of election. Not later than the day following the barangay
election, the board of election tellers shall deliver the list of voters to the election registrar
for custody and safekeeping.

SECTION 42. Polling places. – (1) The chairman of the board of election tellers shall
designate the public school or any other public building within the barangay to be used as
polling place in case the barangay has one election precinct. (2) For barangays with two or
more election precincts the chairman of the board of canvassers shall designate the public
school or any other public building to be used as polling place.

In case there is no public school or other public building that can be used as polling places,
other appropriate private buildings may be designated: Provided, That such buildings are
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not owned or occupied or possessed by any incumbent elective public official or


candidate, or his relative within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity or affinity. The
polling place shall be centrally located as possible, always taking into consideration the
convenience and safety of the voters.

SECTION 43. Official barangay ballots. – The official barangay ballots shall be provided
by the city or municipality concerned of a size and color to be prescribed by the
Commission.

Such official ballots shall, before they are handed to the voter at the polling place, be
authenticated in the presence of the voter, by the authorized representatives of the
candidates and the chairman and members of the board of election tellers who shall affix
their signatures at the back thereof. Any ballot which is not authenticated shall be deemed
spurious.

SECTION 44. Ballot boxes. – The Commission shall provide the ballot boxes for each
barangay polling place, but each candidate may be permitted to provide a padlock for said
ballot box.

SECTION 45. Postponement or failure of election. – When for any serious cause such as
violence, terrorism, loss or destruction of election paraphernalia or records, force majeure,
and other analogous causes of such nature that the holding of a free, orderly and honest
election should become impossible in any barangay, the Commission, upon a verified
petition of an interested party and after due notice and hearing at which the interested
parties are given equal opportunity to be heard, shall postpone the election therein for such
time as it may deem necessary.

If, on account of force majeure, violence, terrorism, fraud or other analogous causes, the
election in any barangay has not been held on the date herein fixed or has been suspended
before the hour fixed by law for the closing of the voting therein and such failure or
suspension of election would affect the result of the election, the Commission, on the basis
of a verified petition of an interested party, and after due notice and hearing, at which the
interested parties are given equal opportunity to be heard shall call for the holding or
continuation of the election within thirty days after it shall have verified and found that the
cause or causes for which the election has been postponed or suspended have ceased to
exist or upon petition of at least thirty percent of the registered voters in the barangay
concerned.

When the conditions in these areas warrant, upon verification by the Commission, or upon
petition of at least thirty percent of the registered voters in the barangay concerned, it shall
order the holding of the barangay election which was postponed or suspended.

SECTION 46. Barangay board of canvassers. – (1) The Commission shall constitute a
board of canvassers at least seven days before the election in each barangay, to be
composed of the senior public elementary school teacher in the barangay as chairman, and
two other public elementary school teachers, as members.

In case the number of public elementary school teachers is inadequate, the Commission
shall designate the chairman and members of the barangay board of canvassers from
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among the board of election tellers.

(2) The barangay board of canvassers shall meet immediately in a building where a polling
place is found and which is most centrally located in the barangay and after canvassing the
results from the various polling places within the barangay, proclaim the winners. The
board of canvassers shall accomplish the certificate of proclamation in triplicate on a form
to be prescribed by the Commission. The original of the certificate shall be sent to the
election registrar concerned, the second copy shall be delivered to the secretary of the
sangguniang bayan or sangguniang panlungsod, as the case may be, and the third copy
shall be kept on file by the secretary of the sangguniang barangay.

(3) In a barangay where there is only one polling place, the barangay board of election
tellers shall also be the barangay board of canvassers.

SECTION 47. Activities during the campaign period. – During the campaign period, the
punong barangay if he is not a candidate, or any resident of the barangay designated by the
Commission, shall convene the barangay assembly at least once for the purpose of
allowing the candidates to appear at a joint meeting duly called, upon proper and with at
least two days notice, to explain to the barangay voters their respective program of
administration, their qualifications, and other information that may help enlighten voters in
casting their votes.

The members of the barangay assembly may take up and discuss other matters relative to
the election of barangay officials.

SECTION 48. Watchers. – Candidates may appoint two watchers each, to serve
alternately, in every polling place within the barangay, who shall be furnished with a
signed copy of the results of the election, in such form as the Commission may prescribe,
immediately after the completion of the canvass.

SECTION 49. Inclusion and exclusion cases. – Inclusion and exclusion cases which shall
be decided not later than seven before the date of the election shall be within the exclusive
original jurisdiction of the municipal or metropolitan trial court. The notice of such
decision shall be served to all parties within twenty-four hours following its promulgation
and any party adversely affected may appeal therefrom within twenty-four hours to the
regional trial court which shall finally decide the same not later than two days before the
date of the election.

SECTION 50. Funding. – Local governments shall appropriate such funds to defray such
necessary and reasonable expenses of the members of the board of election tellers, board
of canvassers and the printing of election forms and procurement of other election
paraphernalia, and the installation of polling booths.

SECTION 51. Penalties. -Violations of any provisions of this Article shall constitute
prohibited acts and shall be prosecuted and penalized in accordance with the provisions of
this Code.

ARTICLE VII - THE COMMISSION ON ELECTIONS

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SECTION 52. Powers and functions of the Commission on Elections. – In addition to the
powers and functions conferred upon it by the Constitution, the Commission shall have
exclusive charge of the enforcement and administration of all laws relative to the conduct
of elections for the purpose of ensuring free, orderly and honest elections, except as
otherwise provided herein and shall:

(a) Exercise direct and immediate supervision and control over national and local officials
or employees, including members of any national or local law enforcement agency and
instrumentality of the government required by law to perform duties relative to the
conduct of elections. In addition, it may authorize CMT cadets eighteen years of age and
above to act as its deputies for the purpose of enforcing its orders.

The Commission may relieve any officer or employee referred to in the preceding
paragraph from the performance of his duties relating to electoral processes who violates
the election law or fails to comply with its instructions, orders, decisions or rulings, and
appoint his substitute. Upon recommendation of the Commission, the corresponding
proper authority shall suspend or remove from office any or all of such officers or
employees who may, after due process, be found guilty of such violation or failure.

(b) During the period of the campaign and ending thirty days thereafter, when in any area
of the country there are persons committing acts of terrorism to influence people to vote
for or against any candidate or political party, the Commission shall have the power to
authorize any member or members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the National
Bureau of Investigation, the Integrated National Police or any similar agency or
instrumentality of the government, except civilian home defense forces, to act as deputies
for the purpose of ensuring the holding of free, orderly and honest elections.

(c) Promulgate rules and regulations implementing the provisions of this Code or other
laws which the Commission is required to enforce and administer, and require the payment
of legal fees and collect the same in payment of any business done in the Commission, at
rates that it may provide and fix in its rules and regulations.

Rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission shall take effect after three (3) days
following the publication thereof in at least two (2) daily newspapers of general
circulation. Orders and directives issued by the Commission pursuant to said rules and
regulations shall be furnished by personal delivery to accredited political parties within
forty-eight hours of issuance and shall take effect immediately upon receipt. (Sec. 3(b),
1971 EC)

In case of conflict between rules, regulations, orders or directives of the Commission in


the exercise of its constitutional powers and those issued by any other administrative
office or agency of the government concerning the same matter relative to elections, the
former shall prevail. (Sec. 185(b), 1978 EC)

(d) Summon the parties to a controversy pending before it, issue subpoena and subpoena
duces tecum, and take testimony in any investigation or hearing before it, and delegate
such power to any officer of the Commission who shall be a member of the Philippine Bar.
In case of failure of a witness to attend, the Commission, upon proof of service of the
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subpoena to said witnesses, may issue a warrant to arrest witness and bring him before the
Commission or the officer before whom his attendance is required.

Any controversy submitted to the Commission shall, after compliance with the
requirements of due process, be immediately heard and decided by it within sixty days
from submission thereof. No decision or resolution shall be rendered by the Commission
either en banc or by division unless taken up in a formal session properly convened for the
purpose.

The Commission may, when necessary, avail of the assistance of any national or local law
enforcement agency and/or instrumentality of the government to execute under its direct
and immediate supervision any of its final decisions, orders, instructions or rulings. (Sec.
185(i), 1978 EC)

(e) Punish contempts provided for in the Rules of Court in the same procedure and with
the same penalties provided therein. Any violation of any final and executory decision,
order or ruling of the Commission shall constitute contempt thereof. (Sec. 185(i), 1978
EC, with amendments)

(f) Enforce and execute its decisions, directives, orders and instructions which shall have
precedence over those emanating from any other authority, except the Supreme Court and
those issued in habeas corpus proceedings. (Sec. 185(c), 1978 EC)

(g) Prescribe the forms to be used in the election, plebiscite or referendum. (Sec. 185(f),
1978 EC, with amendments)

(h) Procure any supplies, equipment, materials or services needed for the holding of the
election by public bidding: Provided, That, if it finds the requirements of public bidding
impractical to observe, then by negotiations or sealed bids, and in both cases, the
accredited parties shall be duly notified.

(i) Prescribe the use or adoption of the latest technological and electronic devices, taking
into account the situation prevailing in the area and the funds available for the purpose:
Provided, That the Commission shall notify the authorized representatives of accredited
political parties and candidates in areas affected by the use or adoption of technological
and electronic devices not less than thirty days prior to the effectivity of the use of such
devices. (Sec. 185(j), 1978 EC)

(j) Carry out a continuing and systematic campaign through newspapers of general
circulation, radios and other media forms to educate the public and fully inform the
electorate about election laws, procedures, decisions, and other matters relative to the
work and duties of the Commission and the necessity of clean, free, orderly and honest
electoral processes. (Sec. 185(k), 1978 EC)

(k) Enlist non-partisan group or organizations of citizens from the civic, youth,
professional, educational, business or labor sectors known for their probity, impartiality
and integrity with the membership and capability to undertake a coordinated operation and
activity to assist it in the implementation of the provisions of this Code and the
resolutions, orders and instructions of the Commission for the purpose of ensuring free,
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orderly and honest elections in any constituency. Such groups or organizations shall
function under the direct and immediate control and supervision of the Commission and
shall perform the following specific functions and duties:

A. Before Election Day:

1. Undertake an information campaign on salient features of this Code and


help in the dissemination of the orders, decisions and resolutions of the
Commission relative to the forthcoming election.

2. Wage a registration drive in their respective areas so that all citizens of


voting age, not otherwise disqualified by law may be registered.

3. Help cleanse the list of voters of illegal registrants, conduct house-to-


house canvass if necessary, and take the appropriate legal steps towards
this end.

4. Report to the Commission violations of the provisions of this Code on the


conduct of the political campaign, election propaganda and electoral
expenditures.

B. On Election Day:

1. Exhort all registered voters in their respective areas to go to their polling


places and cast their votes.

2. Nominate one watcher for accreditation in each polling place and each
place of canvass who shall have the same duties, functions and rights as
the other watchers of political parties and candidates. Members or units
of any citizen group or organization so designated by the Commission
except its lone duly accredited watcher, shall not be allowed to enter any
polling place except to vote, and shall, if they so desire, stay in an area at
least fifty meters away from the polling place.

3. Report to the peace authorities and other appropriate agencies all


instances of terrorism, intimidation of voters, and other similar attempts
to frustrate the free and orderly casting of votes.

4. Perform such other functions as may be entrusted to such group or


organization by the Commission.

The designation of any group or organization made in accordance herewith may be


revoked by the Commission upon notice and hearing whenever by its actuations such
group or organization has shown partiality to any political party or candidate, or has
performed acts in excess or in contravention of the functions and duties herein provided
and such others which may be granted by the Commission.

(l) Conduct hearings on controversies pending before it in the cities or provinces upon
proper motion of any party, taking into consideration the materiality and number of
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witnesses to be presented, the situation prevailing in the area and the fund available for the
purpose. (New)

(m) Fix other reasonable periods for certain pre-election requirements in order that voters
shall not be deprived of their right of suffrage and certain groups of rights granted them in
this Code. (Sec. 185(c), 1978 EC)

Unless indicated in this Code, the Commission is hereby authorized for fix the appropriate
period for the various prohibited acts enumerated herein, consistent with the requirements
of free, orderly, and honest elections. (New)

SECTION 53. Field offices of the Commission. – The Commission shall have the
following field offices:

(1) Regional Election Office, headed by the Regional Election Director and
assisted by the Assistant Regional Director and such other subordinate officers
or employees as the Commission may appoint.

(2) Provincial Election Office, headed by the Provincial Election Supervisor


and assisted by such other subordinate officers or employees as the
Commission may appoint.

(3) City/Municipal Election Office, headed by the City/Municipal Registrar


who shall be assisted by an election clerk and such other employees as the
Commission may appoint.

The Commission may delegate its powers and functions or order the implementation or
enforcement of its orders, rulings, or decisions through the heads of its field offices.
(New).

SECTION 54. Qualifications. – Only members of the Philippines Bar shall be eligible for
appointment to the position of regional director, assistant regional director, provincial
election supervisor and election registrar: Provided, however, That if there are no members
of the Philippine Bar available for appointment as election registrar, except in cities and
capital towns, graduates of duly recognized schools of law, liberal arts, education or
business administration who possess the appropriate civil service eligibility may be
appointed to said position. (Sec. 77, 1978 EC, with amendments)

SECTION 55. Office space. – The local government concerned shall provide a suitable
place for the office of the provincial election supervisor and his staff and the election
registrar and his staff: Provided, That in case of failure of the local government concerned
to provide such suitable place, the provincial election supervisor or the election registrar,
as the case may be, upon prior authority of the Commission and notice to the local
government concerned, may lease another place for office and the rentals thereof shall be
chargeable to the funds of the local government concerned. (Sec. 76, 1978 EC, as amended
by PD 1655)

SECTION 56. Changes in the composition, distribution or assignment of field offices. –


The Commission may make changes in the composition, distribution and assignment of
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field offices, as well as its personnel, whenever the exigencies of the service and the
interest of free, orderly, and honest election so require: Provided, That such changes shall
be effective and enforceable only for the duration of the election period concerned and
shall not affect the tenure of office of the incumbents of positions affected and shall not
constitute a demotion, either in rank or salary, nor result in change of status: and Provided,
further, That there shall be no changes in the composition, distribution or assignment
within thirty days before election, except for cause and after due notice and hearing, and
that in no case shall a regional or assistant regional director be assigned to a region; a
provincial election supervisor to a province; or a city or municipal election registrar to a
city or municipality, where he and/or his spouse are related to any candidate within the
fourth civil degree of consanguinity or affinity as the case may be. (Sec. 185(d), 1978 EC,
with amendments)

SECTION 57. Measures to ensure enforcement. – For the effective enforcement of the
provisions of this Code, the Commission is further vested and charged with the following
powers, duties and responsibilities:

1. To issue search warrants after examination under oath or affirmation of the complainant
and the witnesses.

2. To stop any illegal election activity, or confiscate, tear down, and stop any unlawful,
libelous, misleading or false election propaganda, after due notice and hearing.

3. To inquire into the financial records of candidates and any organization or group of
persons, motu proprio or upon written representation for probable cause by any candidate
or group of persons or qualified voter, after due notice and hearing.

For purposes of this section, the Commission may avail itself of the assistance of the
Commission on Audit, the Central Bank, the National Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau
of Internal Revenue, the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the Integrated National Police of
the Philippines, barangay officials, and other agencies of the government. (Sec. 186, 1978
EC, with amendments)

SECTION 58. Disqualifications of members of the Commission. – The chairman and


members of the Commission shall be subject to the canons of judicial ethics in the
discharge of their functions.

No chairman or commissioner shall sit in any case in which he has manifested bias or
prejudice for or against or antagonism against any party thereto and in connection
therewith, or in any case in which he would be disqualified under the Rules of Court. If it
be claimed that the chairman or a commissioner is disqualified as above Provided, the
party objecting to his competency may file his objection in writing with the Commission
stating the ground therefor. The official concerned shall continue to participate in the
hearing or withdraw therefrom in accordance with his determination of the question of his
disqualification. The decision shall forthwith be made in writing and filed with the other
papers of the case in accordance with the Rules of Court. If a disqualification should result
in a lack of quorum in the Commission sitting en banc, the Presiding Justice of the
Intermediate Appellate Court shall designate a justice of said court to sit in said case for
the purpose of hearing and reaching a decision thereon. (Sec. 187, 1978 EC, with
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amendments)

SECTION 59. Publication of official ballots and election returns and printing thereof. –
The Commission shall publish at least ten days before an election in a newspaper of
general circulation certified data on the number of official ballots and election returns and
the names and addresses of the printers and the number printed by each. (New)

ARTICLE VIII - POLITICAL PARTIES

SECTION 60. Political party. – “Political party” or “party”, when used in this Act, means
an organized group of persons pursuing the same ideology, political ideas or platforms of
government and includes its branches and divisions. To acquire juridical personality,
qualify it for subsequent accreditation, and to entitle it to the rights and privileges herein
granted to political parties, a political party shall first be duly registered with the
Commission. Any registered political party that, singly or in coalition with others, fails to
obtain at least ten percent of the votes cast in the constituency in which it nominated and
supported a candidate or candidates in the election next following its registration shall,
after notice and hearing, be deemed to have forfeited such status as a registered political
party in such constituency. (Sec. 22, 1971 EC, with amendments)

SECTION 61. Registration. – Any organized group of persons seeking registration as a


national or regional political party may file with the Commission a verified petition
attaching thereto its constitution and by-laws, platform or program of government and
such other relevant information as may be required by the Commission. The Commission
shall, after due notice and hearing, resolve the petition within ten days from the date it is
submitted for decision.

No religious sect shall be registered as a political party and no political party which seeks
to achieve its goal through violence shall be entitled to accreditation. (New; Sec. 2 and 8,
Art. XII-C, Const.)

SECTION 62. Publication of petition for registration or accreditation. – The Commission


shall require publication of the petition for registration or accreditation in at least three
newspapers of general circulation and shall, after due notice and hearing, resolve the
petition within fifteen days from the date it is submitted for decision. (New)

ARTICLE IX - ELIGIBILITY OF CANDIDATES AND CERTIFICATE OF


CANDIDACY

SECTION 63. Qualifications for President and Vice-President of the Philippines. – No


person may be elected President or Vice-President unless he is a natural-born citizen of the
Philippines, a registered voter, able to read and write, at least forty years of age on the day
of election, and a resident of the Philippines for at least ten years immediately preceding
such election. (Secs. 2 and 4, Art. VII, Const.)

SECTION 64. Qualifications for Members of the Batasang Pambansa. – No person shall
be elected Member of the Batasang Pambansa as a provincial, city or district
representative unless he is a natural-born citizen of the Philippines and, on the day of the
election, is at least twenty-five years of age, able to read and write, a registered voter in
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the constituency in which he shall be elected, and a resident thereof for a period of not less
than six months immediately preceding the day of the election. (Sec. 4, Art. VIII, Const.)

A sectoral representative shall be a natural-born citizen of the Philippines, able to read and
write, a resident of the Philippines for a period of not less than one year immediately
preceding the day of the election, a bona fide member of the sector he seeks to represent,
and in the case of a representative of the agricultural or industrial labor sector, shall be a
registered voter, and on the day of the election is at least twenty-five years of age. The
youth sectoral representative should at least be eighteen and not be more than twenty-five
years of age on the day of the election: Provided, however, That any youth sectoral
representative who attains the age of twenty-five years during his term shall be entitled to
continue in office until the expiration of his term. (Sec. 12, BP 697)

SECTION 65. Qualifications of elective local officials. – The qualifications for elective
provincial, city, municipal and barangay officials shall be those provided for in the Local
Government Code. (New)

SECTION 66. Candidates holding appointive office or positions. – Any person holding a
public appointive office or position, including active members of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, and officers and employees in government-owned or controlled corporations,
shall be considered ipso facto resigned from his office upon the filing of his certificate of
candidacy.

SECTION 67. Candidates holding elective office. - Any elective official, whether national
or local, running for any office other than the one which he is holding in a permanent
capacity, except for President and Vice President, shall be considered ipso facto resigned
from his office upon the filing of his certificate of candidacy.

SECTION 68. Disqualifications. – Any candidate who, in an action or protest in which he


is a party is declared by final decision of a competent court guilty of, or found by the
Commission of having (a) given money or other material consideration to influence,
induce or corrupt the voters or public officials performing electoral functions; (b)
committed acts of terrorism to enhance his candidacy; (c) spent in his election campaign
an amount in excess of that allowed by this Code; (d) solicited, received or made any
contribution prohibited under Sections 89, 95, 96, 97 and 104; or (e) violated any of
Sections 80, 83, 85, 86 and 261, paragraphs d, e, k, v, and cc, sub-paragraph 6, shall be
disqualified from continuing as a candidate, or if he has been elected, from holding the
office. Any person who is a permanent resident of or an immigrant to a foreign country
shall not be qualified to run for any elective office under this Code, unless said person has
waived his status as permanent resident or immigrant of a foreign country in accordance
with the residence requirement provided for in the election laws. (Sec. 25, 1971 EC)

SECTION 69. Nuisance candidates. – The Commission may, motu proprio or upon a
verified petition of an interested party, refuse to give due course to or cancel a certificate
of candidacy if it is shown that said certificate has been filed to put the election process in
mockery or disrepute or to cause confusion among the voters by the similarity of the
names of the registered candidates or by other circumstances or acts which clearly
demonstrate that the candidate has no bona fide intention to run for the office for which
the certificate of candidacy has been filed and thus prevent a faithful determination of the
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true will of the electorate. (Sec. 26, 1978 EC)

SECTION 70. Guest candidacy. – A political party may nominate and/or support
candidates not belonging to it. (New)

SECTION 71. Changing political party affiliation. – An elective official may change his
party affiliation for purposes of the election next following his change of party within one
year prior to such election. (New)

SECTION 72. Effects of disqualification cases and priority. – The Commission and the
courts shall give priority to cases of disqualification by reason of violation of this Act to
the end that a final decision shall be rendered not later than seven days before the election
in which the disqualification is sought.

Any candidate who has been declared by final judgment to be disqualified shall not be
voted for, and the votes cast for him shall not be counted. Nevertheless, if for any reason, a
candidate is not declared by final judgment before an election to be disqualified and he is
voted for and receives the winning number of votes in such election, his violation of the
provisions of the preceding sections shall not prevent his proclamation and assumption to
office (New)

SECTION 73. Certificate of candidacy. – No person shall be eligible for any elective
public office unless he files a sworn certificate of candidacy within the period fixed herein.

A person who has filed a certificate of candidacy may, prior to the election, withdraw the
same by submitting to the office concerned a written declaration under oath.

No person shall be eligible for more than one office to be filled in the same election, and if
he files his certificate of candidacy for more than one office, he shall not be eligible for
any of them. However, before the expiration of the period for the filing of certificates of
candidacy, the person who was filed more than one certificate of candidacy may declare
under oath the office for which he desires to be eligible and cancel the certificate of
candidacy for the other office or offices.

The filing or withdrawal of a certificate of candidacy shall not affect whatever civil,
criminal or administrative liabilities which a candidate may have incurred. (Sec. 19, 1978
EC)

SECTION 74. Contents of certificate of candidacy. – The certificate of candidacy shall


state that the person filing it is announcing his candidacy for the office stated therein and
that he is eligible for said office; if for Member of the Batasang Pambansa, the province,
including its component cities, highly urbanized city or district or sector which he seeks to
represent; the political party to which he belongs; civil status; his date of birth; residence;
his post office address for all election purposes; his profession or occupation; that he will
support and defend the Constitution of the Philippines and will maintain true faith and
allegiance thereto; that he will obey the laws, legal orders, and decrees promulgated by the
duly constituted authorities; that he is not a permanent resident or immigrant to a foreign
country; that the obligation imposed by his oath is assumed voluntarily, without mental
reservation or purpose of evasion; and that the facts stated in the certificate of candidacy
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are true to the best of his knowledge.

Unless a candidate has officially changed his name through a court approved proceeding, a
certificate shall use in a certificate of candidacy the name by which he has been baptized,
or if has not been baptized in any church or religion, the name registered in the office of
the local civil registrar or any other name allowed under the provisions of existing law or,
in the case of a Muslim, his Hadji name after performing the prescribed religious
pilgrimage: Provided, That when there are two or more candidates for an office with the
same name and surname, each candidate, upon being made aware of such fact, shall state
his paternal and maternal surname, except the incumbent who may continue to use the
name and surname stated in his certificate of candidacy when he was elected. He may also
include one nickname or stage name by which he is generally or popularly known in the
locality.

The person filing a certificate of candidacy shall also affix his latest photograph, passport
size; a statement in duplicate containing his bio-data and program of government not
exceeding one hundred words, if he so desires. (Sec. 20, 1978 EC)

SECTION 75. Filing and distribution of certificate of candidacy. – The certificate of


candidacy shall be filed on any day from the commencement of the election period but not
later than the day before the beginning of the campaign period: Provided, That in cases of
postponement or failure of election under Sections 5 and 6 hereof, no additional certificate
of candidacy shall be accepted except in cases of substitution of candidates as provided
under Section 77 hereof.

The certificates of candidacy for President and Vice-President of the Philippines shall be
filed in ten legible copies with the Commission which shall order the printing of copies
thereof for distribution to all polling places. The certificates of candidacy for the other
offices shall be filed in duplicate with the offices herein below mentioned, together with a
number of clearly legible copies equal to twice the number of polling places in the
province, city, district, municipality or barangay, as the case may be:

(a) For representative in the Batasang Pambansa, with the Commission, the provincial
election supervisor, city election registrar in case of highly urbanized cities, or an officer
designated by the Commission having jurisdiction over the province, city or representative
district who shall send copies thereof to all polling places in the province, city or district;

(b) For provincial offices, with the provincial election supervisor of the province
concerned who shall send copies thereof to all polling places in the province;

(c) For city and municipal offices, with the city or municipal election registrar who shall
send copies thereof to all polling places in the city or municipality; and

(d) For punong barangay or kagawad ng sangguniang barangay, the certificates of


candidacy shall be filed in accordance with the provisions of Section 39 of Article VI of
this Code.

The duly authorized receiving officer shall immediately send the original copy of all
certificates of candidacy received by him to the Commission. (Sec. 24, 1978 EC and Sec.
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29, 1971 EC)

SECTION 76. Ministerial duty of receiving and acknowledging receipt. – The


Commission, provincial election supervisor, election registrar or officer designated by the
Commission or the board of election inspectors under the succeeding section shall have
the ministerial duty to receive and acknowledge receipt of the certificate of candidacy.
(Sec. 25, 1978 EC)

SECTION 77. Candidates in case of death, disqualification or withdrawal of another. – If


after the last day for the filing of certificates of candidacy, an official candidate of a
registered or accredited political party dies, withdraws or is disqualified for any cause,
only a person belonging to, and certified by, the same political party may file a certificate
of candidacy to replace the candidate who died, withdrew or was disqualified. The
substitute candidate nominated by the political party concerned may file his certificate of
candidacy for the office affected in accordance with the preceding sections not later than
mid-day of the day of the election. If the death, withdrawal or disqualification should
occur between the day before the election and mid-day of election day, said certificate may
be filed with any board of election inspectors in the political subdivision where he is a
candidate, or, in the case of candidates to be voted for by the entire electorate of the
country, with the Commission. (Sec. 28, 1978 EC)

SECTION 78. Petition to deny due course to or cancel a certificate of candidacy. – A


verified petition seeking to deny due course or to cancel a certificate of candidacy may be
filed by the person exclusively on the ground that any material representation contained
therein as required under Section 74 hereof is false. The petition may be filed at any time
not later than twenty-five days from the time of the filing of the certificate of candidacy
and shall be decided, after due notice and hearing, not later than fifteen days before the
election.

ARTICLE X - CAMPAIGN AND ELECTION PROPAGANDA

SECTION 79. Definitions. – As used in this Code:

(a) The term “candidate” refers to any person aspiring for or seeking an elective public
office, who has filed a certificate of candidacy by himself or through an accredited
political party, aggroupment, or coalition of parties;

(b) The term “election campaign” or “partisan political activity” refers to an act designed
to promote the election or defeat of a particular candidate or candidates to a public office
which shall include:

(1) Forming organizations, associations, clubs, committees or other groups of persons for
the purpose of soliciting votes and/or undertaking any campaign for or against a candidate;

(2) Holding political caucuses, conferences, meetings, rallies, parades, or other similar
assemblies, for the purpose of soliciting votes and/or undertaking any campaign or
propaganda for or against a candidate;

(3) Making speeches, announcements or commentaries, or holding interviews for or


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against the election of any candidate for public office;

(4) Publishing or distributing campaign literature or materials designed to support or


oppose the election of any candidate; or

(5) Directly or indirectly soliciting votes, pledges or support for or against a candidate.

The foregoing enumerated acts if performed for the purpose of enhancing the chances of
aspirants for nomination for candidacy to a public office by a political party, aggroupment,
or coalition of parties shall not be considered as election campaign or partisan election
activity.

Public expressions or opinions or discussions of probable issues in a forthcoming election


or on attributes of or criticisms against probable candidates proposed to be nominated in a
forthcoming political party convention shall not be construed as part of any election
campaign or partisan political activity contemplated under this Article.

SECTION 80. Election campaign or partisan political activity outside campaign period. –
It shall be unlawful for any person, whether or not a voter or candidate, or for any party, or
association of persons, to engage in an election campaign or partisan political activity
except during the campaign period: Provided, That political parties may hold political
conventions or meetings to nominate their official candidates within thirty days before the
commencement of the campaign period and forty-five days for Presidential and Vice-
Presidential election. (Sec. 35, 1978 EC)

SECTION 81. Intervention of foreigners. – It shall be unlawful for any foreigner, whether
judicial or natural person, to aid any candidate or political party, directly or indirectly, or
take part in or influence in any manner any election, or to contribute or make any
expenditure in connection with any election campaign or partisan political activity. (Sec.
36, 1978 EC)

SECTION 82. Lawful election propaganda. – Lawful election propaganda shall include:

(a) Pamphlets, leaflets, cards, decals, stickers or other written or printed materials of a size
not more than eight and one-half inches in width and fourteen inches in length;

(b) Handwritten or printed letters urging voters to vote for or against any particular
candidate;

(c) Cloth, paper or cardboard posters, whether framed or posted, with an area exceeding
two feet by three feet, except that, at the site and on the occasion of a public meeting or
rally, or in announcing the holding of said meeting or rally, streamers not exceeding three
feet by eight feet in size, shall be allowed: Provided, That said streamers may not be
displayed except one week before the date of the meeting or rally and that it shall be
removed within seventy-two hours after said meeting or rally; or

(d) All other forms of election propaganda not prohibited by this Code as the Commission
may authorize after due notice to all interested parties and hearing where all the interested
parties were given an equal opportunity to be heard: Provided, That the Commission’s
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authorization shall be published in two newspapers of general circulation throughout the


nation for at least twice within one week after the authorization has been granted. (Sec. 37,
1978 EC)

SECTION 83. Removal, destruction or defacement of lawful election propaganda


prohibited. – It shall be unlawful for any person during the campaign period to remove,
destroy, obliterate, or in any manner deface or tamper with, or prevent the distribution of
lawful election propaganda. (Sec. 40, 1978 EC)

SECTION 84. Requirements for published or printed election propaganda. – Any


newspaper, newsletter, newsweekly, gazette or magazine advertising, posters, pamphlets,
circulars, handbills, bumper stickers, streamers, simple list of candidates or any published
or printed political matter for or against a candidate or group of candidates to any public
office shall bear and be identified by the words “paid for by” followed by the true and
correct name and address of the payor and by the words “printed by” followed by the true
and correct name and address of the printer. (Sec. 38, 1978 EC)

SECTION 85. Prohibited forms of election propaganda. - It shall be unlawful:

(a) To print, publish, post or distribute any poster, pamphlet, circular, handbill or printed
matter urging voters to vote for against any candidate unless they bear the names and
addresses of the printer and payor as required in Section 84 hereof;

(b) To errect, put up, make use of attach, float or display any billboard, tinplate-poster,
balloons and the like of whatever size, shape, form or kind, advertising for or against any
candidate or political party;

(c) To purchase, manufacture, request, distribute or accept electoral propaganda gadgets,


such as pens, lighters, fans or whatever nature, flashlights, athletic goods or materials,
wallet, shirt, hats, bandanas, matches, cigarettes and the like except that campaign
supporters accompanying a candidate shall be allowed to wear hats and/or shirts or T-shirts
advertising a candidates;

(d) To show or display publicy and advertisement or propaganda for or against any
candidate by means of cinematography, audio-visual units or other screen projections
except telecast which may be allowed as hereinafter provided: and

(e) For any radio broadcasting or television station to sell or give free of charge air time
for campaign and other political purposes except as authorized in this Code under and
regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant thereto.

Any prohibited election propaganda gadget or advertisement shall stopped, confiscated or


torn down by the representative of the Commission upon specific authority of the
Commission. (Sec. 39, 1978 EC, modified)

SECTION 86. Regulation of election propaganda through mass media. – (a) The
Commission shall promulgate rules and regulations regarding the sale of air time for
partisan political purposes during the campaign period to insure that equal time as to
duration and quality is available to all candidates for the same office or political parties at
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the same rates or given free of charge; that such rates are reasonable and not higher than
those charged other buyers or users of air time for non-political purposes; that the
provisions of this Code regarding the limitation of expenditures by candidates and political
parties and contributions by private persons, entities and institutions are effectively
enforced; and to ensure that said radio broadcasting and television stations shall not
unduly allow the scheduling of any program or permit any sponsor to manifestly favor or
oppose any candidate or political party by unduly or repeatedly referring to or including
said candidate and/or political party in such program respecting, however, in all instances
the right of said stations to broadcast accounts of significant or newsworthy events and
views on matters of public interest.

(b) All contracts for advertising in any newspaper, magazine, periodical or any form of
publication promoting or opposing the candidacy of any person for public office shall,
before its implementation, be registered by said newspaper, magazine, periodical or
publication with the Commission. In every case, it shall be signed by the candidate
concerned or by the duly authorized representative of the political party.

(c) No franchise or permit to operate a radio or television station shall be granted or


issued, suspended or cancelled during the election period.

Any radio or television stations, including that owned or controlled by the Government,
shall give free of charge equal time and prominence to an accredited political party or its
candidates if it gives free of charge air time to an accredited political party or its
candidates for political purposes.

In all instances, the Commission shall supervise the use and employment of press, radio
and television facilities so as to give candidates equal opportunities under equal
circumstances to make known their qualifications and their stand on public issues within
the limits set forth in this Code on election spending. (Sec. 41, 1978 EC)

Rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission under and by authority of this
section shall take effect on the seventh day after their publication in at least two daily
newspapers of general circulation. Prior to the effectivity of said rules and regulations, no
political advertisement or propaganda for or against any candidate or political party shall
be published or broadcast through the mass media. (New)

Violation of the rules and regulations of the Commission issued to implement this section
shall be an election offense punishable under Section 264 hereof. (New)

SECTION 87. Rallies, meetings and other political activities. – Subject to the
requirements of local ordinances on the issuance of permits, any political party supporting
official candidates or any candidate individually or jointly with other aspirants may hold
peaceful political rallies, meetings, and other similar activities during the campaign period:
Provided, That all applications for permits to hold meetings, rallies and other similar
political activities, receipt of which must be acknowledged in writing and which
application shall be immediately posted in a conspicuous place in the city or municipal
building, shall be acted upon in writing by local authorities concerned within three days
after the filing thereof and any application not acted upon within said period shall be
deemed approved: and Provided, further, That denial of any application for said permit
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shall be appealable to the provincial election supervisor or to the Commission whose


decision shall be made within forty-eight hours and which shall be final and executory:
Provided, finally, That one only justifiable ground for denial is a prior written application
by any candidate or political party for the same purpose has been approved. (Sec. 43, 1978
EC)

SECTION 88. Public rally. – Any political party or candidate shall notify the election
registrar concerned of any public rally said political party or candidate intends to organize
and hold in the city or municipality, and within seven working days thereafter submit to
the election registrar a statement of expenses incurred in connection therewith. (Sec. 42,
1978 EC)

SECTION 89. Transportation, food and drinks. – It shall be unlawful for any candidate,
political party, organization, or any person to give or accept, free of charge, directly or
indirectly, transportation, food or drinks or things of value during the five hours before and
after a public meeting, on the day preceding the election, and on the day of the election; or
to give or contribute, directly or indirectly, money or things of value for such purpose.
(Sec. 44, 1978 EC)

SECTION 90. Comelec space. – The Commission shall procure space in at least one
newspaper of general circulation in every province or city: Provided, however, That in the
absence of said newspaper, publication shall be done in any other magazine or periodical
in said province or city, which shall be known as “Comelec Space” wherein candidates can
announce their candidacy. Said space shall be allocated, free of charge, equally and
impartially by the Commission among all candidates within the area in which the
newspaper is circulated. (Sec. 45, 1978 EC)

SECTION 91. Comelec poster area. – Whenever practicable, the Commission shall also
designate and provide for a common poster area in strategic places in each town wherein
candidates can announce and further their candidacy through posters, said space to be
likewise allocated free of charge, equally and impartially by the Commission among all
the candidates concerned. (New)

SECTION 92. Comelec time. – The Commission shall procure radio and television time to
be known as “Comelec Time” which shall be allocated equally and impartially among the
candidates within the area of coverage of all radio and television stations. For this purpose,
the franchise of all radio broadcasting and television stations are hereby amended so as to
provide radio television time, free of charge, during the period of the campaign. (Sec. 46,
1978 EC)

SECTION 93. Comelec information bulletin. – The Commission shall cause the printing,
and supervise the dissemination of bulletins to be known as “Comelec Bulletin” which
shall be of such size as to adequately contain the picture, bio-data and program of
government of every candidate. Said bulletin shall be disseminated to the voters or
displayed in such places as to give due prominence thereto. Any candidate may reprint at
his expense, any “Comelec Bulletin” upon prior authority of the Commission: Provided,
That the printing of the names of the different candidates with their bio-data must be in
alphabetical order irrespective of party affiliation.

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ARTICLE XI - ELECTORAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND EXPENDITURES

SECTION 94. Definitions. – As used in this Article:

(a) The term “contribution” includes a gift, donation, subscription, loan, advance or
deposit of money or anything of value, or a contract, promise or agreement to contribute,
whether or not legally enforceable, made for the purpose of influencing the results of the
elections but shall not include services rendered without compensation by individuals
volunteering a portion or all of their time in behalf of a candidate or political party. It shall
also include the use of facilities voluntarily donated by other persons, the money value of
which can be assessed based on the rates prevailing in the area.

(b) The term “expenditure” includes the payment or delivery of money or anything of
value, or a contract, promise or agreement to make an expenditure, for the purpose of
influencing the results of the election. It shall also include the use of facilities personally
owned by the candidate, the money value of the use of which can be assessed based on the
rates prevailing in the area.

(c) The term “person” includes an individual, partnership, committee, association,


corporation, and any other organization or group of persons. (Sec. 49, 1978 EC)

SECTION 95. Prohibited contributions. – No contribution for purposes of partisan


political activity shall be made directly or indirectly by any of the following:

(a) Public or private financial institutions: Provided, however, That nothing herein shall
prevent the making of any loan to a candidate or political party by any such public or
private financial institutions legally in the business of lending money, and that the loan is
made in accordance with laws and regulations and in the ordinary course of business;

(b) Natural and juridical persons operating a public utility or in possession of or exploiting
any natural resources of the nation;

(c) Natural and juridical persons who hold contracts or sub-contracts to supply the
government or any of its divisions, subdivisions or instrumentalities, with goods or
services or to perform construction or other works;

(d) Natural and juridical persons who have been granted franchises, incentives,
exemptions, allocations or similar privileges or concessions by the government or any of
its divisions, subdivisions or instrumentalities, including government-owned or controlled
corporations;

(e) Natural and juridical persons who, within one year prior to the date of the election,
have been granted loans or other accommodations in excess of P100,000 by the
government or any of its divisions, subdivisions or instrumentalities including
government-owned or controlled corporations;

(f) Educational institutions which have received grants of public funds amounting to no
less than P100,000.00;

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(g) Officials or employees in the Civil Service, or members of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines; and

(h) Foreigners and foreign corporations.

It shall be unlawful for any person to solicit or receive any contribution from any of the
persons or entities enumerated herein (Sec. 65, 1978 EC)

SECTION 96. Soliciting or receiving contributions from foreign sources. – It shall be


unlawful for any person, including a political party or public or private entity to solicit or
receive, directly or indirectly, any aid or contribution of whatever form or nature from any
foreign national, government or entity for the purposes of influencing the results of the
election. (Sec. 67, 1978 EC)

SECTION 97. Prohibited raising of funds. – It shall be unlawful for any person to hold
dances, lotteries, cockfights, games, boxing bouts, bingo, beauty contests, entertainments,
or cinematographic, theatrical or other performances for the purpose of raising funds for
an election campaign or for the support of any candidate from the commencement of the
election period up to and including election day; or for any person or organization,
whether civic or religious, directly or indirectly, to solicit and/or accept from any
candidate for public office, or from his campaign manager, agent or representative, or any
person acting in their behalf, any gift, food, transportation, contribution or donation in
cash or in kind from the commencement of the election period up to and including election
day; Provided, That normal and customary religious stipends, tithes, or collections on
Sundays and/or other designated collection days, are excluded from this prohibition. (Sec.
64, 1978 EC)

SECTION 98. True name of contributor required. – No person shall make any
contribution in any name except his own nor shall any candidate or treasurer of a political
party receive a contribution or enter or record the same in any name other than that of the
person by whom it was actually made. (Sec. 66, 1978 EC)

SECTION 99. Report of contributions. – Every person giving contributions to any


candidate, treasurer of the party, or authorized representative of such candidate or treasurer
shall, not later than thirty days after the day of the election, file with the Commission a
report under oath stating the amount of each contribution, the name of the candidate, agent
of the candidate or political party receiving the contribution, and the date of the
contribution. (Sec. 68, 1978 EC)

SECTION 100. Limitations upon expenses of candidates. – No candidate shall spend for
his election campaign an aggregate amount exceeding one peso and fifty centavos for
every voter currently registered in the constituency where he filed his candidacy:
Provided, That the expenses herein referred to shall include those incurred or caused to be
incurred by the candidate, whether in cash or in kind, including the use, rental or hire of
land, water or aircraft, equipment, facilities, apparatus and paraphernalia used in the
campaign: Provided, further, That where the land, water or aircraft, equipment, facilities,
apparatus and paraphernalia used is owned by the candidate, his contributor or supporter,
the Commission is hereby empowered to assess the amount commensurate with the
expenses for the use thereof, based on the prevailing rates in the locality and shall be
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included in the total expenses incurred by the candidate. (Sec. 51, 1978 EC)

SECTION 101. Limitations upon expenses of political parties. – A duly accredited


political party may spend for the election of its candidates in the constituency or
constituencies where it has official candidates an aggregate amount not exceeding the
equivalent of one peso and fifty centavos for every voter currently registered therein.
Expenses incurred by branches, chapters, or committees of such political party shall be
included in the computation of the total expenditures of the political party.

Expenses incurred by other political parties shall be considered as expenses of their


respective individual candidates and subject to limitation under Section 100 of this Code
(Sec. 52, 1978 EC)

SECTION 102. Lawful expenditures. – To carry out the objectives of the preceding
sections, no candidate or treasurer of a political party shall, directly or indirectly, make any
expenditure except for the following purposes:

(a) For travelling expenses of the candidates and campaign personnel in the course of the
campaign and for personal expenses incident thereto;

(b) For compensation of campaigners, clerks, stenographers, messengers, and other


persons actually employed in the campaign;

(c) For telegraph and telephone tolls, postage, freight and express delivery charges;

(d) For stationery, printing and distribution of printed matters relative to candidacy;

(e) For employment of watchers at the polls;

(f) For rent, maintenance and furnishing of campaign headquarters, office or place of
meetings;

(g) For political meetings and rallies and the use of sound systems, lights and decorations
during said meetings and rallies;

(h) For newspaper, radio, television and other public advertisements;

(i) For employment of counsel, the cost of which shall not be taken into account in
determining the amount of expenses which a candidate or political party may have
incurred under Section 100 and 101 hereof;

(j) For copying and classifying list of voters, investigating and challenging the right to
vote of persons registered in the lists the costs of which shall not be taken into account in
determining the amount of expenses which a candidate or political party may have
incurred under Sections 100 and 101 hereof; or

(k) For printing sample ballots in such color, size and maximum number as may be
authorized by the Commission and the cost of such printing shall not be taken into account
in determining the amount of expenses which a candidate or political party may have
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incurred under Sections 100 and 101 hereof. (Sec. 53, 1978 EC)

SECTION 103. Persons authorized to incur election expenditures. – No person, except the
candidate, the treasurer of a political party or any person authorized by such candidate or
treasurer, shall make any expenditure in support of or in opposition to any candidate or
political party. Expenditures duly authorized by the candidate or the treasurer of the party
shall be considered as expenditures of such candidate or political party.

The authority to incur expenditures shall be in writing, copy of which shall be furnished
the Commission signed by the candidate or the treasurer of the party and showing the
expenditures so authorized, and shall state the full name and exact address of the person so
designated. (Sec. 54, 1978 EC)

SECTION 104. Prohibited donations by candidates, treasurers of parties or their agents. –


No candidate, his or her spouse or any relative within the second civil degree of
consanguinity or affinity, or his campaign manager, agent or representative shall during the
campaign period, on the day before and on the day of the election, directly or indirectly,
make any donation, contribution or gift in cash or in kind, or undertake or contribute to the
construction or repair of roads, bridges, school buses, puericulture centers, medical clinics
and hospitals, churches or chapels cement pavements, or any structure for public use or for
the use of any religious or civic organization: Provided, That normal and customary
religious dues or contributions, such as religious stipends, tithes or collections on Sundays
or other designated collection days, as well as periodic payments for legitimate
scholarships established and school contributions habitually made before the prohibited
period, are excluded from the prohibition.

The same prohibition applies to treasurers, agents or representatives of any political party.
(Sec. 63, 1978 EC)

SECTION 105. Accounting by agents of candidate or treasurer. – Every person receiving


contributions or incurring expenditures by authority of the candidate or treasurer of the
party shall, on demand by the candidate or treasurer of the party and in any event within
five days after receiving such contribution or incurring such expenditure, render to the
candidate or the treasurer of the party concerned, a detailed account thereof with proper
vouchers or official receipts. (Sec. 55, 1978 EC)

SECTION 106. Records of contributions and expenditures. – (a) It shall be the duty of
every candidate, treasurer of the political party and person acting under the authority of
such candidate or treasurer to issue a receipt for every contribution received and to obtain
and keep a receipt stating the particulars of every expenditure made.

(b) Every candidate and treasurer of the party shall keep detailed, full, and accurate
records of all contributions received and expenditures incurred by him and by those acting
under his authority, setting forth therein all information required to be reported.

(c) Every candidate and treasurer of the party shall be responsible for the preservation of
the records of contributions and expenditures, together with all pertinent documents, for at
least three years after the holding of the election to which they pertain and for their
production for inspection by the Commission or its duly authorized representative, or upon
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presentation of a subpoena duces tecum duly issued by the Commission. Failure of the
candidate or treasurer to preserve such records or documents shall be deemed prima facie
evidence of violation of the provisions of this Article. (Sec. 56, 1978 EC)

SECTION 107. Statement of contributions and expenditures. - Every Candidate and


treasure of the political party shall, not later than seven days, or earlier than ten days
before the day of the election, file in duplicate with the office indicate in the following
section, full, true and itemized, statement of all contributions and expenditures in
connection with the election.

Within thirty days after the day of the election, said candidate and treasurer shall also file
in duplicate a supplemental statement of all contributions and expenditures not included in
the statement filed prior to the day of the election. (Sec. 57, 1978 EC)

SECTION 108. Place for filing statements. - The statements of contributions and
expenditures shall be filed as follows:

SECTION 109. Form and contents of statement. – The statement shall be in writing,
subscribed and sworn to by the candidate or by the treasurer of the party, shall be complete
as of the date next preceding the date of filing and shall set forth in detail (a) the amount of
contribution, the date of receipt, and the full name and exact address of the person from
whom the contribution was received; (b) the amount of every expenditure, the date
thereof, the full name and exact address of the person to whom payment was made, and
the purpose of the expenditure; (c) any unpaid obligation, its nature and amount, and to
whom said obligation is owing; and (d) such other particulars which the Commission may
require.

If the candidate or treasurer of the party has received no contribution, made no


expenditure, or has no pending obligation, the statement shall reflect such fact. (Sec. 59,
1978 EC)

SECTION 110. Preservation and inspection of statements. – All statements of


contributions and expenditures shall be kept and preserved at the office where they are
filed and shall constitute part of the public records thereof for three years after the election
to which they pertain. They shall not be removed therefrom except upon order of the
Commission or of a competent court and shall, during regular office hours, be subject and
open to inspection by the public. The officer in-charge thereof, shall, on demand, furnish
certified copies of any statement upon payment of the fee prescribed under Section 270
hereof. (Sec. 60, 1978 EC)

It shall be the duty of the Commission to examine all statements of contributions and
expenditures of candidates and political parties to determine compliance with the
provisions of this Article. (New)

SECTION 111. Effect of failure to file statement. – In addition to other sanctions provided
in this Code, no person elected to any public office shall enter upon the duties of his office
until he has filed the statement of contributions and expenditures herein required.

The same prohibition shall apply if the political party which nominated the winning
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candidate fails to file the statements required herein within the period prescribed by this
Code. (Sec. 61, 1978 EC modified)

SECTION 112. Report of contractor and business firms. – Every person or firm to whom
any electoral expenditure is made shall, within thirty days after the day of the election, file
with the Commission a report setting forth the full names and exact addresses of the
candidates, treasurers of political parties, and other persons incurring such expenditures,
the nature or purpose of each expenditure, the date and costs thereof, and such other
particulars as the Commission may require. The report shall be signed and sworn to by the
supplier or contractor, or in case of a business firm or association, by its president or
general manager.

It shall be the duty of such person or firm to whom an electoral expenditure is made to
require every agent of a candidate or of the treasurer of a political party to present written
authority to incur electoral expenditures in behalf of such candidate or treasurer, and to
keep and preserve at its place of business, subject to inspection by the Commission or its
authorized representatives, copies of such written authority, contracts, vouchers, invoices
and other records and documents relative to said expenditures for a period of three years
after the date of the election to which they pertain.

It shall be unlawful for any supplier, contractor or business firm to enter into contract
involving election expenditures with representatives of candidates or political parties
without such written authority. (Sec. 69, 1978, EC)

ARTICLE XII - REGISTRATION OF VOTERS

SECTION 113. Permanent List of Voters. – Any provision of Presidential Decree No. 1896
to the contrary notwithstanding, the list of voters prepared and used in the election of
Members of the Batasang Pambansa on May 14, 1984, with such additions, cancellations
and corrections as may hereafter be made in accordance with the provisions of this Code,
shall constitute the permanent list of voters in each city or municipality, as the case may
be, until 1996.

For purposes of the next following election, the Commission, through the election
registrars, shall assign the proper precincts and polling places to the registered voters in
said list. Written notice of any such change shall be made to the affected voters within two
weeks therefrom.

SECTION 114. Renewal of the Permanent List. – The list of voters prepared in accordance
with the preceding section shall be renewed in nineteen hundred and ninety-six and every
twelve years thereafter. (New)

SECTION 115. Necessity of Registration. – In order that a qualified elector may vote in
any election, plebiscite or referendum, he must be registered in the permanent list of voters
for the city or municipality in which he resides. (Sec. 3, PD, 1986, as amended).

SECTION 116. Who may be registered in the list. – All persons having complied with the
requisites herein prescribed for the registration of voters shall be registered in the list,
provided they possess all the qualifications and none of the disqualifications of a voter.
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Those who failed to register in the election of 1984, for any reason whatsoever, may
register in accordance with the provisions of this Code. Any person who may not have on
the date of registration the age or period of residence required may also be registered upon
proof that on the date of the election, plebiscite or referendum he shall have such
qualifications. (Sec. 4, PD, 1896, as amended)

SECTION 117. Qualifications of a voter. – Every citizen of the Philippines, not otherwise
disqualified by law, eighteen years of age or over, who shall have resided in the
Philippines for one year and in the city or municipality wherein he proposes to vote for at
least six months immediately preceding the election, may be registered as a voter.

Any person who transfers residence to another city, municipality or country solely by
reason of his occupation; profession; employment in private or public service; educational
activities; work in military or naval reservations; service in the army, navy or air force; the
constabulary or national police force; or confinement or detention in government
institutions in accordance with law, shall be deemed not to have lost his original residence.
(Sec. 5, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 118. Disqualifications. – The following shall be disqualified from voting:

(a) Any person who has been sentenced by final judgment to suffer imprisonment for not
less than one year, such disability not having been removed by plenary pardon or granted
amnesty: Provided, however, That any person disqualified to vote under this paragraph
shall automatically reacquire the right to vote upon expiration of five years after service of
sentence.

(b) Any person who has been adjudged by final judgment by competent court or tribunal
of having committed any crime involving disloyalty to the duly constituted government
such as rebellion, sedition, violation of the anti-subversion and firearms laws, or any crime
against national security, unless restored to his full civil and political rights in accordance
with law: Provided, That he shall regain his right to vote automatically upon expiration of
five years after service of sentence.

(c) Insane or incompetent persons as declared by competent authority. (Sec. 102, 1971 BC;
Sec. 75 1978 EC, as amended)

SECTION 119. Preparation of the permanent list of voters. – For the preparation of the
permanent list of voters in nineteen hundred and ninety-six and every twelve years
thereafter, the board of election inspectors referred to in Article XIV hereof of each
election precinct shall hold four meetings on the seventh Saturday, seventh Sunday, sixth
Saturday and sixth Sunday preceding the date of the regular election to be held. At these
meetings the board shall prepare eight copies of the list of voters of the precinct wherein it
shall register the electors applying for registration. (Sec. 100, RA 180, as amended)

SECTION 120. Preparation of the list before other regular elections. – For the preparation
of the list before other regular elections, the board of election inspectors of each election
precinct shall meet in the polling place on the seventh and sixth Saturdays before the day
of the election. At these meetings, the board shall prepare and certify eight copies of the
list of voters of the corresponding precinct transferring thereto the names of the voters
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appearing in the list used in the preceding election and including therein such new
qualified voters as may apply for registration, as provided in Section 126 hereof. (Sec.
101, RA 180, as amended)

SECTION 121. Preparation of the list before any special election, plebiscite or
referendum. – For the preparation of the list of voters before a special election, plebiscite
or referendum, the board of elections inspectors of each election precinct shall hold a
meeting in the polling place on the second Saturday following the day of the proclamation
calling such election. At this meeting the board shall transfer the names of the voters
appearing in the list used in the preceding election and enter those of the newly registered
voters. (Sec. 102, RA 180, as amended)

SECTION 122. Transfer of names of voters from the permanent list to the current one. –
The transfer of the names of the voters of the precinct already registered in the list used in
the preceding election to the list to be made as provided for in the two preceding sections
is a ministerial duty of the board, and any omission or error in copying shall be corrected
motu proprio, or upon petition of the interested party, without delay and in no case beyond
three days from the time such error is noticed; and if the board should refuse, the
interested party may apply for such correction to the proper municipal or metropolitan trial
court which shall decide the case without delay and in no case beyond three days from the
date the petition is filed. The decision of the proper municipal or metropolitan trial court
shall be final and unappealable in whatever form or manner. (Sec. 103, RA 180, as
amended)

To facilitate the transfer of names of voters, the election registrar shall deliver the book of
voters to the board of election inspectors on the day before the registration of voters, to be
returned after the last day of registration. (New)

SECTION 123. Cancellation and exclusion in the transfer of names. – In transferring the
names of the voters of the precinct from the list used in the preceding election to the
current list, the board shall exclude those who have applied for the cancellation of their
registration, those who have died, those who did not vote in the immediately preceding
two successive regular elections, those who have been excluded by court orders issued in
accordance with the provisions of this Code, and those who have been disqualified, upon
motion of any member of the board or of any elector or watcher, upon satisfactory proof to
the board and upon summons to the voter in cases of disqualification. The motion shall be
decided by the board without delay and in no case beyond three days from its filing.
Should the board deny the motion, or fail to act thereon within the period herein fixed, the
interested party may apply for such exclusion to the municipal or metropolitan trial court
which shall decide the petition without delay and in no case beyond three days from the
date the petition is filed. The decision of the court shall be final. The poll clerk shall keep a
record of these exclusions and shall furnish three copies thereof to the election registrar
who shall, in turn keep one copy and send the two other copies thereof to the provincial
election supervisor and the Commission, to be attached by them to the permanent list
under their custody. (Sec. 104, RA 180, as amended)

SECTION 124. Meeting to close the list of voters. – The board of election inspectors shall
also meet on the second Saturday immediately preceding the day of the regular election, or
on the second day immediately preceding the day of the special election, plebiscite or
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referendum whether it be Sunday or a legal holiday, for the purpose of making such
inclusions, exclusions, and corrections as may be or may have been ordered by the courts,
stating opposite every name so corrected, added, or cancelled, the date of the order and the
court which issued the same; and for the consecutive numbering of the voters of the
election precinct.

Should the board fail to include in the list of voters any person ordered by competent court
to be so included, said person shall, upon presentation of a certified copy of the order of
inclusion and upon proper identification, be allowed by the board to vote.

Should the board fail to exclude from the list of voters any person ordered by the court to
be so excluded, the board shall not permit said person to vote upon presentation to it by
any interested party of a certified copy of the order of exclusion. (Sec. 105, RA 180, as
amended)

SECTION 125. Re-registration. – A voter who is registered in the permanent list of voters
need not register anew for subsequent elections unless he transfer residence to another city
or municipality, or his registration has been cancelled on the ground of disqualification
and such disqualification has been lifted or removed. Likewise a voter whose registration
has been cancelled due to failure to vote in the preceding regular election may register
anew in the city or municipality where he is qualified to vote. (Sec. 132, 1971 EC; Sec. 73,
1978 EC, as amended)

SECTION 126. Registration of voters. – On the seventh and sixth Saturdays before a
regular election or on the second Saturday following the day of the proclamation calling
for a new special election, plebiscite or referendum, any person desiring to be registered as
a voter shall accomplish in triplicate before the board of election inspectors a voter’s
affidavit in which shall be stated the following data:

(a) Name, surname, middle name, maternal surname;


(b) Date and place of birth;
(c) Citizenship;
(d) Periods of residence in the Philippines and in the place of registration;
(e) Exact address with the name of the street and house number or in case there
is none, a brief description of the locality and the place;
(f) A statement that the applicant has not been previously registered, otherwise
he shall be required to attach a sworn application for cancellation of his
previous registration; and
(g) Such other information or data which may be required by the Commission.

The voter’s affidavit shall also contain three specimens of the applicant’s signature and
clear and legible prints of his left and right hand thumbmarks and shall be sworn to and
filed together with four copies of the latest identification photograph to be supplied by the
applicant.

The oath of the applicant shall include a statement that he does not have any of the
disqualifications of a voter and that he has not been previously registered in the precinct or
in any other precinct.

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Before the applicant accomplishes his voter’s affidavit, the board of election inspectors
shall appraise the applicant of the qualifications and disqualifications prescribed by law
for a voter. It shall also see to it that the accomplished voter’s affidavit contain all the data
therein required and that the applicant’s specimen signatures, the prints of his left and right
hand thumbmarks and his photograph are properly affixed in each of the voter’s affidavit.

SECTION 127. Illiterate or disabled applicants. – The voter’s affidavit of an illiterate or


physically disabled person may be prepared by any relative within the fourth civil degree
of consanguinity of affinity or by any member of the board of election inspectors who
shall prepare the affidavit in accordance with the data supplied by the applicant.

SECTION 128. Voter’s identification. – The identification card issued to the voter shall
serve and be considered as a document for the identification of each registered voter:
Provided, however, That if the voter’s identity is challenged on election day and he cannot
present his voter identification card, his identity may be established by the specimen
signatures, the photograph or the fingerprints in his voter’s affidavit in the book of voters.
No extra or duplicate copy of the voter identification card shall be prepared and issued
except upon authority of the Commission.

Each identification card shall bear the name and the address of the voter, his date of birth,
sex, civil status, occupation, his photograph, thumbmark, the city or municipality and
number of the polling place where he is registered, his signature, his voter serial number
and the signature of the chairman of the board of election inspectors.

Any voter previously registered under the provisions of Presidential Decree Numbered
1896 who desires to secure a voter identification card shall, on any registration day,
provide four copies of his latest identification photograph to the board of election
inspectors which upon receipt thereof shall affix one copy thereof to the voter’s affidavit
in the book of voters, one copy to the voter identification card to be issued to the voter and
transmit through the election registrar, one copy each to the provincial election supervisor
and the Commission to be respectively attached to the voter’s affidavit in their respective
custody.

SECTION 129. Action by the board of election inspectors. – Upon receipt of the voter’s
affidavit, the board of election inspectors shall examine the data therein. If it finds that the
applicant possesses all the qualifications and none of the disqualifications of a voter, he
shall be registered. Otherwise, he shall not be registered.

The name and address of each registered voter shall, immediately upon his registration, be
entered in the proper alphabetical group in the list after which the voter identification card
shall be issued to the voter. (Sec. 27, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 130. Provincial central file of registered voters. – There shall be a provincial
central file of registered voters containing the duplicate copies of all approved voter’s
affidavits in each city and municipality in the province which shall be under the custody
and supervision of the provincial election supervisor. The applications shall be compiled
alphabetically by precincts so as to make the file an exact replica of the book of voters in
the possession of the election registrar.

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Should the book of voters in the custody of the election registrar be lost or destroyed at a
time so close to the election day that there is no time to reconstitute the same, the
corresponding book of voters in the provincial file shall be used during the voting.

SECTION 131. National central file of registered voters. – There shall also be a national
central file or registered voters consisting of the triplicate copies of all approved voters’
affidavits in all cities and municipalities which shall be prepared and kept in the central
office of the Commission. The applications in the national central file shall be compiled
alphabetically according to the surnames of the registered voters regardless of the place of
registration.

SECTION 132. Preservation of voter’s affidavits. – A copy of the affidavit of each voter
shall be kept by the board of election inspectors until after the election when it shall
deliver the same to the election registrar together with the copies of the list of voters and
other election papers for use in the next election. The election registrar shall compile the
voter’s affidavits by precinct alphabetically in a book of voters. The other two copies shall
be sent by the board of election inspectors on the day following the date of the affidavit to
the office of the provincial election supervisor and the Commission in Manila. The
provincial election supervisor and the Commission shall respectively file and preserve the
voter’s affidavits by city and municipality and in alphabetical order of their surnames. The
fourth copy shall be given to the voter as evidence of his registration. (Sec. 28, PD 1896,
as amended)

SECTION 133. Columns in the list of voters. – The list of voters shall be arranged in
columns as follows: In the first column there shall be entered, at the time of closing of the
list before the election, a number opposite the name of each voter registered, beginning
with number one and continuing in consecutive order until the end of the list. In the
second column, the surnames of the registered voters shall be written in alphabetical order
followed by their respective first names, without abbreviations of any kind. In the third
column, the respective residences of such persons with the name of the street and number,
or, in case there be none, a brief description of the locality or place. In the fourth column,
shall be entered the periods of residence in the Philippines and in the city or municipality.
In the fifth column, there shall be entered on the day of the election the numbers of the
ballots which were given successively to each voter. In the sixth column, the voter shall
stamp on the day of the election the mark of the thumb of his right hand and under said
mark his signature. And in the seventh column, the signature of the chairman of the board
of election inspectors who has handed the ballot to the voter. It will be sufficient that the
fifth, sixth, and seventh columns shall be filled in the copy of the list under the custody of
the board of election inspectors which shall see to it that the thumbmark is stamped
plainly. (Sec. 29, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 134. Certificate of the board of election inspectors in the list of voters. – Upon
the adjournment of each meeting for the registration of voters, the board of election
inspectors shall close each alphabetical group of surnames of voters by writing the dates
on the next line in blank, which shall be forthwith signed by each member, and, before
adding a new name on the same page at the next meeting, it shall write the following:
“Added at the . . . meeting” specifying if it is the second third or fourth meeting of the
board, as the case may be. If the meeting adjourned is the last one for the registration of
voters, the board shall, besides closing each alphabetical group of voters as above
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Provided, add at the end of the list a certificate (a) of the corrections and cancellations
made in the permanent list, specifying them, or that there has been none, and (b) of the
total number of voters registered in the precinct. (Sec. 30, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 135. Publication of the list. – At the first hour of the working day following the
last day of registration of voters, the poll clerk shall deliver to the election registrar a copy
of the list certified to by the board of election inspectors as provided in the preceding
section; another copy, also certified, shall be sent to the provincial election supervisor of
the province, and another, likewise certified, shall be sent to the Commission, in whose
offices said copies shall be open to public inspection during regular office hours. On the
same day and hour, the poll clerk shall also post a copy of the list in the polling place in a
secure place on the door or near the same at a height of a meter and a half, where it may be
conveniently consulted by the interested parties. The chairman, poll clerk and the two
members of the board of election inspectors shall each keep a copy of the list which may
be inspected by the public in their residence or office during regular office hours.
Immediately after the meeting for the closing of the list, the poll clerk shall also send a
notice to the election registrar, provincial election supervisor and the Commission
regarding the changes and the numbering above referred to, to be attached to the copy of
the list under their custody. (Sec. 31, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 136. Challenge of right to register. – Any person applying for registration may
be challenged before the board of election inspectors on any registration day by any
member, voter, candidate, or watcher. The board shall then examine the challenged person
and shall receive such other evidence as it may deem pertinent, after which it shall decide
whether the elector shall be included in or excluded from the list as may be proper. All
challenges shall be heard and decided without delay, and in no case beyond three days
from the date the challenge was made.

After the question has been decided, the board of election inspectors shall give to each
party a brief certified statement setting forth the challenge and the decision thereon. (Sec.
32, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 137. Power of the board of election inspectors to administer oaths and issue
summons. – For the purpose of determining the right of applicants to be registered as
voters in the list, the board of election inspectors shall have the same power to administer
oaths, to issue subpoena and subpoena duces tecum and to compel witnesses to appear and
testify, but the latter’s fees and expenses incident to the process shall be paid in advance
by the party in whose behalf the summons is issued. (Sec. 33, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 138. Jurisdiction in inclusion and exclusion cases. – The municipal and
metropolitan trial courts shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction over all matters of
inclusion and exclusion of voters from the list in their respective municipalities or cities.
Decisions of the municipal or metropolitan trial courts may be appealed directly by the
aggrieved party to the proper regional trial court within five days from receipt of notice
thereof, otherwise said decision of the municipal or metropolitan trial court shall become
final and executory after said period. The regional trial court shall decide the appeal within
ten days from the time the appeal was received and its decision shall be immediately final
and executory. No motion for reconsideration shall be entertained by the courts. (Sec. 37,
PD 1896, as amended)
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SECTION 139. Petition for inclusion of voters in the list. – Any person whose application
for registration has been disapproved by the board of election inspectors or whose name
has been stricken out from the list may apply, within twenty days after the last registration
day, to the proper municipal or metropolitan trial court, for an order directing the board of
election inspectors to include or reinstate his name in the list, together with the certificate
of the board of election inspectors regarding his case and proof of service of notice of his
petition upon a member of the board of election inspectors with indication of the time,
place, and court before which the petition is to be heard. (Sec. 38, 1896, as amended)

SECTION 140. Voters excluded through inadvertence or registered with an erroneous or


misspelled name. – Any voter registered in the permanent list who has not been included
in the list prepared for the election or who has been included therein with a wrong or
misspelled name shall have the right to file an application on any date with the proper
municipal or metropolitan trial court, for an order directing that his name be reinstated in
the list or that he be registered with his correct name. He shall attach to such application a
certified copy of the entry of his name in the list of the preceding election, together with
proof that he has applied without success to the board of election inspectors and that he
has served notice thereof upon a member of the board. (Sec. 39, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 141. Change of name of registered voter. – Any previously registered voter
whose name has been changed by reason of marriage or by virtue of a court order may
request the board of election inspectors during any of its meetings held under this Article
that his registration in the list be recorded under his or her new name.

SECTION 142. Petition for exclusion of voters from the list. – Any registered voter in a
city or municipality may apply at any time except during the period beginning with the
twenty-first day after the last registration day of any election up to and including election
day with the proper municipal or metropolitan trial court, for the exclusion of a voter from
the list, giving the name and residence of the latter, the precinct in which he is registered,
and the grounds for the challenge. The petition shall be sworn to and accompanied by
proof of notice to the board of election inspectors concerned, if the same is duly
constituted, and to the challenged voters. (Sec. 40, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 143. Common rules governing judicial proceedings in the matter of inclusion,
exclusion, and correction of names of voters. – (a) Outside of regular office hours no
petition for inclusion, exclusion, or correction of names of voters shall be received.

(b) Notices to the members of the board of election inspectors and to challenged voters
shall state the place, day and hour in which such petition shall be heard, and such notice
may be made by sending a copy thereof by registered mail or by personal delivery or by
leaving it in the possession of a person of sufficient discretion in the residence of the said
person or, in the event that the foregoing procedure is not practicable, by posting a copy in
a conspicuous place in the city hall or municipal building and in two other conspicuous
places within the city or municipality, at least ten days prior to the day set for the hearing.

In the interest of justice and to afford the challenged voter every opportunity to contest the
petition for exclusion, the court concerned may, when the challenged voter fails to appear
in the first day set for the hearing, order that notice be effected in such manner and within
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such period of time as it may decide, which time shall in no case be more than ten days
from the day the respondent is first found in default.

(c) Each petition shall refer to only one precinct.

(d) No costs shall be assessed in these proceedings. However, if the court should be
satisfied that the application has been filed for the sole purpose of molesting the adverse
party and causing him to incur expenses, it may condemn the culpable party to pay the
costs and incidental expenses.

(e) Any candidate who may be affected by the proceedings may intervene and present his
evidence.

(f) The decision shall be based on the evidence presented. If the question is whether or not
the voter is real or fictitious, his non-appearance on the day set for hearing shall be prima
facie evidence that the registered voter is fictitious. In no case shall a decision be rendered
upon a stipulation of facts.

(g) These applications shall be heard and decided without delay. The decision shall be
rendered within six hours after the hearing and within ten days from the date of its filing in
court. Cases appealed to the regional trial court shall be decided within ten days from
receipt of the appeal in the office of the clerk of court. In any case, the court shall decide
these petitions not later than the day before the election and the decision rendered thereon
shall be immediately final and executory, notwithstanding the provisions of Section 138 on
the finality of decisions. (Sec. 41, PD 1896, as amended)

SECTION 144. Canvass to check registration. – The election registrar shall, once every
two years or more oftener should the Commission deem it necessary in order to preserve
the integrity of the permanent lists of voters, conduct verification by mail or house-to-
house canvass, or both, of the registered voters of any barangay for purposes of exclusion
proceedings.

SECTION 145. Annulment of permanent lists of voters. – Any book of voters not prepared
in accordance with the provisions of this Code or the preparation of which has been
effected with fraud, bribery, forgery, impersonation, intimidation, force, or any other
similar irregularity or which list is statistically improbable may, upon verified petition of
any voter or election registrar, or duly registered political party, and after notice and
hearing, be annulled by the Commission: Provided, That no order, ruling or decision
annulling a book of voters shall be executed within sixty days before an election.

SECTION 146. Reconstitution of lost or destroyed registration records. – The


Commission shall reconstitute all registration records which have been lost or destroyed.
For this purpose, it shall be the duty of the election registrar to immediately report to the
Commission any case of loss or destruction of approved applications for registration in
their custody. Such reconstitution shall be made with the use of the corresponding copies
in the national or provincial central files of registered voters: Provided, That if this is not
feasible, the registered voter concerned may be summoned by the election registrar to
effect such reconstitution by accomplishing a new application. Reconstituted forms shall
be clearly marked with the word “reconstituted”.
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The reconstitution of any lost or destroyed application for registration shall not affect the
criminal liability of any person or persons who may be responsible for such loss or
destruction.

SECTION 147. Examination of registration records. – All registration records in the


possession of the city or municipal election registrar, the provincial election supervisor,
and the Commission shall, during regular office hours, be open to examination by the
public with legitimate inquiries for purposes of election.

Law enforcement agencies shall, upon prior authorization by the Commission, have access
to said registration records should the same be necessary to, or in aid of, their investigative
functions and duties, subject to regulations promulgated by the Commission.

SECTION 148. List of voters. – Fifteen days before the date of the regular election or
special election, referendum or plebiscite, the board of election inspectors must post the
final list of voters in each precinct with each and every page thereof duly signed or
subscribed and sworn to by the members of the board of election inspectors and that
failure to comply with this provision will constitute an election offense.

Any candidate or authorized representative of an accredited political party, upon formal


request made to an election registrar, shall be entitled to a certified copy of the most recent
list of voters in any precinct, municipality, city or province, upon payment of a reasonable
fee as may be prescribed by the Commission.

ARTICLE XIII - PRECINCTS AND POLLING PLACES

SECTION 149. Precincts and their establishment. – The unit of territory for the purpose
of voting is the election precinct, and every barangay as of the approval of this Act shall
have at least one such precinct. (New)

The Commission shall establish all election precincts.

The precincts actually established in the preceding regular election shall be maintained,
but the Commission may introduce such adjustments, changes or new divisions or abolish
them, if necessary: Provided, however, That the territory comprising an election precinct
shall not be altered or a new precinct established within forty-five days before a regular
election and thirty days before a special election or a referendum or plebiscite. (Sec. 82,
1971 EC)

SECTION 150. Arrangements of election precincts. – (a) Each election precinct shall
have, as far as possible not more than three hundred voters and shall comprise, as far as
practicable, contiguous and compact territory.

(b) When it appears that an election precinct contains more than three hundred voters, the
Commission shall, in the interest of orderly election, and in order to facilitate the casting
of votes, be authorized to divide a precinct not later than one week after the last day of
registration of voters. But the polling place of all the precincts created thereby shall be
located in the same building or compound where the polling place of the original precinct
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is located, and if this be not feasible, in a place as close as possible to the polling place of
the original precinct: Provided, however, That the polling place of the new precinct may be
located elsewhere upon written petition of the majority of the voters of the new precinct:
Provided, further, That when a precinct is divided into two or more precincts, the
registered voters shall be included in the precinct wherein they reside. Every case of
alteration of a precinct shall be duly published by posting a notice of any change in
conspicuous location in the precinct, and in the municipal building or city hall, as the case
may be.

(c) A municipality which has been merged with another municipality shall constitute at
least one election precinct, if the distance between the remotest barangay of the merged
municipality and the nearest polling place in the municipality to which it has been merged
shall, by the shortest road, exceed five kilometers.

(d) An island or group of islands having one hundred and fifty or more voters shall
constitute a precinct.

(e) Any alteration of the election precincts or the establishment of new ones shall be
communicated to the provincial election supervisor, the provincial superintendent of
schools, etc. together with the corresponding maps, which shall be published as prescribed
in the next succeeding sections. (Sec. 83, 1971 EC)

SECTION 151. Publication of maps or precincts. – At least five days before the first
registration day preceding a regular election or special election or a referendum or a
plebiscite, the Commission shall, through its duly authorized representative, post in the
city hall or municipal building and in three other conspicuous places in the city or
municipality and on the door of each polling place, a map of the city or municipality
showing its division into precincts with their respective boundaries and indicating therein
all streets and alleys in populous areas and the location of each polling place.

These maps shall be kept posted until after the election, referendum or plebiscite. (Sec. 84,
1971 EC)

SECTION 152. Polling place. – A polling place is the building or place where the board of
election inspectors conducts its proceedings and where the voters shall cast their votes.
(New)

SECTION 153. Designation of polling places. – The location of polling places designated
in the preceding regular election shall continue with such changes as the Commission may
find necessary, after notice to registered political parties and candidates in the political unit
affected, if any, and hearing: Provided, That no location shall be changed within forty-five
days before a regular election and thirty days before a special election or a referendum or
plebiscite, except in case it is destroyed or it cannot be used. (Sec. 86, 1971 EC)

SECTION 154. Requirements for polling places. – Each polling place shall be, as far as
practicable, a ground floor and shall be of sufficient size to admit and comfortably
accommodate forty voters at one time outside the guard rail for the board of election
inspectors. The polling place shall be located within the territory of the precinct as
centrally as possible with respect to the residence of the voters therein and whenever
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possible, such location shall be along a public road. No designation of polling places shall
be changed except upon written petition of the majority of the voters of the precinct or
agreement of all the political parties or by resolution of the Commission upon prior notice
and hearing.

A public building having the requirements prescribed in the preceding paragraph shall be
preferred as polling place. (Sec. 87, 1971 EC)

SECTION 155. Building that shall not be used as polling places. – No polling place shall
be located in a public or private building owned, leased, or occupied by any candidate or
of any person who is related to any candidate within the fourth civil degree of
consanguinity or affinity, or any officer of the government or leader of any political party,
group or faction, nor in any building or surrounding premises under the actual control of a
private entity, political party or religious organization. In places where no suitable public
building is available, private school buildings may be used as polling places. No polling
place shall be located within the perimeter of or inside a military or police camp or
reservation or within a prison compound. (Sec. 21, BP 697)

Any registered voter, candidate or political party may petition the Commission not later
than thirty days before the first registration day for the transfer of the polling place from
the prohibited buildings provided herein. Such petition shall be heard and decided by the
Commission within twenty days from the filing of the petition. Failure to effect the
transfer of the polling place after the Commission found it to be located in violation of this
section within the period prescribed herein shall be a ground for the postponement of the
election in the polling place concerned.

SECTION 156. Signs and flags of polling places. – On the day of the voting as well as on
any day that the board of election inspectors might meet, every polling place shall have in
front a sign showing the number of the precinct to which it belongs and the Philippine flag
shall be hoisted at the proper height. (Sec. 89, 1971 EC)

SECTION 157. Arrangement and contents of polling places. – Each polling place shall
conform as much as possible to the sketch on the following page. (Sec. 90, 1971 EC)

SECTION 158. Voting booth. – During the voting, there shall be in each polling place a
booth for every twenty voters registered in the precinct. Each booth shall be open on the
side fronting the table for the board of election inspectors and its three sides shall be
closed with walls at least seventy centimeters wide and two meters high. The upper part
shall be covered, if necessary, to preserve the secrecy of the ballot. Each booth shall have
in the background a shelf so placed that voters can write therein while standing and shall
be kept clearly lighted, by artificial lights, if necessary, during the voting.

The Commission shall post inside each voting booth and elsewhere in the polling place on
the day before the election, referendum and plebiscite a list containing the names of all the
candidates or the issues or questions to be voted for, and shall at all times during the
voting period keep such list posted in said places. (Sec. 91, 1971 EC)

SECTION 159. Guard rails. – (a) In every polling place there shall be a guard rail
between the voting booths and the table for the board of election inspectors which shall
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have separate entrance and exit. The booths shall be so arranged that they can be
accessible only by passing through the guard rail and by entering through its open side
facing the table of the board of election inspectors.

(b) There shall also be a guard rail for the watchers between the place reserved for them
and the table for the board of election inspectors and at a distance of not more than fifty
centimeters from the latter so that the watchers may see and read clearly during the
counting of the contents of the ballots and see and count the votes recorded by the board of
election inspectors member on the corresponding tally sheets.

(c) There shall also be, if possible, guard rails separating the table of the board of election
inspectors from the voters waiting for their turn to cast their votes, with entrance and exit
to give them orderly access to the table and the booths during the voting.

(d) The polling place shall be so arranged that the booths, the table, the ballot boxes and
the whole polling place, except what is being written within the booths, shall be in plain
view of the board of election inspectors, the watchers and other persons who may be
within the polling place. (Sec. 92, 1971 EC)

SECTION 160. Ballot boxes. – (a) There shall be in each polling place on the day of the
voting a ballot box one side of which shall be transparent which shall be set in a manner
visible to the voting public containing two compartments, namely, the compartment for
valid ballots which is indicated by an interior cover painted white and the compartment for
spoiled ballots which is indicated by an interior cover painted red. The boxes shall be
uniform throughout the Philippines and shall be solidly constructed and shall be closed
with three different locks as well as three numbered security locks and such other safety
devices as the Commission may prescribe in such a way that they can not be opened
except by means of three distinct keys and by destroying such safety devices.

(b) In case of the destruction or disappearance of any ballot box on election day, the board
of election inspectors shall immediately report it to the city or municipal treasurer who
shall furnish another box or receptacle as equally adequate as possible. The election
registrar shall report the incident and the delivery of a new ballot box by the fastest means
of communication on the same day to the Commission and to the provincial election
supervisor. (Sec. 93, 1971 EC)

SECTION 161. Tally boards. – At the beginning of the counting, there shall be placed
within the plain view of the board of election inspectors, watchers and the public, a tally
board where the names of all the registered candidates or the issues or questions to be
voted upon shall be written, and the poll clerk shall record thereon the votes received by
each of them as the chairman of the board of election inspectors reads the ballot. (Sec. 94,
1971 EC)

SECTION 162. Furnishing of ballot boxes, forms, stationeries and materials for election.
– The Commission shall prepare and furnish the ballot boxes, forms, stationeries and
materials necessary for the registration of voters and the holding of the election.

The provincial, city and municipal treasurer shall have custody of such election
paraphernalia, supplies and materials as are entrusted to him under the law or rules of the
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Commission and shall be responsible for their preservation and storage, and for any loss,
destruction, impairment or damage of any election equipment, material or document in
their possession furnished under this Code. (Sec. 96, 1971 EC)

SECTION 163. Inspection of polling places. – Before the day of the election, referendum
or plebiscite, the Chairman of the Commission shall, through its authorized
representatives, see to it that all polling places are inspected and such omissions and
defects as may be found corrected. The Commission shall keep the reports on these
inspections. (Sec. 97, 1971 EC)

ARTICLE XIV - BOARD OF ELECTION INSPECTORS

SECTION 164. Composition and appointment of board of election inspectors. – At least


thirty days before the date when the voters list is to be prepared in accordance with this
Code, in the case of a regular election or fifteen days before a special election, the
Commission shall, directly or through its duly authorized representatives, constitute a
board of election inspectors for each precinct to be composed of a chairman and a poll
clerk who must be public school teachers, priority to be given to civil service eligibles, and
two members, each representing the two accredited political parties. The appointment shall
state the precinct to which they are assigned and the date of the appointment.

SECTION 165. Oath of the members of the board of election inspectors. – The members
of the board of election inspectors, whether permanent, substitute or temporary, shall
before assuming their office, take and sign an oath upon forms prepared by the
Commission, before an officer authorized to administer oaths or, in his absence, before
any other member of the board of election inspectors present, or in case no one is present,
they shall take it before any voter. The oaths shall be sent immediately to the city or
municipal treasurer. (Sec. 157, 1971 EC)

SECTION 166. Qualification of members of the board of election inspectors. – No person


shall be appointed chairman, member or substitute member of the board of election
inspectors unless he is of good moral character and irreproachable reputation, a registered
voter of the city or municipality, has never been convicted of any election offense or of
any other crime punishable by more than six months of imprisonment, or if he has pending
against him an information for any election offense. He must be able to speak and write
English or the local dialect. (Sec. 114, 1978 EC)

SECTION 167. Disqualification. – No person shall serve as chairman or member of the


board of election inspectors if he is related within the fourth civil degree of consanguinity
or affinity to any member of the board of election inspectors or to any candidate to be
voted for in the polling place or his spouse. (Sec. 115, 1978 EC)

SECTION 168. Powers of the board of election inspectors. – The board of election
inspectors shall have the following powers and functions:

a. Conduct the voting and counting of votes in their respective polling places;

b. Act as deputies of the Commission in the supervision and control of the election in the
polling places wherein they are assigned, to assure the holding of the same in a free,
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orderly and honest manner; and

c. Perform such other functions prescribed by this Code or by the rules and regulations
promulgated by the Commission. (Sec. 116, 1978 EC)

SECTION 169. Voting privilege of members of board of election inspectors. – Members of


the board of election inspectors and their substitutes may vote in the polling place where
they are assigned on election day: Provided, That they are registered voters within the
province, city or municipality where they are assigned: and Provided, finally, That their
voting in the polling places where they are not registered voters be noted in the minutes of
the board of election inspectors. (Sec. 117, 1978 EC, with modifications)

SECTION 170. Relief and substitution of members of the board of election inspectors. –
Public school teachers who are members of the board of election inspectors shall not be
relieved nor disqualified from acting as such members, except for cause and after due
hearing.

Any member of the board of election inspectors, nominated by a political party, as well as
his substitute may at any time be relieved from office and substituted with another having
the legal qualifications upon petition of the authorized representative of the party upon
whose nomination the appointment was made, and it shall be unlawful to prevent said
person from, or disturb him in, the performance of the duties of the said office. A record of
each case of substitution shall be made, setting forth therein the hour in which the replaced
member has ceased in the office and the status of the work of the board of election
inspectors. Said record shall be signed by each member of the board of election inspectors
including the incoming and outgoing officers. (Sec. 145, 1971 EC)

SECTION 171. Vacancy in the board of election inspectors. – Every vacancy in the board
of election inspectors shall be filled for the remaining period in the manner hereinbefore
prescribed. (Sec. 146, 1971 EC)

SECTION 172. Proceedings of the board of election inspectors. – The meetings of the
board of election inspectors shall be public and shall be held only in the polling place
authorized by the Commission.

The board of election inspectors shall have full authority to maintain order within the
polling place and its premises, to keep access thereto open and unobstructed, and to
enforce obedience to its lawful orders. If any person shall refuse to obey lawful orders of
the board of election inspectors, or shall conduct himself in a disorderly manner in its
presence or within its hearing and thereby interrupt or disturb its proceedings, the board of
election inspectors may issue an order in writing directing any peace officer to take such
person into custody until the adjournment of the meeting, but such order shall not be
executed as to prevent any person so taken into custody from exercising his right to vote.
Such order shall be executed by any peace officer to whom it may be delivered, but if none
be present, by any other person deputized by the board of election inspectors in writing.
(Sec. 158, 1971 EC)

SECTION 173. Prohibition of political activity. – No member of the board of election


inspectors shall engage in any partisan political activity or take part in the election except
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to discharge his duties as such and to vote. (Sec. 152, 1971 EC)

SECTION 174. Functioning of the board of election inspectors. – The board of election
inspectors shall act through its chairman, and shall decide without delay by majority vote
all questions which may arise in the performance of its duties. (Sec. 153, second sentence,
1971 EC)

SECTION 175. Temporary vacancies. – If, at the time of the meeting of the board of
election inspectors, any member is absent, or the office is still vacant, the members present
shall call upon the substitute or the absent members to perform the duties of the latter; and,
in case such substitute cannot be found, the members present shall appoint any non-
partisan registered voter of the polling place to temporarily fill said vacancy until the
absent member appears or the vacancy is filled. In case there are two or more members
present, they shall act jointly: Provided, That if the absent member is one who has been
proposed by an accredited political party, the representative of said political party or in his
absence the watchers belonging to said party shall designate a registered voter of the
polling place to temporarily fill said vacancy: Provided, further, That in the event or
refusal or failure of either representative or watchers of said political party to make the
designation, the members of the board of election inspectors present shall choose a non-
partisan registered voter of the polling place to fill the vacancy. (Sec. 154, 1971 EC)

SECTION 176. Temporary designation of members of the board of election inspectors by


watchers. – If at the time the board of election inspectors must meet, all the positions in
the board of election inspectors are vacant, or if not one of the appointed members shall
appear, the watchers present may designate voters of the polling place to act in the place of
said members until the absentees shall appear or the vacancies are filled. (Sec. 156, 1971
EC; Sec. 127, 1978 EC)

SECTION 177. Arrest of absent members. – The member or members of the board of
election inspectors present may order the arrest of any other member or substitute thereof,
who in their judgment, has absented himself with intention of obstructing the performance
of duties of the board of election inspectors. (Sec. 126, 1978 EC)

ARTICLE XV - WATCHERS

SECTION 178. Official watchers of candidates. – Every registered political party,


coalition of political parties and every independent candidate shall each be entitled to one
watcher in every polling place.

No person shall be appointed watcher unless he is a qualified voter of the city or


municipality, of good reputation and shall not have been convicted by final judgment of
any election offense or of any other crime, must know how to read and write Pilipino,
English, Spanish or any of the prevailing local dialects, and not related within the fourth
civil degree of consanguinity or affinity to the chairman or any member of the board of
election inspectors in the polling place where he seeks appointment as a watcher.

Each candidate, political party or coalition of political parties shall designate in every
province, highly urbanized city or district in the Metropolitan Manila area, a representative
authorized to appoint watchers, furnishing the provincial election supervisor or the city
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election registrar, as the case may be, the names of such representatives. The provincial
election supervisors shall furnish the municipal election registrars and election registrars
of component cities with the list of such representatives.

In the case of Metropolitan Manila, the designation of the persons authorized to appoint
watchers shall be filed with the Commission, which shall furnish the list of such
representatives to the respective city and municipal election registrars. (Sec. 26, BP 697,
with amendments)

SECTION 179. Rights and duties of watchers. – Upon entering the polling place, the
watchers shall present and deliver to the chairman of the board of election inspectors his
appointment, and forthwith, his name shall be recorded in the minutes with a notation
under his signature that he is not disqualified under the second paragraph of Section 178.
The appointments of the watchers shall bear the personal signature or the facsimile
signature of the candidate or the duly authorized representatives of the political party or
coalition of political parties who appointed him or of organizations authorized by the
Commission under Section 180. The watchers shall have the right to stay in the space
reserved for them inside the polling place. They shall have the right to witness and inform
themselves of the proceedings of the board of election inspectors, including its
proceedings during the registration of voters, to take notes of what they may see or hear, to
take photographs of the proceedings and incidents, if any, during the counting of votes, as
well as of election returns, tally boards and ballot boxes, to file a protest against any
irregularity or violation of law which they believe may have been committed by the board
of election inspectors or by any of its members or by any persons, to obtain from the board
of election inspectors a certificate as to the filing of such protest and/or of the resolution
thereon, to read the ballots after they shall have been read by the chairman, as well as the
election returns after they shall have been completed and signed by the members of the
board of election inspectors without touching them, but they shall not speak to any
member of the board of election inspectors, or to any voter, or among themselves, in such
a manner as would distract the proceedings, and to be furnished with a certificate of the
number of votes in words and figures cast for each candidate, duly signed and
thumbmarked by the chairman and all the members of the board of election inspectors.
Refusal of the chairman and the members of the board of election inspectors to sign and
furnish such certificate shall constitute an election offense and shall be penalized under
this Code. (Sec. 28, BP 697)

SECTION 180. Other watchers. – The duly accredited citizens arm of the Commission
shall be entitled to appoint a watcher in every polling place. Other civic, religious,
professional, business, service, youth and any other similar organizations, with prior
authority of the Commission, shall be entitled collectively to appoint one watcher in every
polling place. (Sec. 27, BP 697 with amendments)

ARTICLE XVI - OFFICIAL BALLOTS AND ELECTION RETURNS

SECTION 181. Official ballots. – Ballots for national and local offices shall be of uniform
size and color and shall be provided at public expense. They shall be printed on paper with
watermarks or other marks that will readily distinguish the ballot paper from ordinary
paper. Each ballot shall be in the shape of a strip with stub and detachable coupon
containing the serial number of the ballot, and a space for the thumbmark of the voter on
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the detachable coupon. It shall bear at the top on the middle portion thereof the coat of
arms of the Republic of the Philippines, the words “Official Ballot”, the name of the city
or the municipality and province in which the election is held, the date of the election, and
the following notice: “Fill out this ballot secretly inside the voting booth. Do not put any
distinctive mark on any part of this ballot.”

The ballot shall also contain the names of all the offices to be voted for in the election,
allowing opposite the name of each office, sufficient space or spaces with horizontal lines
where the voter may write the name or names of the individual candidates voted for by
him.

There shall not be anything on the reverse side of the ballot.

Ballots in cities and municipalities where Arabic is of general use shall have each of the
titles of offices to be voted printed in Arabic in addition to and immediately below the
English title.

Notwithstanding the preceding provisions of this section, the Commission is hereby


empowered to prescribe a different form of ballot to facilitate voting by illiterate voters
and to use or adopt the latest technological and electronic devices as authorized under
paragraph (i) of Section 52 hereof. (Sec. 128, 1978 EC, with modification)

SECTION 182. Emergency ballots. – No ballots other than the official ballots shall be
used or counted, except in the event of failure to receive the official ballots on time, or
where there are no sufficient ballots for all registered voters or where they are destroyed at
such time as shall render it impossible to provide other official ballots, in which cases the
city or municipal treasurer shall provide other ballots which shall be as similar to the
official ones as circumstances will permit and which shall be uniform within each polling
place. The treasurer shall immediately report such action to the Commission.

The municipal treasurer shall not undertake the preparation of the emergency ballots
unless the political parties, candidates and the organizations collectively authorized by the
Commission to designate watchers have been sufficiently notified to send their
representatives and have agreed in writing to the preparation and use of emergency ballots.
(Sec. 130, 1978 EC; Sec. 30, BP 697)

SECTION 183. Requisition of official ballots and election returns. – Official ballots and
election returns shall be printed upon orders of the Commission. Requisition of official
ballots shall be for each city and municipality, at the rate of one and one-fifth ballots for
every registered voter in the next preceding election; and for election returns, at one set
thereof for every polling place. (Sec. 166, 1971 EC; Sec. 31, BP 697)

SECTION 184. Printing of official ballots and election returns. – The official ballots and
election returns shall be printed by the Government Printing Office and/or the Central
Bank printing facilities exclusively, under the exclusive supervision and control of the
Commission which shall determine and provide the necessary security measures in the
printing, storage and distribution thereof.

Each ballot shall be joined by a perforated line to a stub numbered consecutively,


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beginning with number “1? in each city and municipality. Each ballot shall also have at the
bottom a detachable coupon bearing the same number of the stub. Each pad of ballots shall
bear on its cover the name of the city or municipality in which the ballots are to be used
and the inclusive serial numbers of the ballots contained therein.

The official ballots shall be bound in separate pads of fifty or one hundred ballots each as
may be required.

The election returns shall be prepared in sets of six copies per set and shall be numbered
consecutively, beginning with number “1? in each city and municipality. Each set of the
election returns shall be printed in such a manner that will ensure that the entries on the
original of the returns are clearly reproduced on the other copies thereof and shall bear the
name of the city or municipality in which the returns are to be used. For this purpose, the
Commission shall acquire, if necessary, a special kind of carbon paper or chemically
treated paper. (Sec. 163, 1971 EC; Sec. 129, 1978 EC, with modifications)

SECTION 185. Official Sample Ballots. – The Commission shall provide the board of
election inspectors with official sample ballots at the rate of thirty (30) ballots per polling
place. The official sample ballots shall be printed on colored paper, in all respects like the
official ballots but bearing instead the words ‘Official Sample Ballot’ to be shown to the
public and used in demonstrating how to fill out and fold the official ballots properly. No
name of any actual candidate shall be written on the spaces for voting on the official
sample ballots provided by the Commission, nor shall they be used for voting. (Sec. 131,
1978 EC)

SECTION 186. Distribution of official ballots and election returns. – The official ballots
and the election returns shall be distributed by the Commission to each city and
municipality at the rate of one and one-fifth ballots for every voter registered in each
polling place; and for election returns, at the rate of one set each for every polling place.

The provincial, city or municipal treasurer shall respectively keep a record of the quantity
and serial numbers of official ballots and election returns furnished the various provinces,
cities, municipalities and polling places, as the case may be, legible copies of which record
shall be furnished the duly authorized provincial, city or municipal representatives of the
ruling party and the dominant opposition party, and the Commission immediately after the
distribution is made of such official ballots and election returns.

The Commission shall prescribe the use of official delivery receipts to be signed by the
election registrar and the chairman of the board of canvassers upon receipt of the election
returns.

No official ballots or election returns shall be delivered to the board of election inspectors
earlier than the first hour of election day: Provided, however, That the Commission, after
written notice to the registered political parties and the candidates, may, for justifiable
reasons, authorize the delivery of said official ballots and election returns to the board of
election inspectors of any particular polling place at an earlier date. (Sec. 31, BP 697)

SECTION 187. Committee on printing, storage, and distribution of official ballots and
election returns. – The Commission shall appoint a committee of five members, two of
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whom shall be from among its personnel, the third to be designated by the Commission on
Audit, and the last two to be designated by the ruling party and the dominant opposition
party to act as its representatives in supervising the printing, storage and distribution of
official ballots and election returns.

Upon the request of any candidate, political party or of civic, religious, professional,
business, service, youth or any similar organizations collectively designated by the
Commission, the latter shall allow any person designated by any of the former as watcher
to observe the proceedings of the committee on the printing of official ballots and election
returns, file objections, if any, witness the printing and distribution of the ballots and the
returns and guard the premises of the printer. (Sec. 32, BP 697, with modifications)

SECTION 188. Duties of the committee on printing of official ballots and election returns.
– Under such orders or instructions as the Commission may issue, and in addition to
general supervision and control over the printing and shipment of official ballots and
election returns, the committee on printing of official ballots and election returns shall (a)
take charge of the room or rooms where the paper and paraphernalia used in the printing of
official ballots and election returns are stored and where printed official ballots and
election returns are packed and prepared for shipment, (b) supervise all aspects relating to
the printing, storage and shipment of official ballots and election returns and report to the
Commission any irregularity which they believe may have been committed, and (c)
perform such other related functions as the Commission may direct. (Sec. 32, BP 697)

SECTION 189. Representatives of the registered political parties in the verification and
distribution of official ballots and election returns. – The ruling party and the dominant
opposition party or their respective duly authorized representatives in the different
provinces, cities and municipalities, shall submit the names of their respective watchers
who, together with the representatives of the Commission and the provincial, city and
municipal treasurer shall verify the contents of the boxes containing the shipment of
official ballots, election returns and sample official ballots received by the said treasurers.
The provincial treasurers shall keep a record of their receipt and distribution to each
municipal treasurer, while the city and municipal treasurer shall each keep a record of their
distribution to the board of election inspectors. (Sec. 34, BP 697, with modifications)

ARTICLE XVII - CASTING OF VOTES

SECTION 190. Voting hours. – The casting of votes shall start at seven o’clock in the
morning and shall end at three o’clock in the afternoon, except when there are voters
present within thirty meters in front of the polling place who have not yet cast their votes,
in which case the voting shall continue but only to allow said voters to cast their votes
without interruption. The poll clerk shall, without delay, prepare a complete list containing
the names of said voters consecutively numbered, and the voters so listed shall be called to
vote by announcing each name repeatedly three times in the order in which they are listed.
Any voter in the list who is not present when his name is called out shall not be permitted
to vote. (Sec. 35, BP 697)

SECTION 191. Preliminaries to the voting. – (a) The board of election inspectors shall
meet at the polling place at six-thirty o’clock in the morning of election day and shall have
the book of voters containing all the approved applications of registration of voters
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pertaining to the polling place, the certified list of voters, the certified list of candidates,
the ballot box, the official ballots, sufficient indelible pencils or ball pens for the use of the
voters, the forms to be used, and all other materials which may be necessary.

(b) Immediately thereafter, the chairman of the board of election inspectors shall open the
ballot box, empty both of its compartments, exhibit them to all those present and being
empty, lock its interior covers with three padlocks.

(c) The chairman shall forthwith show to the public and the watchers present the package
of official ballots received from the city, or municipal treasurer duly wrapped and sealed
and the number of pads, the serial numbers and the type forms of the ballots in each pad
appearing on the cover, and the book of voters duly sealed. The board of election
inspectors shall then break the seals of the package of official ballots and the book of
voters. The board of election inspectors shall enter in the minutes the fact that the package
of ballots, and the book of voters were shown to the public with their wrapping and
corresponding seals intact and/or if they find that the wrapping and seals are broken, such
fact must be stated in the minutes as well as the number of pads and the serial numbers of
ballots that they find in the package.

Ballots with separately printed serial numbers shall be deemed spurious and shall not be
utilized by the board of election inspectors unless the Commission representative shall
order their use in writing, stating the reasons therefor.

(d) The chairman and the two party members of the board of election inspectors shall
retain in their possession their respective keys to the padlocks during the voting.

(e) The box shall remain locked until the voting is finished and the counting begins.
However, if it should become necessary to make room for more ballots, the board of
election inspectors may open the box in the presence of the whole board of election
inspectors and the watchers, and the chairman shall press down with his hands the ballots
contained therein without removing any of them, after which the board of election
inspectors shall close the box and lock it with three padlocks as hereinbefore provided.
(Sec. 136, 1978 EC)

SECTION 192. Persons allowed in and around the polling place. – During the voting, no
person shall be allowed inside the polling place, except the members of the board of
election inspectors, the watchers, the representatives of the Commission, the voters casting
their votes, the voters waiting for their turn to get inside the booths whose number shall
not exceed twice the number of booths and the voters waiting for their turn to cast their
votes whose number shall not exceed twenty at any one time. The watchers shall stay only
in the space reserved for them, it being illegal for them to enter places reserved for the
voters or for the board of election inspectors or to mingle and talk with the voters within
the polling place.

It shall be unlawful for any officer or member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
including the Philippine Constabulary or the Integrated National Police or peace officer or
any armed person belonging to any extra-legal police agency, special forces, reaction
forces, strike forces, home defense units, barangay tanod, or other similar forces or para-
military forces, including special forces, security guards, special policemen, and all other
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kinds of armed or unarmed extra-legal police officers, to enter any polling place, unless it
is his polling place where he will vote but in such case he should immediately leave the
polling place, and within a radius of fifty meters from such polling place ,no policeman or
peace officer shall be allowed to enter or stay inside the polling place except when there is
an actual disturbance of the peace and order therein. However, the board of election
inspectors upon majority vote, if it deems necessary, may make a call in writing, duly
entered in the minutes, for the detail of a policeman or any peace officer for their
protection or for the protection of the election documents and paraphernalia, in which
case, the said policeman or peace officer shall stay outside the polling place within a
radius of thirty meters near enough to be easily called by the board of election inspectors
at any time, but never at the door, and in no case shall the said policeman or peace officer
hold any conversation with any voter or disturb or prevent or in any manner obstruct the
free access of the voters to the polling place. It shall likewise be unlawful for any barangay
official to enter and stay inside any polling place except to vote or except when serving as
a watcher or member of the board of election inspectors, in which case, he shall leave the
polling place immediately after voting. (1978 EC; Sec. 137 & Sec. 36 BP 697)

SECTION 193. Order of voting. – The voters shall vote in the order of their entrance into
the polling place. The voters shall have the right to freely enter the polling place as soon as
they arrive unless there are voters waiting inside, in which case they shall fall in line in the
order of their arrival and shall not crowd around the table of the board of election
inspectors. The voters after having cast their votes shall immediately depart. (Sec. 138,
1978 EC)

SECTION 194. Manner of obtaining ballots. – The voter shall approach the chairman and
shall give his name and address together with other data concerning his person. In case
any member of the board of election inspectors doubts the identity of the voter, the board
of election inspectors shall check his voter’s identification card or, if he does not have any,
the board of election inspectors shall refer to his photograph and signature in the voter’s
application for registration. If the board of election inspectors is satisfied with his identity,
the chairman shall distinctly announce the voter’s name in a tone loud enough to be
plainly heard throughout the polling place. If such voter has not been challenged, or if
having been challenged, the question has been decided in his favor, the voter shall
forthwith affix his signature in the proper space in the voting record, and the chairman
shall, after first entering the number of the ballot in the corresponding space of the voting
record, deliver to the voter one ballot correctly folded. No person other than the chairman
shall deliver official ballots nor shall more than one ballot be delivered at one time. (Sec.
139, 1978 EC)

SECTION 195. Manner of preparing the ballot. – The voter, upon receiving his folded
ballot, shall forthwith proceed to one of the empty voting booths and shall there fill his
ballot by writing in the proper space for each office the name of the individual candidate
for whom he desires to vote.

No voter shall be allowed to enter a booth occupied by another, nor enter the same
accompanied by somebody, except as provided for in the succeeding section hereof, nor
stay therein for a longer time than necessary, nor speak with anyone other than as herein
provided while inside the polling place. It shall be unlawful to prepare the ballot outside
the voting booth, or to exhibit its contents to any person, or to erase any printing from the
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ballot, or to intentionally tear or deface the same or put thereon any distinguishing mark. It
shall likewise be unlawful to use carbon paper, paraffin paper, or other means for making a
copy of the contents of the ballot or make use of any other means to identify the vote of
the voter. (Sec. 140, 1978 EC)

SECTION 196. Preparation of ballots for illiterate and disabled persons. – A voter who is
illiterate or physically unable to prepare the ballot by himself may be assisted in the
preparation of his ballot by a relative, by affinity or consanguinity within the fourth civil
degree or if he has none, by any person of his confidence who belong to the same
household or any member of the board of election inspectors, except the two party
members: Provided, That no voter shall be allowed to vote as illiterate or physically
disabled unless it is so indicated in his registration record: Provided, further, That in no
case shall an assistor assist more than three times except the non-party members of the
board of election inspectors. The person thus chosen shall prepare the ballot for the
illiterate or disabled voter inside the voting booth. The person assisting shall bind himself
in a formal document under oath to fill out the ballot strictly in accordance with the
instructions of the voter and not to reveal the contents of the ballot prepared by him.
Violation of this provision shall constitute an election offense. (Sec. 141, 1978 EC)

SECTION 197. Spoiled ballots. – If a voter should accidentally spoil or deface a ballot in
such a way that it cannot lawfully be used, he shall surrender if folded to the chairman
who shall note in the corresponding space in the voting record that said ballot is spoiled.
The voter shall then be entitled to another ballot which the chairman shall give him after
announcing the serial number of the second ballot and recording said serial number in the
corresponding spaces in the voting record. If the second ballot is again spoiled or defaced
in such a way that it cannot lawfully be used, the same shall be surrendered to the
chairman and recorded in the same manner as the first spoiled or defaced ballot. However,
no voter shall change his ballot more than twice.

The spoiled ballot shall, without being unfolded and without removing the detachable
coupon, be distinctly marked with the word “spoiled” and signed by the board of election
inspectors on the indorsement fold thereof and immediately placed in the compartment for
spoiled ballots. (Sec. 142, 1978 EC)

SECTION 198. Voting. – (a) After the voter has filled his ballot he shall fold it in the same
manner as when he received it and return it to the chairman.

(b) In the presence of all the members of the board of election inspectors, he shall affix his
thumbmark on the corresponding space in the coupon, and deliver the folded ballot to the
chairman.

(c) The chairman, in the presence and view of the voter and all the members of the board
of election inspectors, without unfolding the ballot or seeing its contents, shall verify its
number from the voting record where it was previously entered.

(d) The voter shall forthwith affix his thumbmark by the side of his signature in the space
intended for that purpose in the voting record and the chairman shall apply silver nitrate
and commassie blue on the right forefinger nail or on any other available finger nail, if
there be no forefinger nail.
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(e) The chairman shall sign in the proper space beside the thumbmark of the voter.

(f)The chairman, after finding everything to be in order, shall then detach the coupon in
the presence of the board of election inspectors and of the voter and shall deposit the
folded ballot in the compartment for valid ballots, and the detached coupon in the
compartment for spoiled ballots.

(g)The voter shall then depart.

Any ballot returned to the chairman whose detachable coupon has been removed not in the
presence of the board of election inspectors and of the voter, or any ballot whose number
does not coincide with the number of the ballot delivered to the voter, as entered in the
voting record, shall be considered as spoiled and shall be so marked and signed by the
members of the board of election inspectors. (Sec. 143, 1978 EC)

SECTION 199. Challenge of illegal voters. – (a) Any voter, or watcher may challenge any
person offering to vote for not being registered, for using the name of another or suffering
from existing disqualification. In such case, the board of election inspectors shall satisfy
itself as to whether or not the ground for the challenge is true by requiring proof of
registration or the identity of the voter; and

(b) No voter shall be required to present his voter’s affidavit on election day unless his
identity is challenged. His failure or inability to produce his voter’s affidavit upon being
challenged, shall not preclude him from voting if his identity be shown from the
photograph, fingerprints, or specimen signatures in his approved application in the book of
voters or if he is identified under oath by a member of the board of election inspectors and
such identification shall be reflected in the minutes of the board.

SECTION 200. Challenge based on certain illegal acts. – Any voter or watcher may
challenge any voter offering to vote on the ground that the challenged person has received
or expects to receive, has paid, offered or promised to pay, has contributed, offered or
promised to contribute money or anything of value as consideration for his vote or for the
vote of another; that he has made or received a promise to influence the giving or
withholding of any such vote or that he has made a bet or is interested directly or
indirectly in a bet which depends upon the result of the election. The challenged person
shall take a prescribed oath before the board of election inspectors that he has not
committed any of the acts alleged in the challenge. Upon the taking of such oath, the
challenge shall be dismissed and the challenged voter shall be allowed to vote, but in case
of his refusal to take such oath, the challenge shall be sustained and he shall not be
allowed to vote. (Sec. 145, 1978 EC)

SECTION 201. Admission of challenged vote immaterial in criminal proceedings. – The


admission of the challenged vote under the two preceding sections shall not be conclusive
upon any court as to the legality of the registration of the voter challenged or his vote in a
criminal action against such person for illegal registration or voting. (Sec. 146, 1978 EC)

SECTION 202. Record of challenges and oaths. – The poll clerk shall keep a prescribed
record of challenges and oaths taken in connection therewith and the resolution of the
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board of election inspectors in each case and, upon the termination of the voting, shall
certify that it contains all the challenges made. The original of this record shall be attached
to the original copy of the minutes of the voting as provided in the succeeding section.
(Sec. 147, 1978 EC)

SECTION 203. Minutes of voting and counting of votes. – The board of election inspectors
shall prepare and sign a statement in four copies setting forth the following:

1. The time the voting commenced and ended;

2. The serial numbers of the official ballots and election returns, special
envelopes and seals received;

3. The number of official ballots used and the number left unused;

4. The number of voters who cast their votes;

5. The number of voters challenged during the voting;

6. The names of the watchers present;

7. The time the counting of votes commenced and ended;

8. The number of official ballots found inside the compartment for valid
ballots;

9. The number of valid ballots, if any, retrieved from the compartment for
spoiled ballots;

10. The number of ballots, if any, found folded together;

11. The number of spoiled ballots withdrawn from the compartment for valid
ballots;

12. The number of excess ballots;

13. The number of marked ballots;

14. The number of ballots read and counted;

15. The time the election returns were signed and sealed in their respective
special envelopes;

16. The number and nature of protests made by watchers; and

17. Such other matters that the Commission may require.

Copies of this statement after being duly accomplished shall be sealed in separate
envelopes and shall be distributed as follows: (a) the original to the city or municipal
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election registrar; (b) the second copy to be deposited inside the compartment for valid
ballots of the ballot box; and (c) the third and fourth copies to the representatives of the
accredited political parties. (Sec. 148, 1978 EC)

SECTION 204. Disposition of unused ballots at the close of the voting hours. – The
chairman of the board of election inspectors shall prepare a list showing the number of
unused ballots together with the serial numbers. This list shall be signed by all the
members of the board of election inspectors, after which all the unused ballots shall be
torn halfway in the presence of the members of the board of election inspectors.

SECTION 205. Prohibition of premature announcement of voting. – No member of the


board of election inspectors shall, before the termination of the voting, make any
announcement as to whether a certain registered voter has already voted or not, as to how
many have already voted or how many so far have failed to vote, or any other fact tending
to show or showing the state of the polls, nor shall he make any statement at any time,
except as witness before a court, as to how any person voted. (Sec. 149, 1978 EC)

ARTICLE XVIII - COUNTING OF VOTES

SECTION 206. Counting to be public and without interruption. – As soon as the voting is
finished, the board of election inspectors shall publicly count in the polling place the votes
cast and ascertain the results. The Board may rearrange the physical set up of the polling
place for the counting or perform any other activity with respect to the transition from
voting counting. However, it may do so only in the presence of the watchers and within
close view of the public. At all times, the ballot boxes and all election documents and
paraphernalia shall be within close view of the watchers and the public.

The board of election inspectors shall not adjourn or postpone or delay the count until it
has been fully completed, unless otherwise ordered by the Commission.

The Commission, in the interest of free, orderly, and honest elections, may authorize the
board of election inspectors to count the votes and to accomplish the election returns and
other forms prescribed under this Code in any other place within a public building in the
same municipality or city on account of imminent danger of widespread violence or
similar causes of comparable magnitude: Provided, That the transfer shall have been
recommended in writing by the board of election inspectors by unanimous vote and
endorsed in writing by the majority of watchers present: Provided, further, That the said
public building shall not be located within the perimeter of or inside a military or police
camp, reservation, headquarters, detachment or field office nor within the premises of a
prison or detention bureau or any law enforcement or investigation agency.

Any violation of this section, or its pertinent portion, shall constitute an election offense
and shall be penalized in accordance with Batas Pambansa Blg. 881.

SECTION 207. Excess ballots. – Before proceeding to count the votes the board of
election inspectors shall count the ballots in the compartment for valid ballots without
unfolding them or exposing their contents, except so far as to ascertain that each ballot is
single, and compare the number of ballots in the box with the number of voters who have
voted. If there are excess ballots, they shall be returned in the box and thoroughly mixed
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therein, and the poll clerk, without seeing the ballots and with his back to the box, shall
publicly draw out as many ballots as may be equal to the excess and without unfolding
them, place them in an envelope which shall be marked “excess ballots” and which shall
be sealed and signed by the members of the board of election inspectors. The envelope
shall be placed in the compartment for valid ballots, but its contents shall not be read in
the counting of votes. If in the course of the examination ballots are found folded together
before they were deposited in the box, they shall be placed in the envelope for excess
ballots. In case ballots with their detachable coupons be found in the box, such coupons
shall be removed and deposited in the compartment for spoiled ballots, and the ballots
shall be included in the file of valid ballots. If ballots with the words “spoiled” be found in
the box, such ballots shall likewise be placed in the compartment for spoiled ballots. (Sec.
151, 1978 EC)

SECTION 208. Marked ballots. – The board of election inspectors shall then unfold the
ballots and determine whether there are any marked ballots, and, if any be found, they
shall be placed in an envelope labelled “marked ballots” which shall be sealed and signed
by the members of the board of election inspectors and placed in the compartment for
valid ballots and shall not be counted. A majority vote of the board of election inspectors
shall be sufficient to determine whether any ballot is marked or not. Non-official ballots
which the board of election inspectors may find, except those which have been used as
emergency ballots, shall be considered as marked ballots. (Sec. 152, 1978 EC)

SECTION 209. Compartment for spoiled ballots. – The ballots deposited in the
compartment for spoiled ballots shall be presumed to be spoiled ballots, whether or not
they contain such notation; but if the board of election inspectors should find that during
the voting any valid ballot was erroneously deposited in this compartment, or if any ballot
separated as excess or marked had been erroneously deposited therein, the board of
election inspectors shall open said compartment after the voting and before the counting of
votes for the sole purpose of drawing out the ballots erroneously deposited therein. It shall
then prepare and sign a statement of such fact and lock the box with its three keys
immediately thereafter. The valid ballots so withdrawn shall be mixed with the other valid
ballots, and the excess or marked ballots shall be placed in their proper envelopes which
shall for such purposes be opened and again labelled, sealed, signed and kept as
hereinafter provided. (Sec. 153, 1978 EC)

SECTION 210. Manner of counting votes. – The counting of votes shall be made in the
following manner: the board of election inspectors shall unfold the ballots and form
separate piles of one hundred ballots each, which shall be held together with rubber bands,
with cardboard of the size of the ballots to serve as folders. The chairman of the board of
election inspectors shall take the ballots of the first pile one by one and read the names of
candidates voted for and the offices for which they were voted in the order in which they
appear thereon, assuming such a position as to enable all of the watchers to read such
names. The chairman shall sign and affix his right hand thumbmark at the back of the
ballot immediately after it is counted. The poll clerk, and the third member, respectively,
shall record on the election returns and the tally board or sheet each vote as the names
voted for each office are read.

Each vote shall be recorded by a vertical line, except every fifth vote which shall be
recorded by a diagonal line crossing the previous four vertical lines. One party member
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shall see to it that the chairman reads the vote as written on the ballot, and the other shall
check the recording of the votes on the tally board or sheet and the election returns seeing
to it that the same are correctly accomplished. After finishing the first pile of ballots, the
board of election inspectors shall determine the total number of votes recorded for each
candidate, the sum being noted on the tally board or sheet and on the election returns. In
case of discrepancy such recount as may be necessary shall be made. The ballots shall then
be grouped together again as before the reading. Thereafter, the same procedure shall be
followed with the second pile of ballots and so on successively. After all the ballots have
been read, the board of election inspectors shall sum up the totals recorded for each
candidate, and the aggregate sum shall be recorded both on the tally board or sheet and on
the election returns. It shall then place the counted ballots in an envelope provided for the
purpose, which shall be closed, signed and deposited in the compartment for valid ballots.
The tally board or sheet as accomplished and certified by the board of election inspectors
shall not be changed or destroyed but shall be kept in the compartment for valid ballots
(Sec. 154, 1978 EC)

SECTION 211. Rules for the appreciation of ballots. – In the reading and appreciation of
ballots, every ballot shall be presumed to be valid unless there is clear and good reason to
justify its rejection. The board of election inspectors shall observe the following rules,
bearing in mind that the object of the election is to obtain the expression of the voters’
will:

1. Where only the first name of a candidate or only his surname is written, the
vote for such candidate is valid, if there is no other candidate with the same
first name or surname for the same office.

2. Where only the first name of a candidate is written on the ballot, which
when read, has a sound similar to the surname of another candidate, the vote
shall be counted in favor of the candidate with such surname. If there are two
or more candidates with the same full name, first name or surname and one of
them is the incumbent, and on the ballot is written only such full name, first
name or surname, the vote shall be counted in favor of the incumbent.

3. In case the candidate is a woman who uses her maiden or married surname
or both and there is another candidate with the same surname, a ballot bearing
only such surname shall be counted in favor of the candidate who is an
incumbent.

4. When two or more words are written on the same line on the ballot, all of
which are the surnames of two or more candidates, the same shall not be
counted for any of them, unless one is a surname of an incumbent who has
served for at least one year in which case it shall be counted in favor of the
latter.

When two or more words are written on different lines on the ballot all of
which are the surnames of two or more candidates bearing the same surname
for an office for which the law authorizes the election of more than one and
there are the same number of such surnames written as there are candidates
with that surname, the vote shall be counted in favor of all the candidates
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bearing the surname.

5. When on the ballot is written a single word which is the first name of a
candidate and which is at the same time the surname of his opponent, the vote
shall be counted in favor of the latter.

6. When two words are written on the ballot, one of which is the first name of
the candidate and the other is the surname of his opponent, the vote shall not be
counted for either.

7. A name or surname incorrectly written which, when read, has a sound


similar to the name or surname of a candidate when correctly written shall be
counted in his favor;

8. When a name of a candidate appears in a space of the ballot for an office for
which he is a candidate and in another space for which he is not a candidate, it
shall be counted in his favor for the office for which he is a candidate and the
vote for the office for which he is not a candidate shall be considered as stray,
except when it is used as a means to identify the voter, in which case, the
whole ballot shall be void.

If the word or words written on the appropriate blank on the ballot is the
identical name or surname or full name, as the case may be, of two or more
candidates for the same office none of whom is an incumbent, the vote shall be
counted in favor of that candidate to whose ticket belong all the other
candidates voted for in the same ballot for the same constituency.

9. When in a space in the ballot there appears a name of a candidate that is


erased and another clearly written, the vote is valid for the latter.

10. The erroneous initial of the first name which accompanies the correct
surname of a candidate, the erroneous initial of the surname accompanying the
correct first name of a candidate, or the erroneous middle initial of the
candidate shall not annul the vote in favor of the latter.

11. The fact that there exists another person who is not a candidate with the
first name or surname of a candidate shall not prevent the adjudication of the
vote of the latter.

12. Ballots which contain prefixes such as “Sir.”, “Mr.”, “Datu”, “Don”,
“Ginoo”, “Hon.”, “Gob.” or suffixes like “Hijo”, “Jr.”, “Segundo”, are valid.

13. The use of the nicknames and appellations of affection and friendship, if
accompanied by the first name or surname of the candidate, does not annul
such vote, except when they were used as a means to identify the voter, in
which case the whole ballot is invalid: Provided, That if the nickname used is
unaccompanied by the name or surname of a candidate and it is the one by
which he is generally or popularly known in the locality, the name shall be
counted in favor of said candidate, if there is no other candidate for the same
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office with the same nickname.

14. Any vote containing initials only or which is illegible or which does not
sufficiently identify the candidate for whom it is intended shall be considered
as a stray vote but shall not invalidate the whole ballot.

15. If on the ballot is correctly written the first name of a candidate but with a
different surname, or the surname of the candidate is correctly written but with
different first name, the vote shall not be counted in favor of any candidate
having such first name and/or surname but the ballot shall be considered valid
for other candidates.

16. Any ballot written with crayon, lead pencil, or in ink, wholly or in part,
shall be valid.

17. Where there are two or more candidates voted for in an office for which the
law authorizes the election of only one, the vote shall not be counted in favor
of any of them, but this shall not affect the validity of the other votes therein.

18. If the candidates voted for exceed the number of those to be elected, the
ballot is valid, but the votes shall be counted only in favor of the candidates
whose names were firstly written by the voter within the spaces provided for
said office in the ballot until the authorized number is covered.

19. Any vote in favor of a person who has not filed a certificate of candidacy or
in favor of a candidate for an office for which he did not present himself shall
be considered as a stray vote but it shall not invalidate the whole ballot.

20. Ballots containing the name of a candidate printed and pasted on a blank
space of the ballot or affixed thereto through any mechanical process are totally
null and void.

21. Circles, crosses or lines put on the spaces on which the voter has not voted
shall be considered as signs to indicate his desistance from voting and shall not
invalidate the ballot.

22. Unless it should clearly appear that they have been deliberately put by the
voter to serve as identification marks, commas, dots, lines, or hyphens between
the first name and surname of a candidate, or in other parts of the ballot, traces
of the letter “T”, “J”, and other similar ones, the first letters or syllables of
names which the voter does not continue, the use of two or more kinds of
writing and unintentional or accidental flourishes, strokes, or strains, shall not
invalidate the ballot.

23. Any ballot which clearly appears to have been filled by two distinct persons
before it was deposited in the ballot box during the voting is totally null and
void.

24. Any vote cast in favor of a candidate who has been disqualified by final
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judgment shall be considered as stray and shall not be counted but it shall not
invalidate the ballot.

25. Ballots wholly written in Arabic in localities where it is of general use are
valid. To read them, the board of election inspectors may employ an interpreter
who shall take an oath that he shall read the votes correctly.

26. The accidental tearing or perforation of a ballot does not annul it.

27. Failure to remove the detachable coupon from a ballot does not annul such
ballot.

28. A vote for the President shall also be a vote for the Vice-President running
under the same ticket of a political party, unless the voter votes for a Vice-
President who does not belong to such party. (Sec. 155, 1978 EC)

SECTION 212. Election returns. – The board of election inspectors shall prepare the
election returns simultaneously with the counting of the votes in the polling place as
prescribed in Section 210 hereof. The return shall be prepared in sextuplicate. The
recording of votes shall be made as prescribed in said section. The entry of votes in words
and figures for each candidate shall be closed with the signature and the clear imprint of
the thumbmark of the right hand of all the members, likewise to be affixed in full view of
the public, immediately after the last vote recorded or immediately after the name of the
candidate who did not receive any vote.

The returns shall also show the date of the election, the polling place, the barangay and the
city of municipality in which it was held, the total number of ballots found in the
compartment for valid ballots, the total number of valid ballots withdrawn from the
compartment for spoiled ballots because they were erroneously placed therein, the total
number of excess ballots, the total number of marked or void ballots, and the total number
of votes obtained by each candidate, writing out the said number in words and figures and,
at the end thereof, the board of election inspectors shall certify that the contents are
correct. The returns shall be accomplished in a single sheet of paper, but if this is not
possible, additional sheets may be used which shall be prepared in the same manner as the
first sheet and likewise certified by the board of election inspectors.

The Commission shall take steps so that the entries on the first copy of the election returns
are clearly reproduced on the second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth copies thereof, and for
this purpose the Commission shall use a special kind of paper.

Immediately upon the accomplishment of the election returns, each copy thereof shall be
sealed in the presence of the watchers and the public, and placed in the proper envelope,
which shall likewise be sealed and distributed as herein provided. (Sec. 156, 1978 EC)

Any election return with a separately printed serial number or which bears a different
serial number from that assigned to the particular polling place concerned shall not be
canvassed. This is to be determined by the board of canvassers prior to its canvassing on
the basis of the certification of the provincial, city or municipal treasurer as to the serial
number of the election return assigned to the said voting precinct, unless the Commission
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shall order in writing for its canvassing, stating the reason for the variance in serial
numbers.

If the signatures and/or thumbmarks of the members of the board of election inspectors or
some of them as required in this provision are missing in the election returns, the board of
canvassers may summon the members of the board of election inspectors concerned to
complete the returns. (SEC. 156 1978 EC)

SECTION 213. Proclamation of the result of the election in the polling place. – Upon the
completion of the election returns, the chairman of the board of election inspectors shall
orally and publicly announce the total number of votes received in the election in the
polling place by each and every one of the candidates, stating their corresponding office.
(Sec. 157, 1978 EC)

SECTION 214. Disposition of election returns. – (1) In a presidential election: the board
of election inspectors shall prepare in handwriting and sign the returns of the election in
sextuplicate in their respective polling place in a form to be prescribed by the
Commission. One copy shall be deposited in the compartment of the ballot box for valid
ballots, and in the case of municipalities two copies including the original copy shall be
handed to the municipal election registrar who shall immediately deliver the original copy
to the provincial election supervisor and forward the other copy to the Commission, and
one copy each to the authorized representatives of the accredited political parties. In the
case of the cities, the city registrar shall retain the original copy for submission to the
provincial election supervisor, and forward the other copy to the Commission.

(2) In the election for Members of the Batasang Pambansa: the original of the election
returns shall be delivered to the election registrar of the city or municipality for transmittal
to the chairman of the provincial board of canvassers, and direct to the chairman of the
city or district board of canvassers in the urbanized cities and the districts of Metropolitan
Manila, as the case may be, for use in the canvass. The second copy shall likewise be
delivered to the election registrar for transmittal to the Commission. The third copy shall
be deposited in the compartment for valid ballots. The fourth copy shall be delivered to the
election registrar who shall use said copy in the tabulation of the advance results of the
election in the city or municipality. The fifth and sixth copies shall each respectively be
delivered to the members representing political parties represented in the board of election
inspectors.

(3) In local elections: the original copy of the election returns shall be delivered to the city
or municipal board of canvassers as a body for its use in the city of municipal canvass. The
second copy shall be delivered to the election registrar of the city or municipality for
transmittal to the provincial board of canvassers as a body for its use in the provincial
canvass. The third copy shall likewise be delivered to the election registrar for transmittal
to the Commission. The fourth copy shall be deposited in the compartment for valid
ballots. The fifth and sixth copies shall each respectively be delivered to the members
representing the political parties represented in the board of election inspectors.

The Commission shall promulgate rules for the speedy and safe delivery of the election
returns. (Sec. 158, 1978 EC)

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SECTION 215. Board of election inspectors to issue a certificate of the number of votes
polled by the candidates for an office to the watchers. – After the announcement of the
results of the election and before leaving the polling place, it shall be the duty of the board
of election inspectors to issue a certificate of the number of the votes received by a
candidate upon request of the watchers. All the members of the board of election
inspectors shall sign the certificate. (Sec. 159, 1978 EC)

SECTION 216. Alterations and corrections in the election returns. – Any correction or
alteration made in the election returns by the board of election inspectors before the
announcement of the results of the election in the polling place shall be duly initialed by
all the members thereof.

After the announcement of the results of the election in the polling place has been made,
the board of election inspectors shall not make any alteration or amendment in any of the
copies of the election returns, unless so ordered by the Commission upon petition of the
members of the board of election inspectors within five days from the date of the election
or twenty-four hours from the time a copy of the election returns concerned is opened by
the board of canvassers, whichever is earlier. The petition shall be accompanied by proof
of service upon all candidates affected. If the petition is by all members of the board of
election inspectors and the results of the election would not be affected by said correction
and none of the candidates affected objects thereto, the Commission, upon being satisfied
of the veracity of the petition and of the error alleged therein, shall order the board of
election inspectors to make the proper correction on the election returns.

However, if a candidate affected by said petition objects thereto, whether the petition is
filed by all or only a majority of the members of the board of election inspectors and the
results of the election would be affected by the correction sought to be made, the
Commission shall proceed summarily to hear the petition. If it finds the petition
meritorious and there are no evidence or signs indicating that the identity and integrity of
the ballot box have been violated, the Commission shall order the opening of the ballot
box. After satisfying itself that the integrity of the ballots therein has also been duly
preserved, the Commission shall order the recounting of the votes of the candidates
affected and the proper corrections made on the election returns, unless the correction
sought is such that it can be made without need of opening the ballot box. (Sec. 169, 1978
EC)

SECTION 217. Delivery of the ballot boxes, keys and election supplies and documents. –
Upon the termination of the counting of votes, the board of election inspectors shall place
in the compartment for valid ballots, the envelopes for used ballots hereinbefore referred
to, the unused ballots, the tally board or sheet, a copy of the election returns, and the
minutes of its proceedings, and then shall lock the ballot box with three padlocks and such
safety devices as the Commission may prescribe. Immediately after the box is locked, the
three keys of the padlocks shall be placed in three separate envelopes and shall be sealed
and signed by all the members of the board of election inspectors. The authorized
representatives of the Commission shall forthwith take delivery of said envelopes, signing
a receipt therefor, and deliver without delay one envelope to the provincial treasurer,
another to the provincial fiscal and the other to the provincial election supervisor.

The ballot box, all supplies of the board of election inspectors and all pertinent papers and
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documents shall immediately be delivered by the board of election inspectors and the
watchers to the city or municipal treasurer who shall keep his office open all night on the
day of election if necessary for this purpose, and shall provide the necessary facilities for
said delivery at the expense of the city or municipality. The book of voters shall be
returned to the election registrar who shall keep it under his custody. The treasurer and the
election registrar, as the case may be, shall on the day after the election require the
members of the board of election inspectors who failed to send the objects referred to
herein to deliver the same to him immediately and acknowledge receipt thereof in detail.
(Sec. 161, 1978 EC)

SECTION 218. Preservation of the voting record. – The voting record of each polling
place shall be delivered to the election registrar who shall have custody of the same,
keeping them in a safe place, until such time that the Commission shall give instructions
on their disposition. (Sec. 43, BP 697)

SECTION 219. Preservation of the ballot boxes, their keys and disposition of their
contents. – (a) The provincial election supervisor, the provincial treasurer and the
provincial fiscal shall keep the envelope containing the keys in their possession intact
during the period of three months following the election. Upon the lapse of this period,
unless the Commission has ordered otherwise, the provincial election supervisor and the
provincial fiscal shall deliver to the provincial treasurer the envelope containing the keys
under their custody.

(b) The city and municipal treasurer shall keep the ballot boxes under their responsibility
for three months and stored unopened in a secure place, unless the Commission orders
otherwise whenever said ballot boxes are needed in any political exercise which might be
called within the said period, provided these are not involved in any election contest or
official investigation, or the Commission or other competent authority shall demand them
sooner or shall order their preservation for a longer time in connection with any pending
contest or investigation. However, upon showing by any candidate that the boxes will be
in danger of being violated if kept in the possession of such officials, the Commission may
order them kept by any other official whom it may designate. Upon the lapse of said time
and if there should be no order to the contrary, the Commission may authorize the city and
municipal treasurer in the presence of its representative to open the boxes and burn their
contents, except the copy of the minutes of the voting and the election returns deposited
therein which they shall take and keep.

(c) In case of calamity or fortuitous event such as fire, flood, storm, or other similar
calamities which may actually cause damage to the ballot boxes and/or their contents, the
Commission may authorize the opening of said ballot boxes to salvage the ballots and
other contents by placing them in other ballot boxes, taking such other precautionary
measures as may be necessary to preserve such documents. (Sec. 162, 1978 EC)

SECTION 220. Documents and articles omitted or erroneously placed inside the ballot
box. – If after the delivery of the keys of the ballot box to the proper authorities, the board
of election inspectors shall discover that some documents or articles required to be placed
in the ballot box were not placed therein, the board of election inspectors, instead of
opening the ballot box in order to place therein said documents or articles, shall deliver the
same to the Commission or its duly authorized representatives. In no instance shall the
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ballot box be reopened to place therein or take out therefrom any document or article
except to retrieve copies of the election returns which will be needed in any canvass and in
such excepted instances, the members of the board of election inspectors and watchers of
the candidates shall be notified of the time and place of the opening of said ballot box:
Provided, however, That if there are other copies of the election returns outside of the
ballot box which can be used in canvass, such copies of the election returns shall be used
in said canvass and the opening of the ballot box to retrieve copies of the election returns
placed therein shall then be dispensed with. (Sec. 163, 1978 EC)

ARTICLE XIX - CANVASS AND PROCLAMATION

SECTION 221. Board of canvassers. – There shall be a board of canvassers for each
province, city, municipality, and district of Metropolitan Manila as follows:

(a) Provincial board of canvassers. – the provincial board of canvassers shall be


composed of the provincial election supervisor or a senior lawyer in the
regional office of the Commission, as chairman, the provincial fiscal, as vice-
chairman, and the provincial superintendent of schools, and one representative
from each of the ruling party and the dominant opposition political party in the
constituency concerned entitled to be represented, as members.

(b) City board of canvassers. – the city board of canvassers shall be composed
of the city election registrar or a lawyer of the Commission, as chairman, the
city fiscal and the city superintendent of schools, and one representative from
each of the ruling party and the dominant opposition political party entitled to
be represented, as members.

(c) District board of canvassers of Metropolitan Manila. – the district board of


canvassers shall be composed of a lawyer of the Commission, as chairman, and
a ranking fiscal in the district and the most senior district school supervisor in
the district to be appointed upon consultation with the Ministry of Justice and
the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports, respectively, and one
representative from each of the ruling party and the dominant opposition
political party in the constituency concerned, as members.

(d) Municipal board of canvassers. – the municipal board of canvassers shall be


composed of the election registrar or a representative of the Commission, as
chairman, the municipal treasurer, and the district supervisor or in his absence
any public school principal in the municipality and one representative from
each of the ruling party and the dominant opposition political party entitled to
be represented, as members.

(e) Board of canvassers for newly created political subdivisions. – the


Commission shall constitute a board of canvassers and appoint the members
thereof for the first election in a newly created province, city or municipality in
case the officials who shall act as members thereof have not yet assumed their
duties and functions. (Sec. 44, BP 697)

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SECTION 222. Relationship with candidates and other members. – The chairman and the
members of the board of canvassers shall not be related within the fourth civil degree of
consanguinity or affinity to any of the candidates whose votes will be canvassed by said
board, or to any member of the same board. (Sec. 164, 2nd par. 1978 EC)

SECTION 223. Prohibition against leaving official station. – During the period beginning
election day until the proclamation of the winning candidates, no member or substitute
member of the different boards of canvassers shall be transferred, assigned or detailed
outside of his official station, nor shall he leave said station without prior authority of the
Commission. (Sec. 165, 1978 EC)

SECTION 224. Feigned illness. – Any member of the board of canvassers feigning illness
in order to be substituted on election day until the proclamation of the winning candidates
shall be guilty of an election offense.

SECTION 225. Vote required. – A majority vote of all the members of the board of
canvassers shall be necessary to render a decision. (Sec. 166, 1978 EC)

SECTION 226. Incapacity and substitution of members of boards of canvassers. – In case


of non-availability, absence, disqualification due to relationship, or incapacity for any
cause of the chairman, the Commission shall designate the provincial or city fiscal to act
as chairman. Likewise, in case of non-availability, absence, disqualification due to
relationship, or incapacity for any cause, of such designee, the next ranking provincial or
city fiscal shall be designated by the Commission and such designation shall pass to the
next in rank until the designee qualifies. With respect to the other members of the board of
canvassers, the Commission shall appoint as substitute the provincial, city or municipal
officers of other government agencies in the province, city or municipality, as the case
may be, and with respect to the representatives of the accredited political parties, the
Commission shall appoint as substitutes those nominated by the said political parties. (Sec.
167, 1978 EC)

SECTION 227. Supervision and control over board of canvassers. – The Commission
shall have direct control and supervision over the board of canvassers.

Any member of the board of canvassers may, at any time, be relieved for cause and
substituted motu proprio by the Commission. (Sec. 168, 1978 EC)

SECTION 228. Notice of meeting of the board. – At least five days before the meeting of
the board, the chairman of the board shall give notice to all members thereof and to each
candidate and political party of the date, time and place of the meeting. (New)

SECTION 229. Manner of delivery and transmittal of election returns. – (a) For the city
and municipal board of canvassers, the copy of the election returns of a polling place
intended for the city or municipal board of canvassers, duly placed inside a sealed
envelope signed and affixed with the imprint of the thumb of the right hand of all the
members of the board of election inspectors, shall be personally delivered by the members
of the board of election inspectors to the city or municipal board of canvassers under
proper receipt to be signed by all the members thereof.

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(b) For the provincial and district boards of canvassers in Metropolitan Manila, the copy of
the election returns of a polling place intended for the provincial or district board of
canvassers in the case of Metropolitan Manila, shall be personally delivered by the
members of the board of election inspectors to the election registrar for transmittal to the
proper board of canvassers under proper receipt to be signed by all the members thereof.

The election registrar concerned shall place all the returns intended for the board of
canvassers inside a ballot box provided with three padlocks whose keys shall be kept as
follows: one by the election registrar, another by the representative of the ruling party and
the third by the representative of the dominant political opposition party.

For this purpose, the two political parties shall designate their representatives whose
names shall be submitted to the election registrar concerned on or before the tenth day
preceding the election. The three in possession of the keys shall personally transmit the
ballot box, properly locked, containing the election returns to the board of canvassers.
Watchers of political parties, coalition of political parties, and of organizations collectively
authorized by the Commission to designate watchers shall have the right to accompany
transmittal of the ballot boxes containing the election returns.

It shall be unlawful for any person to delay, obstruct, impede or prevent through force,
violence, coercion, intimidation or by any means which vitiates consent, the transmittal of
the election returns or to take away, abscond with, destroy, deface or mutilate or substitute
the election returns or the envelope or the ballot box containing the election returns or to
violate the right of the watchers.

The watchers of the political parties, coalition of political parties and the candidates shall
have the right to accompany the members of the board of election inspectors or the
election registrar in making the delivery to the boards of canvassers. (Sec. 42, BP 697)

SECTION 230. Safekeeping of transmitted election returns. – The board of canvassers


shall keep the ballot boxes containing the election returns in a safe and secure room before
and after the canvass. The door to the room must be padlocked by three locks with the
keys thereof kept as follows: one with the chairman, the other with the representative of
the ruling party, and the other with the representative of the dominant opposition political
party. The watchers of candidates, political parties, coalition of political parties and
organization collectively authorized by the Commission to appoint watchers shall have the
right to guard the room. Violation of this right shall constitute an election offense.

SECTION 231. Canvass by the board. – The board of canvassers shall meet not later than
six o’clock in the afternoon of election day at the place designated by the Commission to
receive the election returns and to immediately canvass those that may have already been
received. It shall meet continuously from day to day until the canvass is completed, and
may adjourn but only for the purpose of awaiting the other election returns from other
polling places within its jurisdiction. Each time the board adjourns, it shall make a total of
all the votes canvassed so far for each candidate for each office, furnishing the
Commission in Manila by the fastest means of communication a certified copy thereof,
and making available the data contained therein to the mass media and other interested
parties. As soon as the other election returns are delivered, the board shall immediately
resume canvassing until all the returns have been canvassed.
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The respective board of canvassers shall prepare a certificate of canvass duly signed and
affixed with the imprint of the thumb of the right hand of each member, supported by a
statement of the votes received by each candidate in each polling place and, on the basis
thereof, shall proclaim as elected the candidates who obtained the highest number of votes
cast in the province, city, municipality or barangay. Failure to comply with this
requirement shall constitute an election offense.

Subject to reasonable exceptions, the board of canvassers must complete their canvass
within thirty-six hours in municipalities, forty-eight hours in cities and seventy-two hours
in provinces. Violation hereof shall be an election offense punishable under Section 264
hereof.

With respect to the election for President and Vice-President, the provincial and city
boards of canvassers shall prepare in quintuplicate a certificate of canvass supported by a
statement of votes received by each candidate in each polling place and transmit the first
copy thereof to the Speaker of the Batasang Pambansa. The second copy shall be
transmitted to the Commission, the third copy shall be kept by the provincial election
supervisor or city election registrar; the fourth and the fifth copies to each of the two
accredited political parties. (Sec. 169, 1978 EC)

SECTION 232. Persons not allowed inside the canvassing room. – It shall be unlawful for
any officer or member of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, including the Philippine
Constabulary, or the Integrated National Police or any peace officer or any armed or
unarmed persons belonging to an extra-legal police agency, special forces, reaction forces,
strike forces, home defense forces, barangay self-defense units, barangay tanod, or of any
member of the security or police organizations of government ministries, commissions,
councils, bureaus, offices, instrumentalities, or government-owned or controlled
corporations or their subsidiaries or of any member of a privately owned or operated
security, investigative, protective or intelligence agency performing identical or similar
functions to enter the room where the canvassing of the election returns are held by the
board of canvassers and within a radius of fifty meters from such room: Provided,
however, That the board of canvassers by a majority vote, if it deems necessary, may make
a call in writing for the detail of policemen or any peace officers for their protection or for
the protection of the election documents and paraphernalia in the possession of the board,
or for the maintenance of peace and order, in which case said policemen or peace officers,
who shall be in proper uniform, shall stay outside the room within a radius of thirty meters
near enough to be easily called by the board of canvassers at any time. (New)

SECTION 233. When the election returns are delayed, lost or destroyed. – In case its copy
of the election returns is missing, the board of canvassers shall, by messenger or
otherwise, obtain such missing election returns from the board of election inspectors
concerned, or if said returns have been lost or destroyed, the board of canvassers, upon
prior authority of the Commission, may use any of the authentic copies of said election
returns or a certified copy of said election returns issued by the Commission, and forthwith
direct its representative to investigate the case and immediately report the matter to the
Commission.

The board of canvassers, notwithstanding the fact that not all the election returns have
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been received by it, may terminate the canvass and proclaim the candidates elected on the
basis of the available election returns if the missing election returns will not affect the
results of the election. (Sec. 171, 1978 EC)

SECTION 234. Material defects in the election returns. – If it should clearly appear that
some requisites in form or data had been omitted in the election returns, the board of
canvassers shall call for all the members of the board of election inspectors concerned by
the most expeditious means, for the same board to effect the correction: Provided, That in
case of the omission in the election returns of the name of any candidate and/or his
corresponding votes, the board of canvassers shall require the board of election inspectors
concerned to complete the necessary data in the election returns and affix therein their
initials: Provided, further, That if the votes omitted in the returns cannot be ascertained by
other means except by recounting the ballots, the Commission, after satisfying itself that
the identity and integrity of the ballot box have not been violated, shall order the board of
election inspectors to open the ballot box, and, also after satisfying itself that the integrity
of the ballots therein has been duly preserved, order the board of election inspectors to
count the votes for the candidate whose votes have been omitted with notice thereof to all
candidates for the position involved and thereafter complete the returns.

The right of a candidate to avail of this provision shall not be lost or affected by the fact
that an election protest is subsequently filed by any of the candidates. (Sec. 172, 1978 EC)

SECTION 235. When election returns appear to be tampered with or falsified. – If the
election returns submitted to the board of canvassers appear to be tampered with, altered
or falsified after they have left the hands of the board of election inspectors, or otherwise
not authentic, or were prepared by the board of election inspectors under duress, force,
intimidation, or prepared by persons other than the member of the board of election
inspectors, the board of canvassers shall use the other copies of said election returns and, if
necessary, the copy inside the ballot box which upon previous authority given by the
Commission may be retrieved in accordance with Section 220 hereof. If the other copies
of the returns are likewise tampered with, altered, falsified, not authentic, prepared under
duress, force, intimidation, or prepared by persons other than the members of the board of
election inspectors, the board of canvassers or any candidate affected shall bring the matter
to the attention of the Commission. The Commission shall then, after giving notice to all
candidates concerned and after satisfying itself that nothing in the ballot box indicate that
its identity and integrity have been violated, order the opening of the ballot box and,
likewise after satisfying itself that the integrity of the ballots therein has been duly
preserved shall order the board of election inspectors to recount the votes of the candidates
affected and prepare a new return which shall then be used by the board of canvassers as
basis of the canvass. (Sec. 173, 1978 EC)

SECTION 236. Discrepancies in election returns. – In case it appears to the board of


canvassers that there exists discrepancies in the other authentic copies of the election
returns from a polling place or discrepancies in the votes of any candidate in words and
figures in the same return, and in either case the difference affects the results of the
election, the Commission, upon motion of the board of canvassers or any candidate
affected and after due notice to all candidates concerned, shall proceed summarily to
determine whether the integrity of the ballot box had been preserved, and once satisfied
thereof shall order the opening of the ballot box to recount the votes cast in the polling
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place solely for the purpose of determining the true result of the count of votes of the
candidates concerned. (Sec. 174, 1978 EC)

SECTION 237. When integrity of ballots is violated. – If upon the opening of the ballot
box as ordered by the Commission under Section 234, 235 and 236, hereof, it should
appear that there are evidence or signs of replacement, tampering or violation of the
integrity of the ballots, the Commission shall not recount the ballots but shall forthwith
seal the ballot box and order its safekeeping. (New)

SECTION 238. Canvass of remaining or unquestioned returns to continue. – In cases


under Section 233, 234, 235 and 236 hereof, the board of canvassers shall continue the
canvass of the remaining or unquestioned election returns. If, after the canvass of all the
said returns, it should be determined that the returns which have been set aside will affect
the result of the election, no proclamation shall be made except upon orders of the
Commission after due notice and hearing. Any proclamation made in violation hereof shall
be null and void. (New)

SECTION 239. Watchers. – Each candidate, political party or coalition of political parties
shall be entitled to appoint one watcher in the board of canvassers. The watcher shall have
the right to be present at, and take note of, all the proceedings of the board of canvassers,
to read the election returns without touching them, to file a protest against any irregularity
in the election returns submitted, and to obtain from the board of canvassers a resolution
thereon. (Sec. 176, 1978 EC; Sec. 45, BP 697)

SECTION 240. Election resulting in tie. – Whenever it shall appear from the canvass that
two or more candidates have received an equal and highest number of votes, or in cases
where two or more candidates are to be elected for the same position and two or more
candidates received the same number of votes for the last place in the number to be
elected, the board of canvassers, after recording this fact in its minutes, shall by resolution,
upon five days notice to all the tied candidates, hold a special public meeting at which the
board of canvassers shall proceed to the drawing of lots of the candidates who have tied
and shall proclaim as elected the candidates who may be favored by luck, and the
candidates so proclaimed shall have the right to assume office in the same manner as if he
had been elected by plurality of vote. The board of canvassers shall forthwith make a
certificate stating the name of the candidate who had been favored by luck and his
proclamation on the basis thereof.

Nothing in this section shall be construed as depriving a candidate of his right to contest
the election. (Sec. 177, 1978 EC)

ARTICLE XX - PRE-PROCLAMATION CONTROVERSIES

SECTION 241. Definition. – A pre-proclamation controversy refers to any question


pertaining to or affecting the proceedings of the board of canvassers which may be raised
by any candidate or by any registered political party or coalition of political parties before
the board or directly with the Commission, or any matter raised under Sections 233, 234,
235 and 236 in relation to the preparation, transmission, receipt, custody and appreciation
of the election returns.

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SECTION 242. Commission’s exclusive jurisdiction of all pre-proclamation controversies.


– The Commission shall have exclusive jurisdiction of all pre-proclamation controversies.
It may motu proprio or upon written petition, and after due notice and hearing, order the
partial or total suspension of the proclamation of any candidate-elect or annual partially or
totally any proclamation, if one has been made, as the evidence shall warrant in
accordance with the succeeding sections.

SECTION 243. Issues that may be raised in pre-proclamation controversy. – The


following shall be proper issues that may be raised in a pre-proclamation controversy:

(a) Illegal composition or proceedings of the board of canvassers;

(b) The canvassed election returns are incomplete, contain material defects,
appear to be tampered with or falsified, or contain discrepancies in the same
returns or in other authentic copies thereof as mentioned in Section 233, 234,
235 and 236 of this Code;

(c) The election returns were prepared under duress, threats, coercion, or
intimidation, or they are obviously manufactured or not authentic; and

(d) When substitute or fraudulent returns in controverted polling places were


canvassed, the results of which materially affected the standing of the
aggrieved candidate or candidates.

SECTION 244. Contested composition or proceedings of the board. – When the


composition or proceedings of the board of canvassers are contested, the board of
canvassers shall, within twenty-four hours, make a ruling thereon with notice to the
contestant who, if adversely affected, may appeal the matter to the Commission within
five days after the ruling with proper notice to the board of canvassers. After due notice
and hearing, the Commission shall decide the case within ten days from the filing thereof.
During the pendency of the case, the board of canvassers shall suspend the canvass until
the Commission orders the continuation or resumption thereof and citing their reasons or
grounds therefor.

SECTION 245. Contested election returns.—Any candidate, political party or coalition of


political parties, contesting the inclusion or exclusion of the canvass of any election
returns on any of the ground authorized under this article or in Sections 234, 235 and 236
of Article XIX shall submit their verbal objections to the chairman of the board of
canvassers at the time the questioned return is presented for inclusion or exclusion, which
objections shall be noted in the minutes of the canvassing.

The board of canvassers upon receipt of any such objections shall auto­matically defer the
canvass of the contested returns and shall proceed to canvass the rest of the returns which
are not contested by any party.

Within twenty-four hours from and after the presentation of a verbal objec­tion, the same
shall be submitted in written form to the board of canvassers. Thereafter, the board of
canvassers shall take up each contested return, consider the written objections thereto and
summarily rule thereon. Said ruling shall be made oral initially and then reduced to writing
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by the board within twenty-four hours from the time the oral ruling is made.

Any party adversely affected by an oral ruling on its/his objection shall immediately state
orally whether it/he intends to appeal said ruling. The said intent to appeal shall be stated
in the minutes of the canvassing. If a party manifests its intent to appeal, the board of
canvassers shall set aside the return and proceed to rule on the other contested returns.
When all the contested returns have been ruled upon by it, the board of canvassers shall
suspend the canvass and shall make an appropriate report to the Commission, copy
furnished the parties.

The board of canvassers shall not proclaim any candidate as winner unless authorized by
the Commission after the latter has ruled on the objections brought to it on appeal by the
losing party and any proclamation made in violation hereof shall be void ab initio, unless
the contested returns will not adversely affect the results of the election.

SECTION 246. Summary proceedings before the Commission. – All pre-proclamation


controversies shall be heard summarily by the Commission after due notice and hearing,
and its decisions shall be executory after the lapse of five days from receipt by the losing
party of the decision of the Commission, unless restrained by the Supreme Court. (Sec. 55,
BP 697)

SECTION 247. Partial proclamation. – Notwithstanding the pendency of any pre-


proclamation controversy, the Commission may, motu proprio or upon the filing of a
verified petition and after due notice and hearing, order the proclamation of other winning
candidates whose election will not be affected by the outcome of the controversy. (Sec. 56,
BP 697)

SECTION 248. Effect of filing petition to annual or to suspend the proclamation. – The
filing with the Commission of a petition to annual or to suspend the proclamation of any
candidate shall suspend the running of the period within which to file an election protest or
quo warranto proceedings.

ARTICLE XXI - ELECTION CONTESTS

SECTION 249. Jurisdiction of the Commission. – The Commission shall be the sole judge
of all contests relating to the elections, returns, and qualifications of all Members of the
Batasang Pambansa, elective regional, provincial and city officials. (Art. XII-C, Sec. 2(b),
Const.; Art. XIV, Sec. 58, BP 697)

SECTION 250. Election contests for Batasang Pambansa, regional, provincial and city
offices. – A sworn petition contesting the election of any Member of the Batasang
Pambansa or any regional, provincial or city official shall be filed with the Commission by
any candidate who has duly filed a certificate of candidacy and has been voted for the
same office, within ten days after the proclamation of the results of the election. (Art. XIV,
Sec. 59, BP 697)

SECTION 251. Election contests for municipal offices. – A sworn petition contesting the
election of a municipal officer shall be filed with the proper regional trial court by any
candidate who has duly filed a certificate of candidacy and has been voted for the same
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office, within ten days after proclamation of the results of the election. (Art. XVIII, Sec.
190, 1978 EC)

SECTION 252. Election contest for barangay offices. – A sworn petition contesting the
election of a barangay officer shall be filed with the proper municipal or metropolitan trial
court by any candidate who has duly filed a certificate of candidacy and has been voted for
the same office, within ten days after the proclamation of the results of the election. The
trial court shall decide the election protest within fifteen days after the filing thereof. The
decision of the municipal or metropolitan trial court may be appealed within ten days from
receipt of a copy thereof by the aggrieved party to the regional trial court which shall
decide the case within thirty days from its submission, and whose decisions shall be final.
(Art. XVIII, Sec. 191, 1978 EC; Sec. 20, BP 222)

SECTION 253. Petition for quo warranto. – Any voter contesting the election of any
Member of the Batasang Pambansa, regional, provincial, or city officer on the ground of
ineligibility or of disloyalty to the Republic of the Philippines shall file a sworn petition
for quo warranto with the Commission within ten days after the proclamation of the results
of the election. (Art. XIV, Sec. 60, BP 697; Art. XVIII, Sec. 189, par. 2, 1978 EC)

Any voter contesting the election of any municipal or barangay officer on the ground of
ineligibility or of disloyalty to the Republic of the Philippines shall file a sworn petition
for quo warranto with the regional trial court or metropolitan or municipal trial court,
respectively, within ten days after the proclamation of the results of the election. (Art.
XVIII, Sec. 189, par. 2, 1978 EC)

SECTION 254. Procedure in election contests. – The Commission shall prescribe the rules
to govern the procedure and other matters relating to election contests pertaining to all
national, regional, provincial, and city offices not later than thirty days before such
elections. Such rules shall provide a simple and inexpensive procedure for the expeditious
disposition of election contests and shall be published in at least two newspapers of
general circulation. (Art. XVIII, Sec. 192, 1978 EC; Art. XIV, Sec. 62, BP 697)

However, with respect to election contests involving municipal and barangay offices the
following rules of procedure shall govern:

(a) Notice of the protest contesting the election of a candidate for a municipal or barangay
office shall be served upon the candidate by means of a summons at the postal address
stated in his certificate of candidacy except when the protestee, without waiting for the
summons, has made the court understand that he has been notified of the protest or has
filed his answer hereto;

(b) The protestee shall answer the protest within five days after receipt of the summons, or,
in case there has been no summons from the date of his appearance and in all cases before
the commencement of the hearing of the protest or contest. The answer shall deal only
with the election in the polling places which are covered by the allegations of the contest;

(c) Should the protestee desire to impugn the votes received by the protestant in other
polling places, he shall file a counter-protest within the same period fixed for the answer
serving a copy thereof upon the protestant by registered mail or by personal delivery or
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through the sheriff;

(d) The protestant shall answer the counter-protest within five days after notice;

(e) Within the period of five days counted from the filing of the protest any other
candidate for the same office may intervene in the case as other contestants and ask for
affirmative relief in his favor by a petition in intervention, which shall be considered as
another contest, except that it shall be substantiated within the same proceedings. The
protestant or protestee shall answer the protest in intervention within five days after notice;

(f) If no answer shall be filed to the contest, counter-protest, or to the protest in


intervention, within the time limits respectively fixed, a general denial shall be deemed to
have been entered;

(g) In election contest proceedings, the permanent registry list of voters shall be
conclusive in regard to the question as to who had the right to vote in said election.

SECTION 255. Judicial counting of votes in election contest. – Where allegations in a


protest or counter-protest so warrant, or whenever in the opinion of the court the interests
of justice so require, it shall immediately order the book of voters, ballot boxes and their
keys, ballots and other documents used in the election be brought before it and that the
ballots be examined and the votes recounted. (Sec. 221, 1971 EC)

SECTION 256. Appeals. – Appeals from any decision rendered by the regional trial court
under Section 251 and paragraph two, Section 253 hereof with respect to quo warranto
petitions filed in election contests affecting municipal officers, the aggrieved party may
appeal to the Intermediate Appellate Court within five days after receipt of a copy of the
decision. No motion for reconsideration shall be entertained by the court. The appeal shall
be decided within sixty days after the case has been submitted for decision. (Art. XVIII,
Sec. 196, 1978 EC)

SECTION 257. Decision in the Commission. – The Commission shall decide all election
cases brought before it within ninety days from the date of their submission for decision.
The decision of the Commission shall become final thirty days after receipt of judgment.
(Art. XII, C, Sec. 3, Const.; Art. XVIII, Sec. 193, 1978 EC)

SECTION 258. Preferential disposition of contests in courts. – The courts, in their


respective cases, shall give preference to election contests over all other cases, except
those of habeas corpus, and shall without delay, hear and, within thirty days from the date
of their submission for decision, but in every case within six months after filing, decide the
same. (Art. XVIII, Sec. 197, 1978 EC)

SECTION 259. Actual or compensatory damages. – Actual or compensatory damages may


be granted in all election contests or in quo warranto proceedings in accordance with law.

SECTION 260. Notice of decisions. – The clerk of court and the corresponding official in
the Commission before whom an election contest or a quo warranto proceeding has been
instituted or where the appeal of said case has been taken shall notify immediately the
President of the Philippines of the final disposition thereof. In election contests involving
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provincial, city, municipal, or barangay offices, notice of such final disposition shall also
be sent to the secretary of the local sanggunian concerned. If the decision be that none of
the parties has been legally elected, said official shall certify such decision to the President
of the Philippines and, in appropriate cases, to the Commission. (Art. XVIII, Sec. 198,
1978 EC)

ARTICLE XXII - ELECTION OFFENSES

SECTION 261. Prohibited Acts. – The following shall be guilty of an election offense:

(a) Vote-buying and vote-selling. – (1) Any person who gives, offers or promises money or
anything of value, gives or promises any office or employment, franchise or grant, public
or private, or makes or offers to make an expenditure, directly or indirectly, or cause an
expenditure to be made to any person, association, corporation, entity, or community in
order to induce anyone or the public in general to vote for or against any candidate or
withhold his vote in the election, or to vote for or against any aspirant for the nomination
or choice of a candidate in a convention or similar selection process of a political party.

(2) Any person, association, corporation, group or community who solicits or receives,
directly or indirectly, any expenditure or promise of any office or employment, public or
private, for any of the foregoing considerations. (Par. (a), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(b) Conspiracy to bribe voters. – Two or more persons, whether candidates or not, who
come to an agreement concerning the commission of any violation of paragraph (a) of this
section and decide to commit it. (Par. (b), Id.)

(c) Wagering upon result of election. – Any person who bets or wagers upon the outcome
of, or any contingency connected with an election. Any money or thing of value or deposit
of money or thing of value situated anywhere in the Philippines put as such bet or wager
shall be forfeited to the government. (Par. (c), Id.)

(d) Coercion of subordinates. - (1) Any public officer or any officer of any public or
private corporation or association, or any head superior, or administrator of any religious
organization, or any employer or land-owner who coerces or intimidates or compels, or in
any manner influence, directly or indirectly, any of his subordinates or members or
parishioners or employees or house helpers, tenants, overseers, farm helpers, tillers, or
lease holders to aid, campaign or vote for or against any candidate or any aspirant for the
nomination or selection of candidates.

(e) Threats, intimidation, terrorism, use of fraudulent device or other forms of coercion. –
Any person who, directly or indirectly, threatens, intimidates or actually causes, inflicts or
produces any violence, injury, punishment, damage, loss or disadvantage upon any person
or persons or that of the immediate members of his family, his honor or property, or uses
any fraudulent device or scheme to compel or induce the registration or refraining from
registration of any voter, or the participation in a campaign or refraining or desistance
from any campaign, or the casting of any vote or omission to vote, or any promise of such
registration, campaign, vote, or omission therefrom. (Par. (e), Id.)

(f) Coercion of election officials and employees. – Any person who, directly or indirectly,
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threatens, intimidates, terrorizes or coerces any election official or employee in the


performance of his election functions or duties. (New)

(g) Appointment of new employees, creation of new position, promotion, or giving salary
increases. – During the period of forty-five days before a regular election and thirty days
before a special election, (1) any head, official or appointing officer of a government
office, agency or instrumentality, whether national or local, including government-owned
or controlled corporations, who appoints or hires any new employee, whether provisional,
temporary or casual, or creates and fills any new position, except upon prior authority of
the Commission. The Commission shall not grant the authority sought unless, it is satisfied
that the position to be filled is essential to the proper functioning of the office or agency
concerned, and that the position shall not be filled in a manner that may influence the
election.

As an exception to the foregoing provisions, a new employee may be appointed in case of


urgent need: Provided, however, That notice of the appointment shall be given to the
Commission within three days from the date of the appointment. Any appointment or
hiring in violation of this provision shall be null and void.

(2) Any government official who promotes, or gives any increase of salary or
remuneration or privilege to any government official or employee, including those in
government-owned or controlled corporations. (Par. (f), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(h) Transfer of officers and employees in the civil service. – Any public official who makes
or causes any transfer or detail whatever of any officer or employee in the civil service
including public school teachers, within the election period except upon prior approval of
the Commission. (Par. (g), Id.)

(i) Intervention of public officers and employees. – Any officer or employee in the civil
service, except those holding political offices; any officer, employee, or member or the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, or any police force, special forces, home defense forces,
barangay self-defense units and all other para-military units that now exist or which may
hereafter be organized who, directly or indirectly, intervenes in any election campaign or
engages in any partisan political activity, except to vote or to preserve public order, if he is
a peace officer. (Par. (jjj), Id.)

(j) Undue influence. – It is unlawful for any person to promise any office or employment,
public or private, or to make or offer to make an expenditure, directly or indirectly, or to
cause an expenditure to be made to any person, association, corporation or entity, which
may induce anyone or the public in general either to vote or withhold his vote, or to vote
for or against any candidate in any election or any aspirant for the nomination or selection
of an official candidate in a convention of a political party. It is likewise unlawful for any
person, association, corporation or community, to solicit or receive, directly or indirectly,
any expenditure or promise or any office, or employment, public or private, for any of the
foregoing considerations. (Sec. 53, 1971 EC)

(k) Unlawful electioneering. – It is unlawful to solicit votes or undertake any propaganda


on the day of registration before the board of election inspectors and on the day of
election, for or against any candidate or any political party within the polling place and
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with a radius of thirty meters thereof. (Sec. 56, 1971 EC)

(l) Prohibition against dismissal of employees, laborers, or tenants. – No employee or


laborer shall be dismissed, nor a tenant be ejected from his landholdings for refusing or
failing to vote for any candidate of his employer or landowner. Any employee, laborer or
tenant so dismissed or ejected shall be reinstated and the salary or wage of the employee
or laborer, or the share of the harvest of the tenant, shall be restored to the aggrieved party
upon application to the proper court. (Sec. 74, 1971 EC)

(m) Appointment or use of special policemen, special agents, confidential agents or the
like. – During the campaign period, on the day before and on election day, any appointing
authority who appoints or any person who utilizes the services of special policemen,
special agents, confidential agents or persons performing similar functions; persons
previously appointed as special policemen, special agents, confidential agents or persons
performing similar functions who continue acting as such, and those who fail to turn over
their firearms, uniforms, insignias and other badges of authority to the proper officer who
issued the same.

At the start of the aforementioned period, the barangay chairman, municipal mayor, city
mayor, provincial governor, or any appointing authority shall submit to the Commission a
complete list of all special policemen, special agents, confidential agents or persons
performing similar functions in the employ of their respective political subdivisions, with
such particulars as the Commission may require. (Par. (h), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(n) Illegal release of prisoners before and after election. – The Director of the Bureau of
Prisons, any provincial warden, the keeper of the jail or the person or persons required by
law to keep prisoners in their custody who illegally orders or allows any prisoner detained
in the national penitentiary, or the provincial, city or municipal jail to leave the premises
thereof sixty days before and thirty days after the election. The municipal or city warden,
the provincial warden, the keeper of the jail or the person or persons required by law to
keep prisoners in their custody shall post in three conspicuous public places a list of the
prisoners or detention prisoners under their care. Detention prisoners must be categorized
as such. (Par. (i), Id.)

(o) Use of public funds, money deposited in trust, equipment, facilities owned or controlled
by the government for an election campaign. – Any person who uses under any guise
whatsoever, directly or indirectly, (1) public funds or money deposited with, or held in
trust by, public financing institutions or by government offices, banks, or agencies; (2) any
printing press, radio, or television station or audio-visual equipment operated by the
Government or by its divisions, sub-divisions, agencies or instrumentalities, including
government-owned or controlled corporations, or by the Armed Forces of the Philippines;
or (3) any equipment, vehicle, facility, apparatus, or paraphernalia owned by the
government or by its political subdivisions, agencies including government-owned or
controlled corporations, or by the Armed Forces of the Philippines for any election
campaign or for any partisan political activity. (Par. (j) Id.)

(p) Deadly weapons. – Any person who carries any deadly weapon in the polling place and
within a radius of one hundred meters thereof during the days and hours fixed by law for
the registration of voters in the polling place, voting, counting of votes, or preparation of
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the election returns. However, in cases of affray, turmoil, or disorder, any peace officer or
public officer authorized by the Commission to supervise the election is entitled to carry
firearms or any other weapon for the purpose of preserving order and enforcing the law.
(Par. (k), Id.)

(q) Carrying firearms outside residence or place of business. – Any person who, although
possessing a permit to carry firearms, carries any firearms outside his residence or place of
business during the election period, unless authorized in writing by the Commission:
Provided, That a motor vehicle, water or air craft shall not be considered a residence or
place of business or extension hereof. (Par. (l), Id.)

This prohibition shall not apply to cashiers and disbursing officers while in the
performance of their duties or to persons who by nature of their official duties, profession,
business or occupation habitually carry large sums of money or valuables.

(r) Use of armored land, water or air craft. – Any person who uses during the campaign
period, on the day before and on election day, any armored land, water or air craft,
provided with any temporary or permanent equipment or any other device or contraption
for the mounting or installation of cannons, machine guns and other similar high caliber
firearms, including military type tanks, half trucks, scout trucks, armored trucks, of any
make or model, whether new, reconditioned, rebuilt or remodelled: Provided, That
banking or financial institutions and all business firms may use not more than two armored
vehicles strictly for, and limited to, the purpose of transporting cash, gold bullion or other
valuables in connection with their business from and to their place of business, upon
previous authority of the Commission. (Par. (m), Id.)

(s) Wearing of uniforms and bearing arms. – During the campaign period, on the day
before and on election day, any member of security or police organization of government
agencies, commissions, councils, bureaus, offices, or government-owned or controlled
corporations, or privately-owned or operated security, investigative, protective or
intelligence agencies, who wears his uniform or uses his insignia, decorations or regalia,
or bears arms outside the immediate vicinity of his place of work: Provided, That this
prohibition shall not apply when said member is in pursuit of a person who has committed
or is committing a crime in the premises he is guarding; or when escorting or providing
security for the transport of payrolls, deposits, or other valuables; or when guarding the
residence of private persons or when guarding private residences, buildings or offices:
Provided, further, That in the last case prior written approval of the Commission shall be
obtained. The Commission shall decide all applications for authority under this paragraph
within fifteen days from the date of the filing of such application. (Par. (n), Id.)

During the same period, and ending thirty days thereafter any member of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines, special, forces, home defense forces, barangay self-defense units
and all other para-military units that now exist or which may hereafter be organized who
wears his uniform or bears arms outside the camp, garrison or barracks to which he is
assigned or detailed or outside their homes, in case of members of para-military units,
unless (1) the President of the Philippines shall have given previous authority therefor, and
the Commission notified thereof in writing, or (2) the Commission authorizes him to do
so, which authority it shall give only when necessary to assist it in maintaining free,
orderly and honest elections, and only after notice and hearing. All personnel of the Armed
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Forces authorized by the President or the Commission to bear arms or wear their uniforms
outside their camps and all police and peace officers shall bear their true name, rank and
serial number, if any, stitched in block letters on a white background on the left breast of
their uniform, in letters and numbers of a clearly legible design at least two centimeters
tall, which shall at all times remain visible and uncovered. (Sec. 64, par. (a), BP 697)

During the election period, whenever the Commission finds it necessary for the promotion
of free, orderly, honest and peaceful elections in a specific area, it shall confiscate or order
the confiscation of firearms of any member or members of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines, police forces, home defense forces, barangay self-defense units, and all other
para-military units that now exist, or which may hereafter be organized, or any member or
members of the security or police organization, government ministries, commissions,
councils, bureaus, offices, instrumentalities, or government-owned or controlled
corporations and other subsidiaries, or of any member or members of privately owned or
operated security, investigative, protective or intelligence agencies performing identical or
similar functions. (Id.)

(t) Policemen and provincial guards acting as bodyguards or security guards. – During the
campaign period, on the day before and on election day, any member of the city or
municipal police force, any provincial or sub-provincial guard, any member of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines, special forces, home defense forces, barangay self-defense units
and all other para-military units that now exist or which may hereafter be organized who
acts as bodyguard or security guard of any public official, candidate or any other person,
and any of the latter who utilizes the services of the former as bodyguard or security
guard: Provided, That, after due notice and hearing, when the life and security of a
candidate is in jeopardy, the Commission is empowered to assign at the candidate’s choice,
any member of the Philippine Constabulary or the police force of any municipality within
the province to act as his bodyguard or security guard in a number to be determined by the
Commission but not to exceed three per candidate: Provided, however, That when the
circumstances require immediate action, the Commission may issue a temporary order
allowing the assignment of any member of the Philippine Constabulary or the local police
force to act as bodyguard or security guard of the candidate, subject to confirmation or
revocation. (Par. (o), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(u) Organization or maintenance of reaction forces, strike forces, or other similar forces. –
Any person who organizes or maintains a reaction force, strike force or similar force
during the election period.

The heads of all reaction forces, strike forces, or similar forces shall, not later than forty-
five days before the election, submit to the Commission a complete list of all members
thereof with such particulars as the Commission may require. (Sec. 65, 1971 EC; Sec. 64
(b) BP 697)

(v) Prohibition against release, disbursement or expenditure of public funds. – Any public
official or employee including barangay officials and those of government-owned or
controlled corporations and their subsidiaries, who, during forty-five days before a regular
election and thirty days before a special election, releases, disburses or expends any public
funds for:

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(1) Any and all kinds of public works, except the following:

(a) Maintenance of existing and/or completed public works project: Provided, That not
more than the average number of laborers or employees already employed therein during
the six-month period immediately prior to the beginning of the forty-five day period
before election day shall be permitted to work during such time: Provided, further, That no
additional laborers shall be employed for maintenance work within the said period of
forty-five days;

(b) Work undertaken by contract through public bidding held, or by negotiated contract
awarded, before the forty-five day period before election: Provided, That work for the
purpose of this section undertaken under the so-called “takay” or “paquiao” system shall
not be considered as work by contract;

(c) Payment for the usual cost of preparation for working drawings, specifications, bills of
materials, estimates, and other procedures preparatory to actual construction including the
purchase of materials and equipment, and all incidental expenses for wages of watchmen
and other laborers employed for such work in the central office and field storehouses
before the beginning of such period: Provided, That the number of such laborers shall not
be increased over the number hired when the project or projects were commenced; and

(d) Emergency work necessitated by the occurrence of a public calamity, but such work
shall be limited to the restoration of the damaged facility.

No payment shall be made within five days before the date of election to laborers who
have rendered services in projects or works except those falling under subparagraphs (a),
(b), (c), and (d), of this paragraph.

This prohibition shall not apply to ongoing public works projects commenced before the
campaign period or similar projects under foreign agreements. For purposes of this
provision, it shall be the duty of the government officials or agencies concerned to report
to the Commission the list of all such projects being undertaken by them.

(2) The Ministry of Social Services and Development and any other office in other
ministries of the government performing functions similar to said ministry, except for
salaries of personnel, and for such other routine and normal expenses, and for such other
expenses as the Commission may authorize after due notice and hearing. Should a
calamity or disaster occur, all releases normally or usually coursed through the said
ministries and offices of other ministries shall be turned over to, and administered and
disbursed by, the Philippine National Red Cross, subject to the supervision of the
Commission on Audit or its representatives, and no candidate or his or her spouse or
member of his family within the second civil degree of affinity or consanguinity shall
participate, directly or indirectly, in the distribution of any relief or other goods to the
victims of the calamity or disaster; and

(3) The Ministry of Human Settlements and any other office in any other ministry of the
government performing functions similar to said ministry, except for salaries of personnel
and for such other necessary administrative or other expenses as the Commission may
authorize after due notice and hearing.
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(w) Prohibition against construction of public works, delivery of materials for public
works and issuance of treasury warrants and similar devices. – During the period of forty-
five days preceding a regular election and thirty days before a special election, any person
who (a) undertakes the construction of any public works, except for projects or works
exempted in the preceding paragraph; or (b) issues, uses or avails of treasury warrants or
any device undertaking future delivery of money, goods or other things of value
chargeable against public funds. (Sec. 64 (d), BP 697)

(x) Suspension of elective provincial, city, municipal or barangay officer. – The provisions
of law to the contrary notwithstanding during the election period, any public official who
suspends, without prior approval of the Commission, any elective provincial, city,
municipal or barangay officer, unless said suspension will be for purposes of applying the
“Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act” in relation to the suspension and removal of
elective officials; in which case the provisions of this section shall be inapplicable. (Sec.
64 (o), Id.)

(y) On Registration of Voters:

(1) Any person who, having all the qualifications and none of the disqualifications of a
voter, fails without justifiable excuse to register as a voter in an election, plebiscite or
referendum in which he is qualified to vote. (Pas (p), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(2) Any person who knowingly makes any false or untruthful statement relative to any of
the data or information required in the application for registration. (Par. (q), Id.)

(3) Any person who deliberately imprints or causes the imprinting of blurred or indistinct
fingerprints on any of the copies of the application for registration or on the voter’s
affidavit; or any person in charge of the registration of voters who deliberately or through
negligence, causes or allows the imprinting of blurred or indistinct fingerprints on any of
the aforementioned registration forms, or any person who tampers with the fingerprints in
said registration records. (Sec. 231 (5), 1971 EC)

(4) Any member of the board of election inspectors who approves any application which
on its face shows that the applicant does not possess all the qualifications prescribed by
law for a voter; or who disapproves any application which on its face shows that the
applicant possesses all such qualifications. (Par. (r), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(5) Any person who, being a registered voter, registers anew without filing an application
for cancellation of his previous registration. (Par. (s), Id.)

(6) Any person who registers in substitution for another whether with or without the
latter’s knowledge or consent. (Par. (t), Id.)

(7) Any person who tampers with or changes without authority any data or entry in any
voter’s application for registration. (Par. (u), Id.)

(8) Any person who delays, hinders or obstruct another from registering. (Par. (v), Id.)

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(9) Any person who falsely certifies or identifies another as a bona fide resident of a
particular place or locality for the purpose of securing the latter’s registration as a voter.
(Par. (w), Id.)

(10) Any person who uses the voter’s affidavit of another for the purpose of voting,
whether or not he actually succeeds in voting. (Par. (aa), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(11) Any person who places, inserts or otherwise includes, as approved application for
registration in the book of voters or in the provincial or national central files of registered
voters, the application of any fictitious voter or any application that has not been
approved; or removes from, or otherwise takes out of the book of voters or the provincial
or national central files of registered voters any duly approved voter’s application, except
upon lawful order of the Commission, or of a competent court or after proper cancellation
as provided in Sections 122, 123, 124 and 125 hereof. (Par. (bb), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(12) Any person who transfers or causes the transfer of the registration record of a voter to
the book of voters of another polling place, unless said transfer was due to a change of
address of the voter and the voter was duly notified of his new polling place. (New)

(13) Any person who asks, demands, takes, accepts or possesses, directly or indirectly, the
voter’s affidavit of another, in order to induce the latter to withhold his vote, or to vote for
or against any candidate in an election or any issue in a plebiscite or referendum. It shall
be presumed prima facie that the asking, demanding, taking, accepting, or possessing is
with such intent if done within the period beginning ten days before election day and
ending ten days after election day, unless the voter’s affidavit of another and the latter are
both members of the same family. (Par. (cc), Id.)

(14) Any person who delivers, hands over, entrusts, gives, directly or indirectly his voter’s
affidavit to another in consideration of money or other benefit or promises thereof, or
takes or accepts such voter’s affidavit directly or indirectly, by giving or causing the giving
of money or other benefit or making or causing the making of a promise thereof. (Par. (a),
Subpar. 8, Sec. 231, 1971 EC)

(15) Any person who alters in any manner, tears, defaces, removes or destroys any
certified list of voters. (Par. (dd), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(16) Any person who takes, carries or possesses any blank or unused registration form
already issued to a city or municipality outside of said city or municipality except as
otherwise provided in this Code or when directed by express order of the court or of the
Commission. (Par. (a), Subpar. 15, Sec. 231, 1971 EC)

(17) Any person who maliciously omits, tampers or transfers to another list the name of a
registered voter from the official list of voters posted outside the polling place.

(z) On voting:

(1) Any person who fails to cast his vote without justifiable excuse. (Par. (ee), Sec. 178,
1978 EC)

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(2) Any person who votes more than once in the same election, or who, not being a
registered voter, votes in an election. (Par. (ff), Id.)

(3) Any person who votes in substitution for another whether with or without the latter’s
knowledge and/or consent. (Par. (gg), Id.)

(4) Any person who, not being illiterate or physically disabled, allows his ballot to be
prepared by another, or any person who prepares the ballot of another who is not illiterate
or physically disabled, with or without the latter’s knowledge and/or consent. (Par. (a),
Subpar. 24, Sec. 231, 1971 EC with amendments)

(5) Any person who avails himself of any means of scheme to discover the contents of the
ballot of a voter who is preparing or casting his vote or who has just voted. (Par. (hh), Sec.
178, 1978 EC)

(6) Any voter who, in the course of voting, uses a ballot other than the one given by the
board of election inspectors or has in his possession more than one official ballot. (Par.
(ii), Id.)

(7) Any person who places under arrest or detains a voter without lawful cause, or molests
him in such a manner as to obstruct or prevent him from going to the polling place to cast
his vote or from returning home after casting his vote, or to compel him to reveal how he
voted. (Par. (jj), Id.)

(8) Any member of the board of election inspectors charged with the duty of reading the
ballot during the counting of votes who deliberately omits to read the vote duly written on
the ballot, or misreads the vote actually written thereon or reads the name of a candidate
where no name is written on the ballot. (Par. (kk), Id.)

(9) Any member of the board of election inspectors charged with the duty of tallying the
votes in the tally board or sheet, election returns or other prescribed form who deliberately
fails to record a vote therein or records erroneously the votes as read, or records a vote
where no such vote has been read by the chairman. (Par. (ll), Id.)

(10) Any member of a board of election inspectors who has made possible the casting of
more votes than there are registered voters.

(11) Any person who, for the purpose of disrupting or obstructing the election process or
causing confusion among the voters, propagates false and alarming reports or information
or transmits or circulates false orders, directives or messages regarding any matter relating
to the printing of official ballots, the postponement of the election, the transfer of polling
place or the general conduct of the election. (Par. (oo), Id.)

(12) Any person who, without legal authority, destroys, substitutes or takes away from the
possession of those having legal custody thereof, or from the place where they are legally
deposited, any election form or document or ballot box which contains official ballots or
other documents used in the election. (Par. (qq), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(13) Any person having legal custody of the ballot box containing the official ballots used
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in the election who opens or destroys said box or removes or destroys its contents without
or against the order of the Commission or who, through his negligence, enables any person
to commit any of the aforementioned acts, or takes away said ballot box from his custody.
(Par. (rr), Id.)

(14) Any member of the board of election inspectors who knowingly uses ballots other
than the official ballots, except in those cases where the use of emergency ballots is
authorized. (Par. (tt), Id.)

(15) Any public official who neglects or fails to properly preserve or account for any ballot
box, documents and forms received by him and kept under his custody. (Par. (uu), Id.)

(16) Any person who reveals the contents of the ballot of an illiterate or disabled voter
whom he assisted in preparing a ballot. (Par. (vv), Id.)

(17) Any person who, without authority, transfers the location of a polling place. (Par.
(ww), Id.)

(18) Any person who, without authority, prints or causes the printing of any ballot or
election returns that appears as official ballots or election returns or who distributes or
causes the same to be distributed for use in the election, whether or not they are actually
used. (Par. (aaa), Id.)

(19) Any person who, without authority, keeps, uses or carries out or causes to be kept,
used or carried out, any official ballot or election returns or printed proof thereof, type-
form mould, electro-type printing plates and any other plate, numbering machines and
other printing paraphernalia being used in connection with the printing of official ballots
or election returns. (Par. (bbb), Id.)

(20) Any official or employee of any printing establishment or of the Commission or any
member of the committee in charge of the printing of official ballots or election returns
who causes official ballots or election returns to be printed in quantities exceeding those
authorized by the Commission or who distributes, delivers, or in any manner disposes of
or causes to be distributed, delivered, or disposed of, any official ballot or election returns
to any person or persons not authorized by law or by the Commission to receive or keep
official ballots or election returns or who sends or causes them to be sent to any place not
designated by law or by the Commission. (Par. (ccc), Id.)

(21) Any person who, through any act, means or device, violates the integrity of any
official ballot or election returns before or after they are used in the election. (Par. (ddd),
Id.)

(22) Any person who removes, tears, defaces or destroys any certified list of candidates
posted inside the voting booths during the hours of voting. (New)

(23) Any person who holds or causes the holding of an election on any other day than that
fixed by law or by the Commission, or stops any election being legally held. (Par. (pp),
Id.)

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(24) Any person who deliberately blurs his fingerprint in the voting record. (New)

(aa) On Canvassing:

(1) Any chairman of the board of canvassers who fails to give due notice of the date, time
and place of the meeting of said board to the candidates, political parties and/or members
of the board.

(2) Any member of the board of canvassers who proceeds with the canvass of the votes
and/or proclamation of any candidate which was suspended or annulled by the
Commission. (New)

(3) Any member of the board of canvassers who proceeds with the canvass of votes and/or
proclamation of any candidate in the absence of quorum, or without giving due notice of
the date, time and place of the meeting of the board to the candidates, political parties,
and/or other members of the board. (New)

(4) Any member of the board of canvassers who, without authority of the Commission,
uses in the canvass of votes and/or proclamation of any candidate any document other than
the official copy of the election returns. (New)

(bb) Common to all boards of election inspectors and boards of canvassers:

(1) Any member of any board of election inspectors or board of canvassers who
deliberately absents himself from the meetings of said body for the purpose of obstructing
or delaying the performance of its duties or functions. (Par. (zz), Sec. 178, 1978 EC)

(2) Any member of any board of election inspectors or board of canvassers who, without
justifiable reason, refuses to sign and certify any election form required by this Code or
prescribed by the Commission although he was present during the meeting of the said
body. (Par. (yy), Id.)

(3) Any person who, being ineligible for appointment as member of any board of election
inspectors or board of canvassers, accepts an appointment to said body, assumes office,
and actually serves as a member thereof, or any of public officer or any person acting in
his behalf who appoints such ineligible person knowing him to be ineligible. (Par. (xx),
Id.)

(4) Any person who, in the presence or within the hearing of any board of election
inspectors or board of canvassers during any of its meetings, conducts himself in such a
disorderly manner as to interrupt or disrupt the work or proceedings to the end of
preventing said body from performing its functions, either partly or totally. (Par. (nn), Id.)

(5) Any public official or person acting in his behalf who relieves any member of any
board of election inspectors or board of canvassers or who changes or causes the change of
the assignments of any member of said board of election inspectors or board of canvassers
without authority of the Commission. (Par. (ss), Id.)

(cc) On candidacy and campaign:


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(1) Any political party which holds political conventions or meetings to nominate its
official candidates earlier that the period fixed in this Code. (Par. (eee), Sec. 178, 1978
EC)

(2) Any person who abstracts, destroys or cancels any certificate of candidacy duly filed
and which has not been cancelled upon order of the Commission. (Par. (fff), Id.)

(3) Any person who misleads the board of election inspectors by submitting any false or
spurious certificate of candidacy or document to the prejudice of a candidate. (Par. (fff),
Id.)

(4) Any person who, being authorized to receive certificates of candidacy, receives any
certificate of candidacy outside the period for filing the same and makes it appear that said
certificate of candidacy was filed on time; or any person who, by means of fraud, threat,
intimidation, terrorism or coercion, causes or compels the commission of said act. (New)

(5) Any person who, by any device or means, jams, obstructs or interferes with a radio or
television broadcast of any lawful political program. (Par. (ggg), Id.)

(6) Any person who solicits votes or undertakes any propaganda, on the day of election,
for or against any candidate or any political party within the polling place or within a
radius of thirty meters thereof. (Par. (hhh), Id.)

(dd) Other prohibitions:

(1) Any person who sells, furnishes, offers, buys, serves or takes intoxicating liquor on the
days fixed by law for the registration of voters in the polling place, or on the day before
the election or on election day: Provided, That hotels and other establishments duly
certified by the Ministry of Tourism as tourist oriented and habitually in the business of
catering to foreign tourists may be exempted for justifiable reasons upon prior authority of
the Commission: Provided, further, That foreign tourists taking intoxicating liquor in said
authorized hotels or establishments are exempted from the provisions of this
subparagraph.

(2) Any person who opens in any polling place or within a radius of thirty meters thereof
on election day and during the counting of votes, booths or stalls of any kind for the sale,
dispensing or display of wares, merchandise or refreshments, whether solid or liquid, or
for any other purposes.

(3) Any person who holds on election day, fairs, cockfights, boxing, horse races, jai-alai or
any other similar sports. (Par. (iii), Id.)

(4) Refusal to carry election mail matter. – Any operator or employee of a public utility or
transportation company operating under a certificate of public convenience, including
government-owned or controlled postal service or its employees or deputized agents who
refuse to carry official election mail matters free of charge during the election period. In
addition to the penalty prescribed herein, such refusal shall constitute a ground for
cancellation or revocation of certificate of public convenience or franchise. (Par. (kkk),
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Id.)

(5) Prohibition against discrimination in the sale of air time. – Any person who operates a
radio or television station who without justifiable cause discriminates against any political
party, coalition or aggroupment of parties or any candidate in the sale of air time. In
addition to the penalty prescribed herein, such refusal shall constitute a ground for
cancellation or revocation of the franchise.

SECTION 262. Other election offenses. – Violation of the provisions, or pertinent


portions, of the following sections of this Code shall constitute election offenses: Sections
9, 18, 74, 75, 76, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102,
103, 104, 105, 106 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 122, 123, 127, 128, 129, 132, 134, 135,
145, 148, 150, 152, 172, 173, 174, 178, 180, 182, 184, 185, 186, 189, 190, 191, 192, 194,
195, 196, 197, 198, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215,
216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 223, 229, 230, 231, 233, 234, 235, 236, 239 and 240.

SECTION 263. Persons criminally liable. – The principals, accomplices, and accessories,
as defined in the Revised Penal Code, shall be criminally liable for election offenses. If the
one responsible be a political party or an entity, its president or head, the officials and
employees of the same, performing duties connected with the offense committed and its
members who may be principals, accomplices, or accessories shall be liable, in addition to
the liability of such party or entity. (Sec. 180, 1978 EC)

SECTION 264. Penalties. – Any person found guilty of any election offense under this
Code shall be punished with imprisonment of not less than one year but not more than six
years and shall not be subject to probation. In addition, the guilty party shall be sentenced
to suffer disqualification to hold public office and deprivation of the right of suffrage. If he
is a foreigner, he shall be sentenced to deportation which shall be enforced after the prison
term has been served. Any political party found guilty shall be sentenced to pay a fine of
not less than ten thousand pesos, which shall be imposed upon such party after criminal
action has been instituted in which their corresponding officials have been found guilty.
(Sec. 181, 1978 EC)

In case of prisoner or prisoners illegally released from any penitentiary or jail during the
prohibited period as provided in Section 261, paragraph (n) of this Code, the director of
prisons, provincial warden, keeper of the jail or prison, or persons who are required by law
to keep said prisoner in their custody shall, if convicted by a competent court, be
sentenced to suffer the penalty of prisión mayor in its maximum period if the prisoner or
prisoners so illegally released commit any act of intimidation, terrorism of interference in
the election. (Sec. 79, 1971 EC)

Any person found guilty of the offense of failure to register or failure to vote shall, upon
conviction, be fined one hundred pesos. In addition, he shall suffer disqualification to run
for public office in the next succeeding election following his conviction or be appointed
to a public office for a period of one year following his conviction. (Sec. 181, 1978 EC)

SECTION 265. Prosecution. – The Commission shall, through its duly authorized legal
officers, have the power, concurrent with the other prosecuting arms of the government, to
conduct preliminary investigation of all election offenses punishable under this Code, and
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to prosecute the same.

SECTION 266. Arrest in connection with the election campaign. – No person shall be
arrested and/or detained at any time for any alleged offense committed during and in
connection with any election through any act or language tending to support or oppose any
candidate, political party or coalition of political parties under or pursuant to any order of
whatever name or nature and by whomsoever issued except only upon a warrant of arrest
issued by a competent judge after all the requirements of the Constitution shall have been
strictly complied with.

If the offense charged is punishable under a presidential decree whether originally or by


amendment of a previous law, the death penalty shall not be imposed upon the offender
except where murder, rape or arson is involved. In all cases, the penalty shall not be higher
than reclusión perpetua and the offender shall be entitled to reasonable bail upon sufficient
sureties to be granted speedily by the competent court. Moreover, loss of the right of
citizenship and confiscation of property shall not be imposed.

Any officer or a person who shall violate any provision of this section shall be punished by
imprisonment of not less than six (6) years and one (1) day nor more than twelve (12)
years, with the accessory penalties for election offenses. The provision of Section 267 of
this Code shall not apply to prosecution under this section.

SECTION 267. Prescription. – Election offenses shall prescribe after five years from the
date of their commission. If the discovery of the offense be made in an election contest
proceedings, the period of prescription shall commence on the date on which the judgment
in such proceedings becomes final and executory. (Sec. 185, Id.)

SECTION 268. Jurisdiction of courts. – The regional trial court shall have the exclusive
original jurisdiction to try and decide any criminal action or proceedings for violation of
this Code, except those relating to the offense of failure to register or failure to vote which
shall be under the jurisdiction of the metropolitan or municipal trial courts. From the
decision of the courts, appeal will lie as in other criminal cases. (Sec. 184, Id.)

SECTION 269. Preferential disposition of election offenses. – The investigation and


prosecution of cases involving violations of the election laws shall be given preference and
priority by the Commission on Elections and prosecuting officials. Their investigation
shall be commenced without delay, and shall be resolved by the investigating officer
within five days from its submission for resolution. The courts shall likewise give
preference to election offenses over all other cases, except petitions for writ of habeas
corpus. Their trial shall likewise be commenced without delay, and shall be conducted
continuously until terminated, and the case shall be decided within thirty days from its
submission for decision. (P.D. 1676)

ARTICLE XXIII - LEGAL FEES

SECTION 270. Collection of legal fees. – The Commission is hereby authorized to collect
fees as follows:

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(a) For furnishing certified transcript of


records or copies of any record, decision or
ruling or entry of which any person is P 2.00
entitled to demand and receive a copy, for
every page

(b) For every certificate or writ or process 10.00

(c) For each certificate not on process 2.00

(d) In appropriate cases, for filing a second


50.00
and succeeding motions for reconsideration

(e) For every search of any record of more


than one year’s standing and reading the 10.00
same

SECTION 271. Payment of Fees. – The fees mentioned in the preceding section shall be
paid to the cashier of the Commission who shall in all cases issue a receipt for the same
and shall enter the amount received upon his book specifying the date when received, the
fee, and the person from whom received. The cashier shall immediately report such
payment to the Commission.

ARTICLE XXIV - TRANSITORY PROVISIONS

SECTION 272. Pending actions. – Pending actions and causes of action arising before the
effectivity of this Code shall be governed by the laws then in force. (Sec. 246, 1971 EC)

SECTION 273. Designation of certain pre-election acts immediately after the approval of
this Code. – If it should no longer be reasonably possible to observe the periods and dates
herein prescribed for certain pre-election acts in the election immediately following the
approval of this Code, the Commission shall fix other periods in order to ensure that voters
shall not be deprived of their right of suffrage.

SECTION 274. Accreditation of dominant opposition party. – For purposes of the next
local elections in 1986 and the next presidential elections in 1987 or earlier, the dominant
opposition party shall be that political party, group or organization or coalition of major
national or regional political parties opposed to the majority party which has the capability
to wage a bona fide nationwide campaign as shown by the extent of its organization and
the number of Members of Parliament affiliated with it: Provided, however, That with
specific reference to the next local elections in constituencies which are represented in the
Batasang Pambansa by Members who do not belong either to the majority party or to the
political party or coalition of political parties described above, the representatives of the
opposition in the board of election inspectors, board of canvassers or other similar bodies
shall be proposed exclusively by the party to which said Member of the Batasang
Pambansa belong: Provided, however, That it is registered before the next local elections.

Any political party, group or organization or coalition of political parties seeking


accreditation under this section shall file a verified petition with the Commission on
Elections stating therein such information as may be necessary to enable the Commission
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to determine the qualifications for accreditation in accordance with the standard herein
provided.

The Commission on Elections shall accredit the dominant opposition party not later than
thirty days before the campaign period in every election.

In case a presidential election is held before the next local elections or before the
presidential election in 1987, the provisions of the Constitution shall be enforced in
determining which shall be the dominant opposition party for purposes of the next local
elections.

SECTION 275. Party representatives in the board of election inspectors. – Until such time
as the two accredited political parties are determined in accordance with the provisions of
the Constitution, the two members shall each be proposed by the ruling party and the
dominant opposition party as may be determined by the Commission pursuant to the
provisions of this Code.

SECTION 276. Appropriations, and insurance for board of election inspectors. – The cost
of holding the next local elections provided in this Code shall be funded out of the current
appropriations of the Commission on Elections provided for this purpose. In case of
deficiency, additional funding may be provided out of the special activities fund intended
for special priority activities authorized in the General Appropriations Act.

The chairman and the poll clerk of the board of election inspectors shall receive per diem
at the rate of one hundred pesos on election day and fifty pesos on each of the registration
and revision days. The inspectors of the political parties shall be granted a per diem of
fifty pesos on election day and twenty-five pesos on each of the registration and revision
days. Education support personnel of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports shall
receive a per diem of twenty-five pesos during election day.

Supervisors, principals and other administrators of the Ministry of Education, Culture and
Sports who may be asked by the Commission, and actually report, for supervisory
assignment during registration and election day shall be entitled to a per diem of fifty
pesos.

The provincial, city and municipal treasurers shall receive per diem at the rate of one
hundred pesos on election day.

Payments of per diems under this section shall be made within seventy-two hours after the
election or registration day.

The chairman, poll clerk and party representatives in the board of election inspectors shall
be insured with the Government Service Insurance System at fifty thousand pesos each
under terms and conditions that shall be agreed upon by the Chairman of the Commission,
the Ministries of the Budget, and the Minister of Education, Culture and Sports.

SECTION 277. Special election for Presidential before 1987. – In case a vacancy in the
Office of the President occurs before the presidential election in 1987, the Speaker of the
Batasang Pambansa shall act as President until a President and a Vice-President or either
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of them shall have been elected and shall have qualified. Their term of office shall
commence at noon of the tenth day following their proclamation, and shall end at noon on
the thirtieth day of June of the sixth year thereafter.

The Acting President may not declare martial law or suspend the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus without the prior consent of at least a majority of all the Members of the
Batasang Pambansa, or issue any decree, order or letter of instructions while the
lawmaking power of the President is in force. He shall be deemed automatically on leave
and the Speaker Pro-Tempore shall act as Speaker. While acting as President, the Speaker
may not be removed. He shall not be eligible for election in the immediately succeeding
election for President and Vice-President.

The Batasang Pambansa shall, at ten o’clock in the morning of the third day after the
vacancy occurs, convene in accordance with its rules without need of a call and within
seven days enact a law calling for a special election to elect a President and a Vice-
president to be held not earlier than forty-five days nor later than sixty days from the time
of such call. The bill calling such special election shall be deemed certified under
paragraph (2), Section 19, Article VIII of the Constitution and shall become law upon its
approval on third reading by the Batasang Pambansa. Appropriations for the special
election shall be charged against any current appropriations and shall be exempt from the
requirements of paragraph (4), Section 16 of Article VIII of the Constitution. As provided
in the third paragraph, Section 9 of Article VII thereof, the convening of the Batasang
Pambansa cannot be suspended nor the special election postponed. No special election
shall be called if the vacancy occurs within seventy days before the date of the presidential
election of 1987.

Appointments extended by the Acting President shall remain effective, unless revoked by
the newly elected President within ninety days from his assumption of office.

SECTION 278. Special election to fill existing vacancies in the Batasang Pambansa. –
The election of Members to fill existing vacancies in the Batasang Pambansa shall be held
simultaneously with the next local election in 1986 or in the next special national election
for President and Vice-President if one is held earlier.

SECTION 279. Elective officials in existing sub-provinces. – The election of elective


public officials in existing sub-provinces shall likewise be held simultaneously with the
next local elections of 1986 and 1990 in accordance with their respective charters, subject
to the same term, qualifications, manner of election and resolution of election
controversies as are herein provided for comparable provincial elective officials.

ARTICLE XXV - FINAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 280. Reorganization of the Commission on Elections. – In order to promote


maximum efficiency in carrying out its constitutional duty to insure free, orderly and
honest elections and in discharging its judicial powers and functions under the
Constitution, the Commission is hereby authorized to reorganize its office within twelve
months after the first election to be held under this Code. It may create, merge, or abolish
departments, offices, divisions or units, redistribute functions and reassign personnel,
change designations of existing positions subject to pertinent existing laws and
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regulations. It may recommend the levels and rates of salaries of its subordinate officials
and employees subject to the laws and regulations on civil service and compensation,
position classification and standardization of salaries: Provided, That no permanent
official or employee already in the service of the Commission, upon approval of this Code,
shall be laid off, or demoted in rank or salary.

SECTION 281. Separability clause. – If for any reason any section or provision of this
Code, or any portion thereof, or the application of such section, provision or portion to any
person, group or circumstance is declared invalid or unconstitutional, the remainder of this
Code or the application of such section, provision or portion thereof to other persons,
groups or circumstances shall not be affected by such declaration.

SECTION 282. Repealing clause. – Presidential Decree No. 1296, otherwise known as
The 1978 Election Code, as amended, is hereby repealed. All other election laws, decrees,
executive orders, rules and regulations, or parts thereof, inconsistent with the provisions of
this Code are hereby repealed, except Presidential Decree No. 1618 and Batas Pambansa
Blg. 20 governing the election of the members of the Sangguniang Pampook of Regions
IX and XII.

SECTION 283. Effectivity. – This Code shall take effect upon its approval.

Approved:

(SGD.) NICANOR E. YÑIGUEZ


Speaker

This Act was passed by the First Batasang Pambansa on November 28, 1985.

(SGD.) ANTONIO M. DE GUZMAN


Secretary General

Approved: December 3, 1985

(SGD.) FERDINAND E. MARCOS


PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES

Source: Supreme Court E-Library


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