Philippine Daily Inquirer

Senate bet: We may be poor but we’re no clowns

- By Jocelyn R. Uy

MORE colorful wannabes who also hope to get a seat in the Senate next year yesterday joined other senatorial contenders in beating the deadline for the filing of certificat­es of candidacy (COC) with the Commission on Elections (Comelec).

One was a widowed preacher who vowed to champion widows and single moms. Another was an insurance employee who planned to “melt” all weapons of destructio­n and convert them into something that would produce food while another would push for the constructi­on of what he called “Edsalex.”

But they insisted they were neither clowns nor crackpots. They said they were merely ordinary citizens exercising their constituti­onal right to run for a government post.

“Just because we are poor we are already considered nuisance or clowns. It’s the so-called serious candidates who sing and dance to win votes. Doesn’t that make them more of a clown than us?” said 67-year-old Rafael Cabrera of Lemery, Batangas.

It’s his right

Cabrera, a former worker for a laundry soap manufactur­er, said he was running for the Senate because it was his right to do so.

After the five-day registrati­on period ended yesterday, the Comelec said a total of 84 senatorial contenders had filed their COCs. On the last day of the filing, 35 bets formalized their candidacie­s. Of this number, four candidates were from the Liberal Party and one from the United Nationalis­t Alliance.

Clad in a printed red dress and wearing medallions bearing the image of saints, Norma Nueva claimed she was nominated by the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan, an umbrella coalition of parties who supported the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

A preacher who ran a program in the Church-run Radio Veritas for four years, Nueva said she had the capacity to launch a nationwide campaign because she was used to going around the Philippine­s to conduct evangeliza­tion and values formation in military and police camps and in depressed

areas, among others.

‘Edsalex’

Meanwhile, farmer Manuel Espinosa said hewould push for the constructi­on of “Edsalex,” the Edsa version of the Southern Luzon Expressway and the Northern Luzon Expressway, to ease traffic emanating from the two expressway­s.

“I will also push for the nationwide showing of film entries in the Metro Manila Film Festival next year,” said Espinosa.

The 42-year-old senatorial aspirant even brought colorful posters to show his projects if elected in the 2013 balloting.

Former jukebox king Victor Wood, who rose to fame in the 1970s, was among the buzzerbeat­ers, saying his entry into the senatorial race was a sign of his restored confidence in the Comelec.

Wood, who was wearing a hat and a red-black longsleeve­d polo when he filed his COC, claimed he was cheated in the 2007 elections. “My votes were not counted,” he said.

FPJ too?

Another senatorial aspirant identified as Fernando Po again closed the five-day registrati­on period, filing his COC when the clock struck at 5 p.m. yesterday.

According to the Comelec staff overseeing the registrati­on, Po—who bears no resemblanc­e to the late movie actor, Fernando Poe Jr.—was also the last person to file his COC for the 2010 elections at midnight on the last day of the filing.

The Democratic Party of the Philippine­s also fielded senatorial bets for next year’s elections, among them was Christian Señeres, a former representa­tive of the Buhay party-list. Señeres filed his COC yesterday.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY ALBERT RODRIGUEZ ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY ALBERT RODRIGUEZ

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