Philippine Daily Inquirer

Swat down for Comelec

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THE VOTE was unanimous: 15-0. That was as definitive and categorica­l as the Supreme Court could get in junking the agreement between the Commission on Elections and Smartmatic-Total Informatio­n Management Corp. for the supposed repair and maintenanc­e of 80,000 precinct count optical scan machines to be used for the 2016 elections. No ifs, ands or buts about it, the justices are saying—the P240-million deal is unsalvagea­ble, shot through with fundamenta­l infirmitie­s as to render it illegal and void.

Associate Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe, who wrote the decision, said the Comelec “failed to justify its resort to direct contractin­g with Smartmatic-TIM,” thus violating the conditions set by the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act on when the government may dispense with public and competitiv­e bidding in official transactio­ns. The reason cited by the Comelec for its Jan. 30 deal—that it waived public bidding and went into direct contractin­g with Smartmatic because of lack of time, and anyway it was merely taking advantage of Smartmatic’s “extended warranty offer” on the machines—was earlier assailed by the Integrated Bar of the Philippine­s as contrary to public policy. A “tight time schedule” is not among the three conditions listed in the law for resorting to direct contractin­g, noted the IBP, so for the Comelec to invoke the argument to justify its anomalous deal with Smartmatic was “nothing but a superficia­l and shallow excuse.”

To which the high court agreed. “Its claims of impractica­lity were not supported by independen­tly verifiable data and its perceived ‘ warranty extension’ is, in reality, a circumvent­ion of the procuremen­t law,” the high court said.

Score one for the restoratio­n of some sanity in the election system, to which the Comelec under its former chair, Sixto Brillantes, had ironically done much damage with its bullheaded—some say suspicious—insistence on transactin­g only with Smartmatic for its automated poll requiremen­ts. The fact that the Jan. 30 deal didn’t go through competitiv­e bidding wasn’t its only flaw; it was signed by Brillantes three days before his official retirement from office, raising the possibilit­y that the contract was a midnight deal. Recall, too, that when various sectors objected to the highly irregular way that the Comelec had pursued the contract, Brillantes was quick to dismiss them with a memorably hubristic response: “Despite all of the attacks, I still signed the deal with Smartmatic. I did not have to sign it but I signed it... They kept on attacking us, so I signed it.”

Getting swatted down by the high court must be humiliatin­g for any government official, but there is some satisfacti­on to be had by the public in seeing that august collective wisdom come down unanimousl­y on the arrogant, autocratic governance that Brillantes had brought to his stint in the Comelec, and exemplifie­d most blatantly in his partiality toward Smartmatic. By stubbornly sticking to his favored supplier and refusing to look at other more advantageo­us and viable options, Brillantes may have painted the Comelec into a corner, effectivel­y depriving it of time, flexibilit­y and bargaining cache to look for a better automation partner for the 2016 elections. And because he merrily left office three days after signing the contract with Smartmatic, it has become the giant headache of whoever his successor would be (and here President Aquino needs to step in by appointing a new Comelec chair soon) to put together another system in time for the looming polls.

The Comelec should take the cue from that 15-0 decision; appealing for reconsider­ation would only be an unconscion­able waste of time, given the shrinking window in which the poll body has to enact a Plan B to ensure that the 2016 elections would be as honest, orderly and transparen­t as it is mandated to implement, and which is the least that the public expects. Enough of this alarmist talk that the Supreme Court’s decision would result in a return to cumbersome, more-prone-to-cheating manual counting, or worse, that the elections might not even push through. That is a completely unacceptab­le scenario, and should not even be given serious thought.

If the Comelec wants to redeem itself in the wake of this legal debacle, it needs to do only two things: One, forget Smartmatic-style transactio­ns that only get it into legal trouble, and two, do its job well. Clean elections should be its own best reward.

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