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Big business groups call for manual count
By Ma. Elisa Osorio (The Philippine Star) Updated April 24, 2010 12:00 AM
 


MANILA, Philippines - The country’s major business groups want the Commission on Elections (Comelec)
to conduct a parallel manual count of the votes for president, vice president and mayors to ensure
transparency in the country’s first automated polls.

The Makati Business Club (MBC), the Management Association of the Philippines (MAP) and the Financial
Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX) said a parallel manual count would entail P500 million in
expenses – and additional man-hours – but would make the results of the elections more credible.

Information technology expert Gus Lagman has made a similar appeal to the Comelec.

The business groups said six of the nine presidential candidates have endorsed the manual count
proposal. Only Nacionalista Party (NP) standard-bearer Sen. Manuel Villar Jr. and Lakas-Kampi-CMD
candidate Gilbert Teodoro have not given their positions on the proposal. Bagumbayan standard-bearer
Sen. Richard Gordon, meanwhile, is against it because he is one of the proponents of the poll automation
law.

The group said manual counting is “more reflective of the will of the voters.”

The business groups arrived at the decision to support a manual count of the votes at a meeting attended by
Finex president Gregorio Navarro, MBC executive director Alberto Lim, MAP chairman Ramon del Rosario,
MAP members former Trade secretary Juan Santos, and former Development Bank of the Philippines
chairman Vitaliano Nanagas, among others.

Lagman said they would present their proposal to the Comelec on Monday. He said the Comelec must
decide on their proposal before April 29 as there is little time left before the May 10 elections.

He said a manual counting of votes can stave off a failure of elections as well as ensure that an “automated
Garci” does not succeed.

“Garci” is widely believed to refer to former elections commissioner Virgilio Garcillano who reportedly helped
manipulate the results of the 2004 elections to ensure Mrs. Arroyo’s victory against the late popular actor
Fernando Poe Jr. A wiretapped phone conversation between Mrs. Arroyo and a man she called “Garci”
regarding an alleged poll fraud plot became the basis of unsuccessful impeachment cases against her.

Lagman, meanwhile, said there is a need for a backup manual count and not just a random count, citing
possible glitches in the technology of Smartmatic-TIM, the consortium undertaking the automated election
system.

The proposal of the businessmen is to make a manual count of the votes for the three positions and
compare them with the automated results. If the discrepancy is less than one percent then the machine
count will be used, but if the discrepancy is one percent or more then there is a need to manually count all
the votes for all the positions.

The manual count for the president, vice president and mayor will only take an additional three hours, but if
there is a discrepancy then the manual count may mean an additional two days. “But what is that compared
to credible and honest elections,” Del Rosario said.

The business groups said they have already addressed the concerns of the Comelec regarding their
proposal.

They added that there is nothing in the law that prohibits manual counting of the votes for the three positions.

The manual count of the votes for the three positions, they said, would eliminate the need for random
manual audit.

The random manual audit will be done after the proclamation of winners. The random audit covers five
precincts per district, or equivalent to roughly one million voters.

Earlier, the Philippine Bar Association and the Alyansa Agrikultura also pushed for parallel manual counting
of votes to countercheck results of the precinct count optical scan (PCOS) machines.

A group of overseas Filipinos with signatories from the United States and other countries was also set to
petition the Comelec for a parallel manual account.