VOL. XXIX NO. 247 3 Sections 32 Pages P18 SATURDAY : OCTOBER 17, 2015 www.thestandard.com.ph editorial@thestandard.com.ph
Typhoon to make landfall today
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NEW CASE LODGED TO DISQUALIFY POE By Sara Susanne D. Fabunan and Macon Ramos Araneta
LESS than a day after Senator Grace Poe filed her Certificate of Candidacy for the presidency, a lawyer filed a disqualification case against her before the Commission on Elections, alleging that she failed to comply with the citizenship and residency requirements “I believe that as a registered voter, as a Filipino and as a lawyer, it is my duty to ensure that somebody who is not qualified under our Constitution to run should not be allowed to run for the highest position of the land,” said Estrella Elamparo, after filing her petition at the Comelec. “I think the requirements of citizenship and residency are so basic that… someone who has not complied with these requirements… should not be allowed to run as President of the Philippines.” Elamparo said she had no personal disagreement with Poe and said no politician was behind her decision to file a disqualification case before the Comelec. “This is really nothing personal... I have no political affiliation... I am not doing this on behalf of any candidate. I’m doing this as a registered voter, as a citizen and as a lawyer,” she said. In her petition, Elamparo, former chief legal counsel for the Government Service Insurance System, said Poe committed material misrepresentation in the CoC that she filed Thursday afternoon by claiming that she had met all the legal requirements in seeking the presidency. Elamparo said the provisions of the 1935 Constitution clearly do not qualify Poe as a natural born citizen since she is a foundling and was unaware of her biological parents. Next page
Miriam makes pitch to ‘non-stupid’ vote By Sara Susanne D. Fabunan and Macon Ramos-Araneta
She’s running. Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago shows off her Certificate of Candidacy for President that she filed at the Comelec offices in Manila on Friday. LINO SANTOS
ADDRESSING “voters and people who will never be stupid forevermore,” Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago said she filed her Certificate of Candidacy for President Friday, and would use social media extensively to reach young voters. Defensor, who addressed journalists after filing her CoC at the Commission on Elections office in Intramuros, Manila, spent much of her press conference answering questions about her running mate, Senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr., whose father ruled the country under Martial Law from 1972 until his ouster in 1986. Asked how she could reconcile her views on human rights violations during the Martial Law regime with her running with Marcos, she said, “Life doesn’t have to be a constant straight line from one end to another. We should not live our lives that way.” She added that the ideology of the millennials now are far different from those of their parents. “So we need to adjust,” she said. But Santiago disagreed with Marcos’ view that people should bury the past and move on. Next page