SENATOR Robinhood “Robin” C. Padilla on Monday filed an anti-political bill that seeks to finally fulfill the 1987 Constitution’s mandate to prohibit political dynasties.
In filing Senate Bill 2730, Padilla said it is time to break the barriers that prevent the best and the brightest from serving the Filipino people.
“Given that this measure complies with the legislature’s mandate to enact an anti-political dynasty law and is a step towards leveling the playing field in politics and governance, the passage thereof is earnestly sought,” he said.
Padilla, who chairs the Senate Committee on Constitutional Amendments and Revision of Codes, cited a Harvard Academy research study in 2011 that showed how political dynasties stem from the tendency of elites to “persist and reproduce their power over time, undermining the effectiveness of institutional reforms in the process.”
Also, he said a dataset of Philippine local elections from 1988 to 2019 showed the number of governors with at least one relative in office (dynasty) increased by almost 39 percentage points, from 41% in 1988 to 80% in 2019. The dynasty proportion of vice governors rose from 18% in 1988 to 68% in 2019.
The percentage of mayors in the dynasty increased gradually from 26% in 1988 to 53% in 2019.
Yet another study by Tusalem and Pe-Aguirre in 2013 noted that congressional funds are higher in areas with more political dynasties, but these provinces also have higher rates of crime and poor governance, as well as lower spending on employment, infrastructure, and health care.
“Political dynasties, in effect, have exhausted resources to attain economic and political dominance while at the same time compromising political competition and undermining accountability,” Padilla said.
“It is time to break the barriers preventing the best and the brightest from serving the Filipino people,” he added.
Under the bill, “No spouse or person related within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, whether legitimate or illegitimate, full or half blood, to an incumbent elective official seeking re-election, shall be allowed to hold or run for any elective office in the same city and/or province, or any party list in the same election.”
If the constituency of the incumbent elective official is national in character, such relatives shall be disqualified from running only within the same province where the former is domiciled or in any, including the same, national position.
“No person who has a political dynasty relationship to the incumbent shall immediately succeed to the position of the latter,” the bill said.
The bill requires any person running for any elective public office to file a sworn statement with the Commission on Elections (Comelec) that he or she does not have a political dynasty relationship with any incumbent public official running for an elective public office in the same city and/or province other than the position earlier mentioned.
A petition to disqualify a candidate on grounds of political dynasty may be filed before the Comelec, which will conduct summary proceedings.
The Comelec shall deny due course to any certificate of candidacy filed in violation of the Anti-Political Dynasty Act.
While the votes for a respondent shall be counted if the Comelec cannot decide on the petition before the completion of the canvass, his or her proclamation shall be suspended if the basis for disqualification is strong. If the disqualified candidate has been proclaimed, the candidate shall ipso facto forfeit the right to assume the office.

HOUSE EXPELS CAVITE CONGRESSMAN KIKO BARZAGA
PROPOSED P240 IMMIGRATION FEE FOR TRAVELERS STILL UNDER STUDY – PALACE
PRESIDENT MARCOS LEADS BRIGADA ESKWELA AT A NAVOTAS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
7 MOST WANTED MEN IN CENTRAL LUZON CAPTURED