Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting
Motto | Boto Ko, Dangal Ko, Ipagtatanggol Ko (I'll defend my vote, my honor) |
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Founded | October 1991 |
Founder | H.E. Jaime Cardinal Sin, Haydee Yorac, Henrietta T. de Villa, Bishop Gabriel Reyes, Msgr. Bayani Valenzuela |
Type |
Non-profit NGO |
Focus | Elections, plebiscites and referendums |
Location |
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Area served | Nationwide |
Services | Democracy reform in the Philippines |
Fields | Poll watching, advocacy, electoral reforms |
Key people | Henrietta T. de Villa (Chairperson) |
Volunteers | 500,000+ |
Website | http://www.ppcrv.org/ |
The Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPCRV) is a non-partisan, non-sectarian non-profit organization affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines that works to ensure free, fair and fraud-free elections in the Philippines. The organization has been the "citizens arm" of the Commission of Elections since 2010.[1] PPCRV conducts the Unofficial Parallel Count of returns after the election.[1]
PPCRV's activity includes advocating for electoral reforms, conducting parallel manual auditing in automated elections, coordinating parishes to conduct poll-watching, providing legal assistance related to elections, reporting of electoral violations, providing voters' assistance services, and voters' education.
History
The Roman Catholic Second Plenary Council of the Philippines, held in February 1991, called for reforms in the conduct of elections in the Philippines. In May 1991, Cardinal Jaime Sin of Manila, COMELEC Commissioner Haydee Yorac, then-Laity President Henrietta T. de Villa, Bishop Gabriel Reyes, Msgr. Bayani Valenzuela, and thirty parish lay leaders conceived of the idea of the PPCRV in Mandaluyong City. In October 1991, the PPCRV was launched at St. Paul University, Quezon City, with around one thousand laypeople from the parishes of the Archdiocese of Manila. The next month, with the support of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, the PPCRV expanded its operations nationwide.[2]
PPCRV's poll-watching activities began with the 1992 presidential elections. Then, 346,688 PPCRV volunteers participated in poll-watching, voters’ assistance, assisting the Board of Election Inspectors, protecting election returns, monitoring electoral exercise, and watching the canvassing of votes.
Relation with COMELEC
In April 2013, PPCRV was accused by the Archbishop of Lipa Ramon Arguelles of being a COMELEC lapdog since the conduct of the 2010 general elections, an allegation that the chairperson of PPCRV, Henrietta T. de Villa, disputes. The organization has been an "citizens arm" of the Commission of Elections since 2010.[1]
In 2010, it had objected to the National Movement for Free Elections' (NAMFREL) application as a citizen's arm of COMELEC, stating that a dual system would interfere with election watch. NAMFREL had never objected to PPCRV's applications as a citizen arm in previous elections.[3] The feud seems to be over as both parties were accredited by COMELEC for the 2013 midterm elections and agreed on their respective functions.[4]
Funding
There was an allegation that the PPCRV was receiving foreign funding for its operations, something that the organization denied.[5]
2013 election return error
During the transmission of votes, on the night after the polls for the 2013 midterm elections had closed, the PPCRV server released inaccurate data which was attributed to a formatting error in the server's software. The counting of transmitted results was suspended for an hour while the software, provided by Smartmatic Corporation, was fixed.[6]
References
- 1 2 3 PPCRV's Henrietta T. de Villa responds to allegations the org is acting as COMELEC lapdog. ABS-CBN News Channel. Retrieved 21 May 2013
- ↑ Our History. Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting. Retrieved 21 May 2013
- ↑ 'Silent war' between PPCRV and NAMFREL worsens. ABS-CBN News Channel. Retrieved 21 May 2013
- ↑ PPCRV now in 'kissing mode' with Namfrel. ABS-CBN News Channel. Retrieved 21 May 2013
- ↑ PPCRV gets foreign funding, violates election law?. Rappler. Retrieved 21 May 2013
- ↑ 'Formatting error’ mars PPCRV count. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 21 May 2013
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