Thursday, October 22, 2009

Legal Issues on Erap's Candidacy

Even before former President Joseph Ejercito Estrada's Wednesday announcement to claim the presidency again, his eligibility for the office have long been the subject of much debate. Legal scholars and laymen alike have given their two cents' worth on the issue. Once again, we will revisit the legal issues surrounding Estrada's second quest for the presidency or, as he calls it, the "performance of his life."

Let us start with a little background. Estrada was elected president in 1998, but his tenure was cut short when on January 2001 he was ousted from office during the so-called EDSA II revolution where the Supreme Court, in an unprecedented manner, made then Vice President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo the president by administering to her, through then Chief Justice Hilario Davide, the oath of office for the president. The Supreme Court later on legitimized GMA's assumption of office by ruling in Estrada v. Desierto that Estrada resigned the presidency under the artful doctrines of "totality test" and "constructive resignation." In 2004, after serving about three years as president, GMA run for and was elected as president.

The constitutional provision dealing with the election and term of office of the president is Article 7, Section 4, which is pertinent to the eligibility of Estrada to run. The provision reads as follows:

Section 4. The President and the Vice-President shall be elected by direct vote of the people for a term of six years which shall begin at noon on the thirtieth day of June next following the day of the election and shall end at noon of the same date, six years thereafter. The President shall not be eligible for any re-election. No person who has succeeded as President and has served as such for more than four years shall be qualified for election to the same office at any time.

Those who support the eligibility of Estrada raise the following positions: (1) The bar on second election to the presidency applies only to the incumbent president and (2) Estrada served as president for two and a half years only.

The first position argues that in prohibiting the election of a person to the presidency for the second time, the second sentence of Article 7, Section 4 refers only to the incumbent president as evidenced by the use of the definite article "the." Thus, in saying that "[t]he president" is not eligible for re-election the phrase simply means the sitting president, which at present is GMA. This position is further reinforced by the use of the word "re-election." The proponents claim that re-election refers to one who has been elected to an office and is seeking to be elected to the same office immediately upon the expiration of his or her term.

Since Estrada is not the incumbent president he is not covered by the prohibition on re-election to the presidency. As former Supreme Court justice and DOJ secretary Serafin Cuevas said, Estrada is not seeking re-election but a new election.

This interpretation would, of course, mean that not only will Estrada be eligible to run for president again, but also Fidel V. Ramos and others who will become president later on - after they are no longer in office. It advances the view that the prohibition on second election to the presidency is not absolute.

The opposing view, on the other hand, states that the use of the definite article "the," before the word president, and the word "re-election" in Section 4 are not conclusive grounds in saying that the prohibition on second election to the presidency applies only to the incumbent president. It is argued that the adjective "any" before the word re-election dispels this. Thus, when Section 4 states that the president shall not be eligible for any re-election, it means that the president cannot be elected president again either immediately upon the expiration of his or her term or on any presidential election thereafter.

If the intention were that the ban applies only to the election upon expiration of the holder's tenure of office, the adjective "any" would clearly be out of place and useless. But the insertion of this adjective suggests that the ban on re-election is not limited to the election to be held at the end of the incumbent president's term but on any other presidential election. The phraseology of Section 4 looks forward which thus makes the ban on second election to the presidency apply now and in the future to the sitting president.

The adjective "any" clearly modifies the word "re-election" by giving it a non-restrictive meaning. In addition the dictionary defines re-election as to elect again. Thus, one can be considered re-elected to the same office even after the interval of one or more terms.

Proponents of Estrada's re-election also explain that the rationale of Section 4 in prohibiting re-election is to prevent an incumbent president from using the power and influence of his or her office to ensure electoral victory. Obviously this rationale would have no application to one who is no longer president, which argues for the non-application of the prohibition to a former president like Estrada. The contrary view, however, is that if indeed this is the rationale, then why is the same not true in the case of one who succeeded as president and has served as such for four years or less. The third sentence of Section 4 states that such person will be eligible for election to the presidency. Such person will be enjoying the same power and influence as president - as in the case of GMA after succeeding to the presidency in 2001 - and yet the Constitution does not prohibit him or her from running in the next presidential election. The incumbent's advantage, therefore, is not a very strong argument.

As regards the second point of those favoring Estrada's candidacy, they argue that Estrada did not finish his term as president since he only served two and a half years. This is, however, a long shot. The ban on re-election under Section 4 does not require that the president must complete his or her term before the prohibition is triggered.

A variant of this position is that since on the third sentence of Section 4 it prohibits second election only when one who became president has served the presidency for more than four years, Estrada would be qualified to run since he only served two and a half years as president. But the contrary view holds that said provision of Section 4 applies only to one who became president by virtue of succession, such as when the vice president becomes president because the president dies, resigns or becomes permanently incapacitated.

This claim is supported by the phraseology of Section 4's third sentence when it says that no person who has succeeded as president and has served under that capacity for more than four years shall be qualified for election to the presidency at any time. The provision uses the word "succeeded as president" instead of "elected as president" or "became president," which means that it refers to the rule of succession. Also, this interpretation is supported by the use of the word "election" on the third sentence of Section 4, to wit:

No person who has succeeded as President and has served as such for more than four years shall be qualified for election to the same office at any time.
Obviously, one who became president by the rule of succession is not elected to the office he or she succeeded. In contrast, the second sentence uses the word "re-elected" because it speaks of one who has already been elected to the presidency.

There is view to the effect that if GMA was allowed to run for president in 2004, having served as president immediately prior thereto for less than four years, there is also no reason why Estrada cannot run for president, considering that he also served for less than four years. This proposition, however, ignores the fact that GMA only succeeded to the office of presidency in 2001 while Estrada was elected thereto in 1998.

One other legal obstacle being thrust into Estrada's candidacy is his conviction for plunder, which carried the accessory penalty of disqualification. It would appear, however, that the absolute nature of the pardon granted him by President Macapagal-Arroyo has eliminated this legal challenge.

7 comments:

  1. Hi Jun,

    Your explanations are very clear. It's become evident that Estrada IS qualified to run:

    a) he's not running for re-election (although this could be debated)
    b) he's not served 4 years in the presidency, (as successor to a president)

    If the authors of the Constitution had wanted to exclude an outgoing president or a former president from running again, i.e., run for an election for the presidency or for re-election to the highest office, they should have been definite about it, eg. (even at the risk of being "rebarbative", redundant, etc),:

    Section 4. The President and the Vice-President shall be elected by direct vote of the people for a term of six years which shall begin at noon on the thirtieth day of June next following the day of the election and shall end at noon of the same date, six years thereafter. The President shall not be eligible for any re-election. [No person who has been elected president or held the office of president of the republic shall be eligible to run for president again. Furthermore, no] person who has succeeded as President and has served as such for more than four years shall be qualified for election to the same office at any time.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anne, like in other provisions of the Constitution this provision on re-election ban is susceptible to many interpretations. As always, our con-com delegates have spoken in an equivocal manner. Your rendition of the provision is way clearer than those of the lawyers, judges, lawmakers, and educators who composed the con-com!

    P.S. If it's any consolation, at least constitutional lawyers are given a source of income.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Jun

    Sentences 2 and 3 of the first paragraph in Sec. 4 of Article VII are apparently about the term limit imposed upon (a) the person who has been proclaimed elected as “The President,” or the elected president and that upon (b) the person who has succeeded UNELECTED as president following a vacancy in the same office, or the successor president.

    What this means, of course, is that the ineligibility provision for the elected president in sentence 2--“The President shall not be eligible for any re-election”--cannot be made to apply to a successor president who fills the position unelected since the provision speaks of the ineligibility “for any re-election.”

    Actually, sentences 2 and 3 are patterned after the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1951, aptly titled “Term Limit”:

    “No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of President more than once.”

    Take note of the phraseology employed above to describe in no uncertain terms the person who succeeds as president following a vacancy--”no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which the other person was elected President …”

    Thus, the confusion concerning the language the framers used in phrasing the term limit of the person who is proclaimed elected as “The President” (sentence 2) as differentiated from that of the person who merely succeeds unelected to the office following a vacancy (sentence 3) would have been altogether avoided had the framers added the following bracketed words similar to that found in the cited 22nd Amendment, to read:

    “No person who has succeeded as President and has served as such for more than four years [of a term to which some other person was elected president] shall be qualified for election to the same office at any time.”

    Clearly, the crucial determinant word the framers employed in sentences 2 and 3 is the adjective “any,” common to the phrases:

    --“any re-election” (for the elected President in sentence 2) and
    --“election to the same office at any time” (for the unelected successor President in sentence 3).

    The two phrases above are obviously intended to convey the same prohibition, and that is--the absolute ineligibility and perpetual disqualification of the elected president for "any re-election" immediately following the end of the term or after a lapse of one or more terms or of the successor President who has served as such for more than four years "for election to the same office at any time."

    Note, nonetheless, that the phrase “at any time” placed at the end of sentence 3 may be regarded rightly as superfluous and unnecessary to underscore the disqualification of a successor president in perpetuity.

    The same phrase would have been more effective in conveying the intention of absolute ineligibility of the elected president had the framers inserted it instead at the end of sentence 2 in lieu of using the adjective “any” to qualify “re-election,” to read

    “The President shall not be eligible for re-election at any time.”

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi domingoarong,

    Welcome back to the discussion. Take note also that the 3rd sentence of section 4 speaks of the word "succeeded," which means that one who became president under the rule on succession. In legal parlance, this word has a definite meaning and when employed in a legal document like the Constitution, it refers to the process by which one person, as the next-in-line, assumes a position vacated by another and not after such other person completes his/her term.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Jun

    Yes, there are TWO--there is an elected president and an unelected successor president. Both become ineligible after their first election as president

    Below are some of my thoughts regarding this matter that I have already expressed in other blogs:

    One dictionary definition of the term “re-election” is “election again,” and the other more specific sense is “election a second time” (underscore the phrase “SECOND TIME”).

    Thus, the now-controversial second sentence in the first paragraph of Sec. 4 in Article 7 is intended to be read as:

    “The President shall not be eligible for any election again” or “The President shall not be eligible for any election the second time.”

    In other words, this provision limits “The President to only ONE election to the office. And this means that ALL persons who have ever been “elected by direct vote of the people” and “proclaimed elected” as “The President,” having garnered “the highest number of votes” following the canvass of votes by Congress, and have already began serving as the INCUMBENT elected president at one time--even for just one day in office--cannot anymore stand for election a second time or, owing to the qualifier “any” to the word “re-election,” even at any other time after the first election.

    Former elected president Estrada, therefore, is unquestionably ineligible “for any re-election”--defined as to be elected again or to be elected a SECOND or any other time--even if he was unable to serve the full 6-year term, since the ineligibility the Constitution automatically imposes upon Estrada is based solely upon the circumstance of his having been elected “The President” ONCE and his having wielded already the powers and functions of that office as the INCUMBENT elected president, even for one day.

    The more relevant rationale for a one term limit to the presidency is not only to prevent the incumbent from using the power and influence of the office, but, more importantly, to deter the possibility of an “indefinite” term of the incumbent by a succession of re-elections at the end of each term.

    An “indefinite” term, by the way, is what defines a “dictator” and not the awesome powers a ruler is invested with and wields.

    The possibility of an “indefinite” term was the controlling reason behind the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1951 (that I quoted in an earlier comment here), a reaction to the longest term U.S. president--Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt--who won four successive elections between 1932 and 1944.

    The term limits in Sec. 4, Article VII, in fact, are patterned after the American 22nd, this time around following Marcos’ 12-year dictatorship.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Let them all run unless they are outright disqualified by law, and let the people decide as we have seen in the past whereby even people in jail can run for office. In a democracy, we carry all the ingrained defects in the system, so be it.

    P.S. I like your "wall of fame" so stick with your principles. Do not let anyone distract you from the truth; including today's form of media, because I believe that most of it is way biased toward the limitation of personal free-
    dom. The TRUTH will set all of us FREE!

    ReplyDelete