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OAV: 2004 & Beyond

OAV: 2004 & Beyond. Presented by: Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines (CMA-Phils) to the 2 nd National Electoral Reform Summit 02 September 2004 Sulo Hotel, Quezon City. RA9189 OAV Law. 1987 RP Constitution Sec. 5 Art. 2 8 th -12 th Congress Signed into law on Feb. 13, 2003

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OAV: 2004 & Beyond

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  1. OAV: 2004 & Beyond Presented by: Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines (CMA-Phils) to the 2nd National Electoral Reform Summit 02 September 2004 Sulo Hotel, Quezon City

  2. RA9189 OAV Law • 1987 RP Constitution Sec. 5 Art. 2 • 8th-12th Congress • Signed into law on Feb. 13, 2003 • Rationale: To restore the right of suffrage to Filipinos overseas who have been denied it due to physical absence in RP.

  3. OAV Law: Salient Features-1 • Scope: All qualified Filipino citizens overseas, 18 yrs old and above; Immigrants and permanent residents must execute an affidavit of intent to return. • Coverage: President, VP, Senators, Party-List representatives

  4. OAV Law: Salient Features-2 • Registration: Personal at embassies/consulates; ERB; for seafarers: also at Comelec Manila • Voting: Personal at embassies/consulates & other designated voting centers • Voting: By mail in Japan, Canada, UK Voting period: 30 days, land-based; 60 days, sea-based

  5. OAV Law: Salient Features-3 • Counting & Canvass: On-Site; start is synchronized with RP time of counting; Automated for 5,000 voters and above; manual for less [until SC nullified contract for ACMs so it was manual for all] • Political Campaign: No prohibition from personal campaigning • Information Campaign: Inter-agency; Comelec-accredited NGOs

  6. OAV Turn Out

  7. Registration Turn Out by Region

  8. OAV Voter Turn Out by Geographic Region

  9. Posts with Significant Voter Turn Out

  10. OAV Facilities and Personnel-1 • field registration activities in 154 areas covering 44 posts • 1,013 deputized for OAV registration-related duties

  11. OAV Facilities and Personnel-2 • 138 precincts set up in all 81 embassies and consulates, 3 Phil. Labor Offices and 3 MECO offices including 21 field voting centers • 2,795 election officers were deputized for voting (37% from foreign service corps; 54% from Filipino communities; 9% from other government agencies in the posts)

  12. Senators with >100,000 votes

  13. Party list with >1,000 votes

  14. Party list with >1,000 votes

  15. Problems Encountered in the OAV Implementation • Few and Far Between Registration and Voting Centers • Non-User-Friendly Forms • Missing Names, ID Problems • Tedious Counting Process • Special Ballot Reception and Custody Group (SBRCG) • Insufficient human power and Training • Lack of Information Dissemination

  16. Major Recommendations • Option on Personal or Postal Registration & Voting • Implement ASAP Continuing System of registration; also RA 9225 • No to Affidavit of Intent to Return for Immigrants • Adaptable Mechanism for Registration and Voting of Seafarers • Sufficient time & Budget for information & political campaign • Full Automation of Counting

  17. Other Recommendations • Filling Up Forms • Voters’ IDs • SBRCG • CLOAV

  18. Facts on RP Labor Migration • In 2003, estimated population of Filipinos overseas was 7.76 million in 192 countries and destinations • RP is the world’s biggest sender of workers for overseas employment • Daily, 2,444 Filipinos leave for various destinations abroad • Annual departure is about 800,000

  19. Irregular OFWs 1.62 3.15 2.78 Permanent Residents and Other Filipinos Source: CFO Stock Estimates of Overseas Filipinos, Millions, December 2002

  20. Feminization of RP Migration • Women workers constitute more than 50% of deployed workers; 73% in 2002 • They dominate the service (90%) and professional occupations (85%, as entertainers) while 54% are in production • 86% of deployed nurses are women

  21. Economic Contribution • Philippine Government acknowledges “critical role of OFWs in the country’s economic and social stability” •  OFWs contributes nearly $8 B (8% of GDP) in annual remittances ($7.6 B in 2003 – 10% contraction) • Additional $5 B if non-banking channel is considered • BSP Governor noted that remittances “make up for the shortfall in foreign direct investments, portfolio investments and even exports.”

  22. Philippines In 2002, Overseas Filipinos remitted close to US$ 8B  about 10 times ODA and 3 times Direct Foreign Investment. Economic Contribution GlobalizationIndex 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 The Philippines ranked fairly high in the Globalization Index and took a 21-Step increment from 2002 to 2003. Reason: The Philippines topped one of the indicators used in the Index  Remittance and Personal Transfers. ___________________ (Foreign Policy Magazine, Washington USA) 1 54 62 1 33 62 Phils. 2002 2003

  23. SONA 2004 by Pres. Arroyo • “...To create Economic Opportunity at home and ABROAD. I don’t want just one or the other. I want both. • …..At the end of my term, the question will no longer be whether we can compete. But where else in the world shall we take an indisputable competitive advantage…”

  24. (Confusing) State Policies • The State does not promote overseas employment as a means to sustain economic growth and achieve national development; • The deployment of OFWs by local service contractors shall be encouraged; appropriate incentives may be extended to them; • Comprehensive Deregulation Plan on Recruitment Activities -migration becomes strictly a matter between the worker and the employer

  25. Global Migration (world estimates; MW percentage of total popn, 2000)

  26. Transnational Communities of Filipinos • Migration is a Global Phenomenon • Filipino out-migration will continue • The Filipino Diaspora will continue • Filipinos Overseas are an Integral part of the Filipino Nation

  27. Political Empowerment of Overseas Filipinos: The OAV law must be defended and amended. RA9189, despite its flaws and limitations, for now, is a positive little step for the democratic participation of overseas Filipinos in the country’s political and electoral processes.

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