— witsandnuts

Why the carton ballot box?

(Originally uploaded here.) This carton ballot box looks almost the same with those being used in the ongoing election in the UAE. Just take out the label and imagine sealer-tapes on each side of a more vulnerable box instead.

I casted my vote at the Philippine Embassy in Abu Dhabi two days ago. That was before 12:00 noon and there were only three voters then. I brought a solid list with me, so it did not take much time for me to finish. I briefly sorted the names of the candidates though and found myself humoured to know their full names, which I probably would not easily identify if not for their aliases and popular names. Also, only that moment I learned that Jay Sonza was running for vice-president and Imelda Papin for senator.

I stayed in the precinct a little longer just to feel the control environment which is contributory to the possible results of the election. It turned out that I had too many WHYs:

(1) The absentee voting began on 10th of April. The same carton ballot boxes will be used until 10th of May. Can we please have more durable ballot boxes? Please take note that there are also ballot boxes taken to and from the Labor Office (also in Abu Dhabi) because there is a number of Filipinos assigned to cast their votes from there. You probably can calculate how depreciated the boxes will be after a month or before the actual counting of votes begin.
(2) I registered in August of last year. We were advised that the voter’s ID will be available (at most) by April. Until the day I voted, I did not receive it. The same applies to the rest of the voters in the UAE. I have no idea if this singly happened here. Instead, we were asked to present the original passport or any locally issued identification.
(3) After presenting the acceptable ID, the name of the voter was checked from the masterlist/registration; and the voter was asked to sign there and signify a right thumb print. But why is the ink delible? One sneeze can erase it.
(4) A few who actually registered last year cannot find their names on the masterlist/registration.
(5) There was no secrecy booth. Voters were asked to cast their votes over a shared rectangular table. Yes, a folder was there with the name of the candidates in it. But the area and arrangement was so open that my neighbor-voter can actually cheat (i.e. copy my list). In a way, I would be happy if somebody indeed copied my list. Since I believe I made a right choice. (I have, however, this inkling that the election will never be 100% clean, no matter how much we pray about it. And that is beyond my control. But I am happy that in the aspect that is within my means, I did my best. Shall my candidate win or not, I would support whoever would be officially elected.)
(6) I was asked to thumb print again on the ballot before slipping it to the box (there goes my precious choices!). Yes, the ink was doubly verified as delible. It was gone in a few minutes without really trying to intentionally remove it.
(7) I have chatted with the person overseeing the voting that hour. I asked a number of questions like the safekeeping of ballot boxes, custodianship of keys, other preventive and detective controls, and a lot more. I got a feeling that she wanted to shoo me away as soon as possible. Sorry, if I made you uncomfortable. But I think I will always have the right to ask that.
(8) Well, there are just too many WHYs.

One hundred two diplomatic posts (embassies and consulates) will have postal voting and 70 posts will have personal voting (voter has to cast his ballot at the embassy or consulate), and the new automated voting system in Hong Kong and Singapore (THIS IS ANOTHER WHY; why not in the Middle East?).

Of the 8.1 million Filipinos (workers and residents combined) worldwide, only 589,830 overseas Filipinos registered* for the May 2010 national elections. Well, of course, not all those who registered are going to vote.

*215,546 voters in the Asia Pacific, 66,745 in the Americas, 61,294 in Europe, 225,148 in the Middle East and and Africa, and 21,097 seafarers.

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18 comments
  1. kayni says: May 3, 20103:28 pm

    i’m nervous and excited; i can’t think.

  2. Photo Cache says: May 3, 20109:29 pm

    jay sonza for veep?

    sabi nga ng kanta – WHICH ONE WILL THE FOUNTAIN BLESS?

    can’t wait for the outcome!

  3. kg says: May 3, 201010:19 pm

    hay naku wits, alam mo naman, di mawawala mga aberya sa eleksyon….haay…. you’d think that the votes deserve something better than just cardboard boxes.

  4. upto6only says: May 4, 20101:54 am

    we really are auditors hehehe hayyyy ilang araw na nga lang before the election and the machines are still not working properly… question dyan eh did they do any parallel testing, user acceptance testing and what are their back up plans in case something went wrong during the day it self. normally pag nag implement ng new system you need to have it stabilize by at least 6 months. Pero sa case na ito mabilisan cya. ayaw pa nilang pumayag to do a manual counting pero it’s safe in case may mangyari. hayyy di ko alam kung nagiisip sila.

  5. dyanie says: May 4, 20102:21 am

    ay oo jo, tumatakbo si jay sonza. pero ni isa wala man lang syang ad haha!

    may prob din ang voters’ id dito sa pinas. ako nag register nung 2003 pa at hanggang ngayon eh wala pa din. tsk.

  6. angeli says: May 4, 20108:01 am

    parang ayaw ko nang isipin yang nalalapit na election. everything just feels so hopeless to me.

  7. Nebz says: May 4, 201011:54 am

    Gumana ang pagiging auditor mo! Hehe. That’s good. As long as I can remember, the election boxes were like that. I think (think lang ha, don’t sue me for saying this) it is still safe kahit karton lang sya dahil sa dami ng mga reps ng bawat tumatakbong kandidato, I’m sure wala ni isa ang papayag na madaya.

    We will watch the counting of ballots dito sa Saudi. I’m sure my bet’s not going to win pero I won’t feel I lost. Bumoto kasi ako e.

    Ditto. I also took my own list with me when I voted.

  8. eds says: May 5, 20101:10 am

    oy, tapos ka na pala bumoto. first time kong boboto sa monday and i’m kinda excited na ha.

  9. redlan says: May 5, 20103:27 am

    Mukhang hindi nga safe ang ballot box considering na lalakbay pa yan from UAE to the Philippines. Kala ko sosyal nga ang pagboto sa ibang bansa. Excited ako bumoto sa darating na lunes. Sana hindi pumalpak ang machine na gagamitin for the first time.

    • witsandnuts says: May 6, 20103:59 am

      Hi Red, the ballots will be counted in the Philippine Embassy (Abu Dhabi)after the elections on 10th of May.

  10. dong ho says: May 5, 201011:12 am

    wow! i remember reading this when you plurked it. i actually feel uncomfortable to vote as comelec seems to have so many flaws.

  11. docgelo says: May 5, 20102:14 pm

    my jaw dropped big time when i saw these election carton boxes in the news yesterday. it made me panic more when i heard that flash disks of smartmatic counting machines all over the country are defective! i hate to think every election-related hassles are well orchestrated. note to self : don’t be cynical. trust your country.

  12. PM says: May 6, 20101:22 am

    this election is really having my ears all up and tingly LOL it will definitely be history, whichever route it takes.

  13. Josiet says: May 6, 201011:04 am

    Valid question, why only a carton ballot box? Hayyy…

  14. Nomadic Pinoy says: May 7, 20102:00 am

    I can’t help but feel jittery on the outcome of this election. From that carton ballot box that doesn’t look tamper-proof to automated machines that initially failed – I get restless.

  15. sheng says: May 7, 20106:44 am

    Yay, ganyan lang ang ballot box ninyo for the election? What happened to the steel ballot boxes they were using from here, pinadala na lang sana diyan, they don’t have any use anymore.

  16. dennis villegas says: May 7, 20107:35 am

    The carton ballot box looks unsafe to me…Let’s hope for a clean and peaceful elections this May 10…

  17. bw says: May 8, 20103:42 pm

    darn, would you think its about time these embassy votes get automated? the thought of counting the box without supervision from all parties brings a bad taste in the mouth :(

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