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World / Asia

Philippine court shakes up election race by allowing Poe to run

Published: 08 Mar 2016 - 11:19 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 05:48 am
Peninsula

Philippine Senator Grace Poe, daughter of late local movie actor Fernando Poe Jr, waves to her supporters during her proclamation rally inside the University of the Philippines in Quezon city, metro Manila September 16, 2015. REUTERS/ROMEO RANOCO

 

By Karen Lema and Manuel Mogato

MANILA: The Philippine Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that a senator who spent much of her life in the United States is eligible to run for president, reversing a decision by the election commission and putting her in line to reclaim her position as frontrunner.

Voting 9-6, the judges allowed first-term Senator Grace Poe to run in the May election, said court spokesman Theodore Te, a decision that will shake up what is now a tight race to succeed President Benigno Aquino.

Poe, 47, was abandoned as a child in a church in the central Philippines and was adopted by movie actors. She had been leading opinion polls, but questions about her citizenship allowed three of her four rivals to catch up.

Ramon Casiple, executive director of the Institute for Political and Electoral Reform, told Reuters the ruling would put her back in the lead.

"A favourable decision seals Poe's frontrunner position," he said.

Poe has campaigned on a pro-poor campaign, promising to build on Aquino's programmes of creating jobs and building infrastructure, which have helped propel one of Asia's fastest growing economies.

"It's a dangerous result," Manuelito Luna, a lawyer for former senator Francisco Tatad who opposed Poe's candidacy, told Reuters. "It's a recipe for chaos."
Luna said his team would appeal against the decision.

A former pre-school teacher, Poe moved to the United States during her university years and spent much of her adult life in Fairfax, Virginia, marrying an American of Philippine origin.

The mother of three returned to the Philippines in late 2004 after her adoptive father, action movie hero Fernando Poe, died and topped the Philippine senatorial race in 2013, running on his legacy.

The 2016 presidential election is being closely watched by investors, who fear the political succession could derail the above 6 percent average economic growth and efforts to crack down on corruption made during Aquino's rule.

Aquino, in power since 2010, is barred under the constitution from seeking a second term.

Reuters