TAKING a plunge into politics, actor Aga Muhlach shakes hands with Liberal Party leaders in August as his wife, actress Charlene Gonzales (left, partly hidden), looks on. - Photo by ARNOLD ALMACEN
SAN JOSE, CamSur: The Election
Registration Board (ERB) of this town approved the voters’ application of
couple Aga Muhlach and Charlene Gonzales, removing an obstacle to the actor’s
plan to run for a seat in the House of Representatives in the fourth district
of CamSur.
Muhlach and Gonzales filed their
application in March but a petition questioning the couple’s registration here
was filed soon after the actor announced his decision to run for a House seat
representing the Partido area, or fourth district, of Camarines Sur.
Muhlach, who joined the ruling Liberal
Party in August, will face Felix William “Wimpy” Fuentebella, son of last-term
Deputy Speaker Arnulfo Fuentebella.
The actor, a neophyte in politics, is
facing a clan that has ruled the district for decades.
The elder Fuentebella is one of the
main proponents of a bill that will convert the Partido area into a province to
be known as Nueva Camarines, which the bill’s critics said was simply a move to
allow the deputy speaker to skirt his term limit and run for another position
in the new province.
The elder Fuentebella had repeatedly
denied Nueva Camarines was designed to benefit him or his clan, saying that
creating another province out of Camarines Sur would help reduce poverty levels
as the area to be governed would be reduced and easier to handle.
The show-business couple registered on
March 19 in San Jose and listed a leased house on Rizal Street in Barangay San
Juan as their place of residence since August last year.
On April 16, a group of political
allies of Fuentebella, led by former San Jose Mayor Gil Pacamara and 14 others,
questioned Muhlach’s residency at the municipal ERB.
The group said the actor failed to meet
the six-month residency requirement to register as a voter, which is a
requirement for candidacy.
The case dragged on for six months
after two previous ERB chairpersons failed to hear and deliberate on the case.
On Sept. 17, the Commission on
Elections appointed Rosendo Vales as the
third ERB chair of San Jose.
On Friday,
the case was finally settled after a 10-hour hearing at the municipal council
building.
The group that tried to block the
actor’s registration presented the sworn statements of 400 town residents who
claimed the actor was neither a resident nor was even seen in San Jose.
Vales, with two other ERB members
representing the Department of Education
and the local government, validated the names of the 400 residents.
The
board also went to check the couple’s leased house.
In its decision, the ERB said it found
“substantial compliance” of the couple with the requirement of the law to
reside within the place where one seeks to be registered as a voter for six
months immediately preceding the election.
Muhlach told the Inquirer he was happy
because “the truth was heard” and he would now have greater confidence to go
around the fourth district of CamSur Sur and “pursue his dream to render public
service.” - Inquirer
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