The Interim Batasang Pambansa (IBP) Elections of 1978
In the early
part of 1978, politics in the Philippines was about to undergo a big change. Previously,
opposition to the martial law regime in Metro-Manila was dominated by the radical
Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), with the reformist opposition being
free-riders at best. The CPP’s primary method was the street rally, as was its
wont in the pre-martial law days. Now, Marcos
was about to give the politicos an exercise that would enable them to deal with
the CPP on equal terms.
This was an
activity they were very good at, and which the public was extremely accustomed
to. I am referring to the April 7, 1978 Interim
Batasang Pambansa (IBP) elections, but especially the campaign for the IBP’s 21
seats in Metro-Manila. The country’s last electoral exercise was the senatorial
election of November 8, 1971, in which the opposition Liberal Party took 5
seats in the Philippine Senate, with the administration Nacionalista Party
taking 3 seats. Marcos knew the opposition was already salivating for another
electoral bout. He also knew that, despite the remoteness of victory, they
could not resist the elections he was dangling at them.
The IBP was
created by the first of nine amendments to the 1973 Philippine constitution
which were “overwhelmingly” approved in the November 16, 1976 referendum-plebiscite.
The members of the IBP included “the incumbent President of the Philippines,
representatives elected from the different regions of the nation, those who shall
not be less than eighteen years of age elected by their respective sectors, and
those chosen by the incumbent President from the members of the Cabinet."
The IBP was intended to be a transitional body as the Philippines shifted from
a presidential to a parliamentary form of government. It convened on June 12,
1978.
For the IBP
elections, leadership of the opposition fell on the shoulders of imprisoned
former senator Benigno S. “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. Along with Liberal Party
leaders Jovito R. Salonga and Gerardo de Leon Roxas, Aquino had earlier taken a
boycott stance, but later changed to participation when he saw the elections as
a chance to mingle with the people after six years behind bars. He related this
change of heart in his historic TV interview during the campaign.
Lakas ng Bayan (Laban)
Aquino proceeded
to build a new political party. He named the party “Lakas ng Bayan” or “Laban.”
Laban decided to field candidates only in Metro-Manila, then called Region IV-A,
where there were 21seats up for grabs. Laban chose Metro-Manila as the
battleground because it reckoned Marcos would hesitate to cheat there, and it
was the best place to make its case to the world. Besides, it was the best way
to maximize the opposition’s meager resources. Aquino also announced that
should Marcos not allow him to campaign in the streets of Manila, he intended
to campaign from his cell.
Of the 21 Laban
candidates, only two were outright CPP elements. They were Alex Boncayao of the
Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP) and Trinidad “Trining” Herrera from from the labor and urban poor sectors,
respectively. Another two candidates were sympathetic to the CPP, and they were
Charito Planas and Jerry Barican. The rest of the ticket was a motley of
pre-martial law national and local politicians, civic leaders, former constitutional
convention delegates, and lawyers.
The prominent candidates,
aside from Ninoy Aquino, were former senator Francisco “Soc” Rodrigo, former education
secretary Alejandro “Anding” Roces, former Comelec chairman Jaime “Jimmy”
Ferrer, former student leader Jerry Barican, former “Young Turk” congressmen Ramon
“Monching” Mitra and Neptali Gonzales, and perennial senatorial candidate Juan
T. David.
The Laban lineup
represented a fragile coalition of Philippine Left and non-Left forces out to
engage in electoral politics, the first since the declaration of martial law
six years before. The small number of Left candidates in the Laban ticket,
however, was a measure of the influence the CPP was exerting on Ninoy Aquino’s
bloc. It was also an indication that the CPP leadership was not completely sold
on participating in the IBP elections.
What was giving
energy to the CPP’s participation in the IBP elections was the single-minded determination
of its Manila-Rizal (MR) leadership. Filemon “Popoy” Lagman, MR’s passionate leader,
looked at the election’s campaign as an opportunity to improve the CPP’s
crowd-drawing capacity in Metro-Manila, regardless of the polls’ outcome. As
always for the past three years, Lagman passionately viewed the exercise in the
context of his much awaited general people’s uprising or “Rebolusyonaryong
Sigwa” that will topple the Marcos dictatorship.
Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL)
For the IBP
elections, President Marcos created the political party called Kilusang Bagong
Lipunan (KBL). KBL fielded candidates nationwide, and predictably enjoyed the
machinery, finance, and logistics of the martial law regime. In Metro-Manila,
it fielded a slate led by the First Lady, Imelda R. Marcos, who was
concurrently the region’s governor, and human settlements minister.
The other prominent
KBL candidates in Metro-Manila were: Deputy Human Settlements Minister and
Imelda gofer Jose Conrado “Joly” Benitez, businessman Fred J. Elizalde,
broadcaster and former senator Edgar U. Ilarde, former senator Arturo
Tolentino, labor leader Roberto Oca, diplomat, statesman, soldier, journalist and
former UP president Carlos P. Romulo, former Supreme Court justices Querube
Makalintal and Jose P. Bengzon, former ambassador to the US Emilio M. Abello,
and lawyer Rolando B. Zamora.
The Meeting to Establish CINACORPE
It was a
foregone conclusion that Marcos was going to cheat in the IBP elections, and
cheat massively. In the vain hope that at least some in the Laban slate would
make it, an election watchdog brigade was seen as helpful by anti-Marcos civic
leaders. These people were not part of the Laban machinery, but nonetheless sympathized
with Ninoy Aquino and his candidates.
Their idea was
to mobilize volunteers who would be deployed as watchdog teams near the
thousands of Metro-Manila precincts. These volunteers would report and document
election irregularities such as vote-buying, ballot box snatching, and voter
intimidation. I do not remember the exact number of precincts existing in
Metro-Manila in 1978, but I remember that the civic leaders said around 10,000
volunteers were needed.
My assignment in the IBP campaign was to touch base with these civic leaders, who were fiercely anti-martial law, but were likewise fervently anti-communist. I was instructed to help them establish an election watchdog group that would be independent of Laban. When they were first approached by Left forces regarding the formation of such a group, they expressed misgivings, stating that generating the required number of volunteers was impossible. My job was to reassure them that enough warm bodies would come forward for this dangerous task.
My assignment in the IBP campaign was to touch base with these civic leaders, who were fiercely anti-martial law, but were likewise fervently anti-communist. I was instructed to help them establish an election watchdog group that would be independent of Laban. When they were first approached by Left forces regarding the formation of such a group, they expressed misgivings, stating that generating the required number of volunteers was impossible. My job was to reassure them that enough warm bodies would come forward for this dangerous task.
In January or
February 1978, someone called me at home and told me to attend a large evening meeting
at the residence of Teresa Feria Nieva in San Lorenzo Village in Makati. I was
told that Mrs. Nieva had been one of the leaders of the pre-martial law
election watchdog Citizens National Electoral Assembly (CNEA). I also learned
that she was the elder sister of my National Secretariat of Social Action
(NASSA) colleague Maring Feria, and that Teresa and Maring were the sisters of
lawyer, jurist, and constitutional convention delegate Jose Y. Feria
The meeting was
held in a large rectangular patio in the Nieva residence. It started at about 8
in the evening. The chairs were placed at the edges of the patio in an oval
configuration, with a broad expanse of floor separating the participants. In
attendance were various representatives of Left influenced/controlled NGOs,
peoples’ organizations, and civic organizations. This event happened 36 years
ago and memories do fade, but I estimate some 25 to 30 people came.
I have forgotten
who presided. My best bet is that it must have been Oscar “Oca” Francisco, a
community organizer from NASSA, he with the booming voice. I represented the youth sector as a former UP
student, and being only 23 years old. There were other youth groups who were
represented though, such as Student Catholic Action Manila (SCA-Manila) and
Young Christian Workers of the Philippines (YCWP). There were also Oblates of
Mary Immaculate (OMI) young priests and seminarians. Teresa Nieva and her
husband Tony welcomed us, and I think Mrs. Nieva must have started the ball
rolling.
The ones I
remember present, aside from Oscar “Oca” Francisco, were Gerardo “Gerry”
Bulatao from the Association of Major Religious Superiors of the Philippines
(AMRSP), former detainee and Jose Rizal College (JRC) professor Loretta Ann
“Etta” Rosales, businessman and former constitutional convention delegate Jose “Joe”
Concepcion, activist priest Fr. Francisco “Fritz” Araneta SJ, and Fr. Francisco Tantoco, representing the Knights of Columbus Philippines (K of C Philippines). Concepcion, Nieva, Araneta, and the Fr. Tantoco were not Left sympathizers or supporters. They were there mainly
because of their anti-Marcos and pro-democracy sentiments.
CINACORPE Almost Gets Nipped in the Bud
After each
person had identified him/herself, the meeting discussed two things basically: the
current political situation in the Philippines at that time, and the
feasibility of forming an election watchdog group. There was not much
discussion or debate on the political situation, and that part was done in
about thirty minutes. The nitty-gritty came when it came to the organizational
part.
After the group agreed on the tasks of the watchdog, Mr. Concepcion said that it was
useless to even start it if there was no certainty that we could
mobilize at least 7,000 volunteers. He then asked the group how many
individuals each could commit. This question was followed by a long silence. Mr.
Concepcion interrupted the quietness with a frank proposal to call the whole
project off. Mr. Concepcion’s threat to abort the preparations was followed by
yet another moment of silence.
The watchdog
group was threatened with death even before it could be born. The Left
activists, who each had instructions to goad the civic leaders present to form
the watchdog group, were quietly panicking. They all knew that without the guarantee of
sufficient election watchers, Mr. Concepcion and Mrs. Nieva would pull out of
the undertaking. And, without the two, there was not a chance in hell we could
pull the thing off under the intense watch of martial law.
Mr. Concepcion
and Mrs. Nieva were well-nigh indispensable because they had the network,
experience, influence, and stature to put up an election watchdog group. They
had been doing it as early as the Sixties, with the CNEA and an entity called the
Citizens National Committee for Referenda, Plebiscites and Elections
(CINACORPE). Furthermore, with people like them in the watchdog group, it would
not appear like a communist front organization and turn off potential
supporters or invite suppression from the dictatorship.
I Do Some Heroics
It was at this
point that I did some desperate heroics. I told myself that I had to do
something to save the situation. My mind was running. I also thought that a
middle-of-the-road watchdog group was very necessary in the coming elections,
which would pit a liberal-Left alliance against a dictatorship. There had to be
a group, I said to myself, which would watch the precincts and expose the
assured irregularities to the foreign media. Besides, it raced in my mind that
I was strictly assigned to see through the group’s formation, so my best
judgment demanded I do something.
Then, I suddenly
remembered a conversation I had with CPP Manila-Rizal secretary Filemon “Popoy”
Lagman a few months earlier in a CPP safehouse in Bulacan. I was interviewing
Lagman for a report I was preparing about the CPP strength in Metro-Manila. I
asked him how many students the CPP could mobilize for the planned actions
during the IBP campaign. I recall Lagman gruffly telling me that with enough
preparation, the CPP could easily put 10,000 students in the streets. I knew
Lagman had a reputation for exaggerating his estimates, but at least I had a
figure to cling to, I told myself.
To break the
impasse, I raised my hand and spoke up. Posturing as best as I could, I told
the meeting that the UP Student Committee for Student Rights and Welfare (SCSRW)
I was once a chairman of could muster 7,000 students to volunteer for the watchdog
group. I even dropped the names of a few UP student leaders as contact persons,
when Mrs. Nieva demanded it. For good measure, I also told the group that I
also had contacts with the Columban priests of SCA-Manila, and they too, could
provide many volunteers.
My "7,000" Saves the Day
Mr. Concepcion’s
face lighted up. He seemed relieved by what I said, and visibly glad that the
watchdog group had a chance. Mrs. Nieva was also appeased, although I could
sense unease in her countenance. I also discerned that she suspected I was
bluffing, although she said she was glad of what I said. And, in reaction to my
unabashed grandiloquence, the other activists in attendance could not help but
feel relieved. They gave me grateful looks, which I acknowledged. What was
amazing was that they actually believed my group had that many people.
After my “commitment”
of 7,000 students, the group started to plan for training the volunteers, by
discussing the contents of a training handbook. Mr. Concepcion also proposed to
call the watchdog group CINACORPE ---- this was rousingly approved. It was
almost 11:00 pm, and, after some snacks, the meeting was thanked and closed by
Mrs. Nieva.
When I got home
that night, Oscar “Oca” Francisco called me, and congratulated me for what I
had done. I will never forget his line – “Your 7,000 saved the day.” I went to
bed overjoyed with what I had done. I was a good soldier and had faithfully
done my assignment. The following morning, I sent word to the higher ups that I
had committed 7,000 or more activists to volunteer for CINACORPE. I warned them
that they had better come up with this number on Election Day or else the trust
of the allies would diminish greatly. I later learned that day that word of
CINACORPE’s creation was spreading rapidly in the activist community.
In the two
months before the elections, I became very busy working with Jose Concepcion
and Teresa Nieva in getting more civic and pro-democracy personalities to
participate in the newly formed CINACORPE. The three of us were CINACORPE’s
de-facto secretariat. I often rode with Mrs. Nieva in her car, with her as the
driver.
We made the
rounds in Metro-Manila, visiting likely supporters. Mrs. Nieva phoned the
contacts from her home, then off we went.
I remember having meetings in the K of C headquarters in Intramuros, in
Cardinal Jaime Sin’s office at Villa San Miguel, St. Scholastica’s College, St’
Joseph’s College, barangay offices in Mandaluyong and Caloocan, and in Mr.
Concepcion’s residence in Forbes Park. I also remember riding in his new
Mercedes-Benz, with him and Mrs. Nieva at the back. All this time, we were busy
writing CINACORPE’s handbook. The group held most of its meetings in Mrs.
Nieva’s residence, with Etta Rosales being present not a few times.
The Laban Campaign in Metro-Manila: Kris Aquino Speaks
at a Laban Rally
Laban took
maximum advantage of the rally permits made possible by the IBP campaign in
Metro Manila. Wherever there was a Laban rally, the Left mobilized its people
to give the gatherings massive and boisterous audiences. These were instructed
to make as much slogan-shouting and agitation as possible.
In a big way, it was muscle flexing time for the communists and national democrats. Never since September 21, 1972, had they enjoyed so much freedom. For the first time, moreover, the innocent bystanders were no longer afraid to attend opposition rallies. Their numbers made the crowds swell all the more.
I attended many
of these rallies, but the one I remember most was that held in Plaza Goiti,
which was located in front of Sta. Cruz church in Manila. It was about 7 in the
evening and the April heat was overpowering.
When I arrived, the plaza was sweltering with several thousand people. Alex
Boncayao was on a stage, stirring the crowd with one rabble-rousing tirade
after another.
Alex Boncayao
seemed never to get tired, always speaking at the top of his high-pitched
voice. I then heard Trining Herrera speak. She spoke in a calm, almost detached
manner, in complete contrast to the blistering Boncayao. She spoke mostly about
her torture and arrest by military agents, because of her urban poor organizing
activities under ZOTO.
After a number
of speakers whom I have already forgotten, a 7-year-old Kris Aquino spoke. I
only heard her and not see her, because of the thick crowd. After a brief
intro, the child glowingly spoke of her father, who at that time had been
imprisoned for 6 years. I tried to raise my head above the crowd by standing on
a concrete embankment to see Kris Aquino, but I was just too short and far from
the stage see her. Be that as it may, I remember most her emotional account of
the Aquino family visits to the detained Ninoy, and her plaintive plea for
votes in behalf of her captive father. After Kris Aquino, her brother, Benigno
Aquino III, delivered an impassioned, albeit forgettable speech.
March 10, 1978: Ninoy Aquino’s “Face the Nation” Interview
On the night of March
10, 1978, I watched Ninoy Aquino’s much awaited TV interview in a friend’s
house on Annapolis St. in Cubao. Ninoy was not allowed to campaign in the
streets as he had hoped. He was instead granted by Marcos a single live TV interview
on the Channel 9 program “Face the Nation.” He was supposed to be grilled by a
hostile panel composed of Enrique “Pocholo” Romualdez, Teddy Owen, and one
other guy in dark glasses whose name I have already forgotten. Ronnie
Nathanielsz, another Marcos minion, was the moderator.
Instead, the
panel ended up being mesmerized by Aquino’s splendid performance. The foursome,
in the first five minutes of the program, went through the motions of asking
loaded and accusatory questions, all of which had nothing to do with the
elections. Aquino seemed to have anticipated this, and immediately took the
offensive. For the next hour or so, he argued his case, about not being a
communist, why he chose to boycott the military commission trying him, and
about his work “with” and not “for” the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). He
did so with the classic aplomb of a senator speaking on the hallowed floor of
the old Philippine Senate.
The “bondying”
or baby image was not there anymore. Six
years of detention had visibly aged Ninoy and removed all baby fat. He was
wearing a new hair-do, with the crew-cut being replaced by thick locks covering
his entire scalp. Also, the trade-mark white barong-tagalog with rolled-up
sleeves and dark pants had been replaced by matching white bush-jacket and
white pants. The new outfit gave Aquino a rugged appearance, which gave justice
to the night’s mood of standing up to a dictatorship.
But the vintage brainpower
and high-speed delivery were still there, now heightened by seething anger. His
memory seemed to have even improved in the loneliness of his cell, as he
rattled off numbers, names, and places prodigiously. I remember most the way he
effortlessly pronounced the name of Thai diplomat Sompong Sucharitkul! To make matters worse for the interviewers, he
seemed to have done his homework extensively --- leafing through a thick file
to expose a secret Marcos plan to hire a foreign PR company to shore up his
image.
Ninoy Aquino Steals the Show
It was Aquino’s
show for most of the two-hour program, as the three-man panel seemed to just lazily
sit on their chairs like studio props, enchantingly disarmed by this gifted
man. As usual, Aquino could instantaneously shift from angry to resigned, from
defiant to distressed, and from combative to friendly.
He was also a master of the sound byte, long before the term became a norm. When asked why he was running despite certain defeat, he related having told his doting mother, “Ina, kating-kati na akong makipagusap sa masa.” (Mother, I’m itching to talk to the masses)
When Ronnie Nathanielzs
implied that he was unduly questioning the integrity of the military commission
trying him, he curtly replied that it was their circumstance of being Marcos
employees that was affecting their judgment, ending this with a deadly quip ---
“Ikaw Ronnie, empleyado ka ng NMPC (National Media Production Center), maaatake mo ba si Marcos?” (You Ronnie, you
are an employee of NMPC , can you criticize Marcos?)
When Aquino was
given the last five minutes of the program to pitch for Laban, he flashed a
most disarming smile, and profusely thanked the moderator for giving him time
for a “commercial.” He first expressed his relief that he still had enough time
to do so, after spending the better part of the show defending himself against
various charges.
Aquino then
related a heart rending, against-all-odds story that successfully painted the
opposition, and himself in particular, as the intrepid underdogs. The way
Aquino endearingly told it, I thought, all the lolos and lolas (grandfathers
and grandfathers) out there must have been crying. Referring to the Comelec and
its chairman, Aquino uttered something like “Kanila na yung rules, kanila pa
yung referee, pero ok lang.” (They own the rules and they own the referee, but it’s
ok)
Ronnie Nathanielsz
then thanked the guest and the panel, who by then, had been effectively stunned
by Aquino’s personality. Nathanielsz
subsequently closed the program. All of us watching in the living room looked
at each other and agreed that we had just watched a virtuoso performance, one
that will be talked about ages and ages hence.
The April 6 1978 “Noise Barrage”: I Saw It All in A Taxi Ride
On the night of
April 6, 1978, the historic “Noise Barrage” occurred in in Metro-Manila. This
was the first non-CPP initiated mass protest under martial law. It was the brainchild of the Partido
Demokratiko-Sosyalista ng Pilipinas (PDSP) aka the Social-Democrats, aka the
“Soc-Dems.” At that time PDSP was led by Fr. Romeo “Archie” Intengan SJ.
The call to
conduct the protest was made by the PDSP about a month before the elections and
mainly through word-of-mouth and leaflets. It told the public to make as much
noise as possible with anything they could lay their hands on, such as pots,
pans, and car horns, on 7 or 8 pm of April 6, the eve of the IBP elections. It confirmed
that Laban not only had an alliance with the Left, but with the PDSP as well.
I decided to
survey the extent of the noise barrage, as soon as it started. I took a taxi
cab, and told it to go around Metro-Manila. Along the way, I picked up fellow
activist and now UP professor Jo Cabuniag. Our jaws dropped at what we saw. As
the cab made its way through such thoroughfares as EDSA, Aurora Boulevard, UP
Campus, Quezon Boulevard, Quiapo, and Taft Avenue we saw people lining both
sides of the streets banging on pots, pans, and wash basins. Cars, jeepneys,
taxi cabs, buses, and trucks were also rhythmically honking their horns as if
to shout the middle accented Laban word. The entire metropolis seemed to have
come out in support of Ninoy Aquino’s candidates.
Others were
shouting, flashing the Laban “L” sign with their thumb and index finger, and holding
Laban emblazoned placards and streamers. Along the route, I saw several burning
tires in the middle of the road, which slowed down the traffic. I could have
sworn even the prostitutes plying the Quezon Avenue and Quiapo areas joined in,
judging by their outfits. They flaunted 1 meter long 2 feet wide pieces of
cloth on which was painted “Laban,” and on Quezon Avenue near Aberdeen Court,
many jammed the signs on the cab’s windows, as I told the driver to slow down.
I asked the cab
driver to repeat the route we had just taken, and still Jo and I saw the same
thing --- people making noise and shouting their throats hoarse. Our road trip
lasted about two hours. Jo and I called it a day at about 10:30 pm on Roosevelt
Avenue with people still fearlessly remonstrating. I would say that, easily, two
hundred thousand people participated in this historic action.
For a moment, I
had the wishful thought that Laban could perform well in the next day’s polls.
I also grudgingly admitted that our perennial adversaries, the Social-Democrats,
had scored a magnificent coup. They judged the people’s temper well, and had
brilliantly figured out a form of protest. Their indubitable logic was: if you
cannot get the people to march on the streets because of restrictions, then the
next best thing is for them to make noise, and a lot of it. Absolutely vivid
thinking by the Soc-Dems. From thence
on, even the communists would adopt this protest form, even using the same name
that has stuck through the years --- “Noise Barrage”
The IBP Election Results
As for the April
7, 1978 Philippine elections, Marcos made sure that not one of the Laban
candidates would win. He did it with massive spending, cheating, and
intimidation. His principal instruments were thousands of thugs or “Barangay
Tanods” (village watchmen) who engaged in such activities as ballot box
snatching, vote buying, intimidating watchers and teacher canvassers, and
hauling paid voters (hakot). Besides, if a KBL victory could not be produced at
the barangay level, there was always the Commission on Elections (Comelec) who
would doctor the final results and proclaim the winners. The Comelec chairman
at that time was none other than the great Marcos underling Leonardo B. Perez.
KBL swept the
elections in Metro-Manila, bagging all 21 IBP Region IV-A seats. Waldo
Perfecto, an unknown KBL candidate who was no. 21 in the final tally, got more
votes than Ninoy Aquino. Alex Boncayao, one of the two CPP candidates in the
Laban slate, was so incensed at Laban’s “defeat” that he lost no time in
joining the New People’s Army (NPA) after the elections. He subsequently died
in an encounter with government troops in Bongabong, Nueva Ecija.
Trining Herrera,
the other leftist candidate, went into hiding. The moderate candidates and their supporters,
like Francisco “Soc” Rodrigo, Teofisto Guingona, and former senator Lorenzo Tañada,
tried to stage a protest rally against the election cheating, but were quickly
arrested. Ramon Mitra, a Laban candidate, made a famous promise not to shave
his beard “until Leonardo Perez learns how to count.”
The Failure of CINACORPE
As for the
CINACORPE, little came of it. The 7,000 student volunteers that CPP –MR head Filemon
“Popoy” Lagman told me he could produce did not materialize. And to think I was
so naïve as to even slightly trust his word. Mrs. Nieva and I set up office at the Knights of
Columbus headquarters in Intramuros. Up to this time we had not met any
volunteers yet, when they should have showed up a week before the elections so
we could train/orient them.
We waited for
the volunteers to come, intending to give them even cursory training, but all
who came were some 30 or so high-school students from SCA-Manila. I could see
the frustration on Mrs Nieva’s face. When they arrived, Mrs. Nieva was completely aghast at
their youth, immediately saying, “They’re just babies!” She felt they were too
young to stand up to the armed goons who would surely descend on the precincts
on Election Day. Not even the UP student activists that I had bragged so much
about came. Needless to say, I was so embarrassed, both to Mr. Concepcion and
Mrs. Nieva for falling short of my commitments. All of our problems were
overshadowed, however, by reports of massive irregularities in thousands
of Metro-Manila election precincts.
hello, happy to stumble on this for a ninoy timeline. are you also the running priest o tukayo lang?
ReplyDeleteTukayo lang. Thanks for reading my blog.
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