Local Absentee Voting para sa Media — RA 10380
Reporters and camera crews cover elections for a living. But every election day, thousands of them are deployed to polling precincts, press centers, and command posts far from where they're registered to vote. The result? They can't vote.
RA 10380 fixes exactly that.
ELI5 / Sa madaling salita: Kung ikaw ay miyembro ng media na naka-deploy sa election coverage, hindi mo na kailangang pagpilian pa — ipokus ka sa trabaho mo at iboto pa rin ang iyong mga kandidato sa national positions, kahit malayo ka sa iyong precinct.
Real Filipino Scenario
Dante is a 29-year-old field cameraman for a local TV network in Iloilo. Every election season, he gets deployed to cover vote-counting operations in Capiz — a province away from his registered address in Iloilo City.
Before RA 10380, Dante had two choices: apply for absentee voting (which wasn't available to him), or skip voting entirely. He always skipped. That's thousands of Filipino journalists who lost their voice in every election.
Under RA 10380, Dante's network applies for COMELEC accreditation for their crew. Dante and his colleagues vote before their deployment through the local absentee voting process — casting ballots for President, Vice President, Senators, and Party-List. Hindi sila tinanggal sa pagboto.
What the Law Actually Says
RA 10380, signed by President Benigno Aquino III on March 14, 2013, amends the existing local absentee voting laws to include media practitioners.
Section 2 is the core of the law. It extends local absentee voting rights to:
- Members of media (journalists, reporters, anchors)
- Media practitioners (technical and production staff)
- Support staff assigned to election coverage
The law requires that they be duly registered voters who cannot vote on election day because of their work covering the elections.
What positions can they vote for? Only national positions:
- President
- Vice President
- Senators
- Party-List Representative
They cannot vote for local positions (mayor, governor, congressman) because their ballot is counted at the national level, not in a specific local precinct.
Section 3 directs COMELEC to promulgate implementing rules within 30 days of the law's effectivity, including an accreditation and verification system for qualifying media personnel.
What This Means for You
If you work in media, here's the practical picture:
You qualify if you are:
- A journalist, reporter, anchor, photographer, or videographer
- A technical staff member (audio engineers, editors, producers on the ground)
- Support personnel (drivers, security staff assigned to media teams)
The catch: Your employer or news organization must be accredited by COMELEC. Individual applications are not the norm — your network or outlet must register your team.
Hindi ibig sabihin ay pwede kang lumabas ng bansa at bumoto — this is LOCAL absentee voting, meaning you're voting within the Philippines, just away from your home precinct.
What Most Filipinos Get Wrong
"Kahit sinong media worker ay automático na makakalamang." Hindi. You need to be:
- Registered with COMELEC as part of an accredited media organization
- Assigned to actual election coverage work on election day
- A duly registered voter in the Philippines
"Maaari kang bumoto para sa lahat ng posisyon." Mali. National positions lang — President, VP, Senators, and Party-List. Local positions (mayor, governor) ay hindi kasama dahil nasa ibang precinct ka.
"Kahit freelancer ay kasama." The law covers those "duly registered" through a verification system COMELEC manages. Freelancers may be covered if their organization is accredited, but this depends on COMELEC's IRR implementation.
What to Do If You Want to Exercise This Right
- Confirm your voter registration is active. Check the COMELEC website or your local COMELEC office.
- Ask your HR or news director if your organization is COMELEC-accredited for absentee voting.
- If not accredited, encourage your organization to apply with COMELEC well before the election calendar.
- Submit required documents through your organization's designated coordinator — your deployment assignment, ID, and proof of coverage assignment.
- Vote at the designated absentee voting center specified by COMELEC, usually held days before election day.
For COMELEC inquiries: www.comelec.gov.ph
Related Laws
- RA 9189 — The Overseas Absentee Voting Act: For Filipinos abroad, a separate and more extensive absentee system
- RA 8436 — Automated Election System: The law that governs the automated counting of votes including absentee ballots
- RA 7166 — Synchronized Elections Law: Governs the overall election framework within which absentee voting operates
Mga Tanong at Sagot (FAQ)
Tanong: Kasama ba ang mga bloggers at online journalists sa local absentee voting para sa media? Sagot: The law covers "members of media" and "media practitioners" — the scope depends on whether your outlet is formally accredited by COMELEC. Online journalists working for recognized digital news organizations may qualify, but the accreditation of the organization is the key requirement.
Tanong: Paano kung hindi ma-accredit ang aking employer bago mag-election? Sagot: You would need to vote at your registered precinct on election day. If you cannot leave your assignment, you effectively lose the chance to vote that cycle. Encourage your outlet to process accreditation early — ideally months before any election.
Tanong: Maaari bang iboto ang lokal na opisyal sa pamamagitan ng absentee voting for media? Sagot: Hindi. Section 2 of RA 10380 explicitly limits the ballot to national positions only: President, Vice President, Senators, and Party-List Representative.
Sources
- Republic Act No. 10380 — An Act Providing for Local Absentee Voting for Media, approved March 14, 2013. Full text at Lawphil.net
General information only. Not legal advice. Consult PAO at 1-800-10-PAO-8888 or visit www.comelec.gov.ph for authoritative guidance on election procedures.
By Irvin Abarca & Claude (AI Research Partner) Published May 2026 · 5 min read