Tapos na ang diktadura. Noong 1987, pinilit ng bagong gobyerno na gawing mas malinis ang halalan — dahil ang halalan mismo ang pinaka-madalas na pinalsipikahin ng diktadura para manatili sa kapangyarihan.
Republic Act 6646 ay isa sa mga unang batas na ginawa ng bagong Kongreso para baguhin ang sistema. Signed on January 5, 1988.
ELI5: RA 6646 introduced specific rules to make Philippine elections fairer after EDSA — from how candidate lists are posted to how watchers can observe counting, how canvassing works, and how vote-buying is prosecuted. It supplements the Omnibus Election Code (BP 881) and many of its provisions remain in force today.
Real Filipino Scenario
Aling Nena is a public school teacher in Baguio City. During the local elections, she was appointed as a member of the Board of Election Inspectors (BEI) for Precinct 045.
A local politician's supporter approached her before the canvassing and offered her ₱5,000 to "misplace" some ballot papers from precincts supporting the rival candidate.
Under Section 27(b) of RA 6646, what was offered to Aling Nena is an election offense. Any BEI member who "tampers, increases, or decreases the votes received by a candidate in any election" commits a crime under this section.
So does the person who tried to bribe her — under Section 28 of RA 6646 and Section 261 of BP 881, vote-buying is an election offense.
Aling Nena refused. But more than refusing — she can report the incident to the COMELEC. Under Section 28, her testimony could be used to prosecute the buyer. And if she cooperates with authorities, she has immunity from prosecution.
What the Law Actually Says
Section 3 — Voters in Highly Urbanized Cities
Registered voters of a highly urbanized city (HUC) do not vote in provincial elections for the province where the city is located. Component city voters can vote for provincial officials unless the city charter says otherwise.
This still matters today — it is why Cebu City voters don't vote for Cebu provincial governor, but Mandaue City voters (a component city) do.
Section 4 — Certified List of Candidates
Instead of requiring candidates to file dozens of copies of their certificates of candidacy, COMELEC must print certified lists of all candidates for each office and post them inside every voting booth. Nicknames and political party affiliations must be included.
Section 5 — Nuisance Candidates (Procedure)
A registered candidate can file a verified petition within 5 days from the last day of filing certificates to have another candidate declared a nuisance candidate. COMELEC must resolve such petitions within 5 days of the hearing — a fast-track process.
Section 6 — Effect of Disqualification
If a candidate is finally disqualified: their votes are not counted. If disqualification is still pending on election day and they win, the COMELEC continues the proceedings and may suspend proclamation if evidence of guilt is strong.
Section 11 — Prohibited Forms of Election Propaganda
Election posters and campaign materials may only be placed:
- In common poster areas designated by COMELEC
- At the candidate's own residence
- At the campaign headquarters
Poster size limit: 2 feet by 3 feet. Streamers at rallies: maximum 2 streamers, each no more than 3 feet by 8 feet, removed within 24 hours after the rally.
No mass media entity may sell or give free airtime or print space for campaign purposes except through COMELEC's free space program (Sections 90 and 92 of BP 881). Media personalities who are candidates must take a leave of absence during the campaign period.
Section 12 — Official Watchers
Every registered political party, coalition, and every candidate is entitled to one watcher per polling place. Watchers must have full and unimpeded access to the proceedings — they can read the names on ballots being counted with unaided vision.
Two principal watchers are recognized: one for the ruling coalition and one for the dominant opposition coalition.
Section 13 — Board of Election Inspectors (BEI)
BEI members must be public school teachers — preferably with permanent appointments. If there aren't enough teachers, private school teachers, civil servants, or citizens of known competence may be appointed.
Section 15 — Ballot Authentication
The BEI chairman and poll clerk must sign the back of every official ballot before voting begins. This is a chain-of-custody measure to prevent ballot stuffing.
Section 16 — Certificate of Votes
After counting, watchers can request a certificate of votes — a document stating how many votes each candidate received in that precinct, signed and thumbmarked by BEI members. This is critical evidence in election protests.
Section 17 — Certificate of Votes as Evidence
The certificate of votes is admissible in court as evidence of tampering in election returns — if authenticated by at least 2 BEI members who issued it. Failure to present a certificate of votes bars the presentation of other evidence to question the authenticity of returns.
Section 27 — Election Offenses Under RA 6646
These are criminal:
- (a) Unauthorized printing of official ballots or election returns
- (b) Any BEI or canvassing board member who tampers with votes or refuses to credit correct votes
- (c) Any BEI member who refuses to issue a certificate of votes to accredited watchers
- (d) Any person who violates the propaganda restrictions in Section 11
- (e) A board of canvassers chairman who fails to give proper notice of meetings
- (f) A disqualified candidate who continues to campaign despite a final judgment of disqualification
Section 28 — Prosecution of Vote-Buying and Vote-Selling
RA 6646 strengthened vote-buying prosecution by establishing a disputable presumption of conspiracy. If at least one voter in precincts covering 20% of the total precincts in a municipality received money or valuable consideration from a candidate's relatives, leaders, or sympathizers, it is presumed that the candidate and campaign managers were involved.
Both the vote-buyer and the vote-seller are criminally liable — but a vote-seller who voluntarily testifies against the buyer is immune from prosecution.
What This Means for You
As a voter, RA 6646 gives you:
- The right to see a certified list of candidates posted inside the polling booth
- The right to have watchers from your candidate's party watch the counting and canvassing
- Protection against intimidation — campaign materials must stay within designated areas, and media cannot sell airtime to campaigns
- Evidence rights in election protests — the certificate of votes is a tool to protect your vote from tampering
As a poll worker: the law protects you from pressure to cheat. If someone offers you money or threatens you to manipulate results, that is an election offense. You can report it to COMELEC.
For OFWs — Para sa OFW
OFWs have the right to vote in Philippine elections under RA 9189 (Overseas Absentee Voting Act) — a separate law that built on the foundations of RA 6646 and the Omnibus Election Code.
RA 6646 itself has provisions that matter to OFW voters:
- The rules against vote-buying apply even when the "buying" happens through OFW remittance channels — cash sent home with strings attached to how family members vote is covered under Section 261 of BP 881 as read with Section 28 of RA 6646
- The rules on candidate list postings and canvassing transparency are the same procedures applied to the counting of overseas ballots
If you plan to vote from abroad:
- Register with the COMELEC through the Philippine embassy or consulate in your host country
- Monitor overseas voting schedules at www.comelec.gov.ph
- Overseas voting deadlines and procedures differ from local voting — register early
What to Do If Your Rights Are Violated
Report election law violations to COMELEC immediately. COMELEC has quasi-judicial power to investigate and prosecute election offenses. File at the nearest COMELEC office or through the COMELEC hotline. In Metro Manila: (02) 8525-9004. Website: www.comelec.gov.ph
Document vote-buying. If you witnessed vote-buying, write down details — who offered, who received, how much, when, and where. Affidavits from multiple witnesses are stronger. Cooperating witnesses may be immune from prosecution under Section 28.
Demand a certificate of votes. If you are a watcher or an authorized representative, request your certificate of votes from the BEI before they leave the polling place. A BEI member who refuses commits an election offense under Section 27(c).
File an election protest if you believe election returns were tampered. This is filed with the appropriate court (Municipal Trial Court for local officials, House Electoral Tribunal for House members, Senate Electoral Tribunal for senators).
Report illegal campaign materials. Take photos of oversized posters or unauthorized billboard placements and report to the COMELEC. You can submit reports through the COMELEC's e-complaint system.
Related Laws
- BP 881 — Omnibus Election Code: The main election law; RA 6646 supplements and amends it
- RA 9189 — Overseas Absentee Voting Act: Gives OFWs the right to vote from abroad
- RA 8436 — Election Automation Law: Later reforms that introduced automated election systems, building on RA 6646's canvassing framework
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Puwede bang pumunta ng iba sa presinto para bumoto para sa inyo?
No. Voting is personal and non-delegable. No one can vote on your behalf. The ballot must be accomplished personally by the registered voter, inside the polling booth.
Q: Ilang watcher ang pwede mayroon ang isang kandidato?
Under Section 12 of RA 6646, each candidate is entitled to one watcher per polling place. However, candidates for Sangguniang Bayan/Panlungsod/Panlalawigan belonging to the same slate collectively share one watcher.
Q: Paano kung ang BEI member ay ayaw magbigay ng certificate of votes?
A BEI member who refuses to issue a certificate of votes to an accredited watcher commits an election offense under Section 27(c) of RA 6646. Report it immediately to the COMELEC legal officer or election registrar present. Document the refusal in writing.
Sources
- Republic Act No. 6646, "Electoral Reforms Law of 1987," approved January 5, 1988. Available at: https://lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra1988/ra_6646_1988.html
Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information only and does not constitute legal advice. Election laws are regularly amended and interpreted through COMELEC resolutions and court decisions. For advice on election-related legal matters, consult a licensed Filipino lawyer or the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) directly.