Facts:
1. Eleven (11) petitions were filed for prohibition
against the enforcement of BP 883 which calls for special national elections on
February 7, 1986 (Snap elections) for the offices of President and Vice
President. It was contended that BP 883 in conflict with the constitution in
that it allows the President to continue holding office after the calling of
the special election.
2. Senator Pelaez submits that
President Marcos’ letter of conditional “resignation” did not create the actual
vacancy required in Section 9, Article 7 of the Constitution which could be the
basis of the holding of a special election for President and Vice President
earlier than the regular elections for such positions in 1987. The letter
states that the President is: “irrevocably vacat(ing) the position of President
effective only when the election is held and after the winner is proclaimed and
qualified as President by taking his oath office ten (10) days after his
proclamation.”
3. The unified opposition, rather
than insist on strict compliance with the cited constitutional provision that
the incumbent President actually resign, vacate his office and turn it over to
the Speaker of the Batasang Pambansa as acting President, their standard
bearers have not filed any suit or petition in intervention for the purpose nor
repudiated the scheduled election. They have not insisted that President Marcos
vacate his office, so long as the election is clean, fair and honest.
ISSUE: W/N BP 883 is unconstitutional, and should
the Supreme Court therefore stop and prohibit the holding of the elections
The petitions were dismissed and
the prayer for the issuance of an injunction restraining respondents from
holding the election on February 7, 1986, in as much as there are less than the
required 10 votes to declare BP 883 unconstitutional.
The events that have transpired
since December 3,as the Court did not issue any restraining order, have turned
the issue into a political question (from the purely justiciable issue of the
questioned constitutionality of the act due to the lack of the actual vacancy
of the President’s office) which can be truly decided only by the people in
their sovereign capacity at the scheduled election, since there is no issue
more political than the election. The Court cannot stand in the way of letting
the people decide through their ballot, either to give the incumbent president
a new mandate or to elect a new president.
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