Sergio Osmeña eyes Senate comeback
MANILA, Philippines — Former Sen. Sergio "Serge" Osmeña III filed his certificate of candidacy on Wednesday in a bid to return to the upper chamber.
Osmeña, son of former President Sergio Osmeña, served as senator from 1995 to 2001 and was re-elected again in 2010.
He ran again as senator in 2016 as an independent but lost, placing 14th in the previous general elections.
Osmeña ranked 8th to 17th in the Pulse Asia survey for senatorial bets released last September. — Patricia Lourdes Viray
The Commission on Elections has started to accept the certificates of candidacy filed by senatorial and party-list aspirants who will run in next year’s midterm elections.
Sen. Aquilino "Koko" Pimentel III, a re-electionist, was the first to file his COC at the Comelec main office.
Other senatorial bets who submitted their COCs, as of this writing, include:
- Singer Freddie Aguilar
- Former Health department consultant Willie Ong
- Former Bayan Muna Party-list Rep. Neri Colmenares
Lawyer Glenn Chong, former congressman for Biliran, has filed a disqualification case against Sen. Aquilino "Koko" Pimentel III, president of the administration PDP-Laban party.
According to a press release from Reform Philippines Coalition, Chong believes Pimentel should be disqualified from seeking reelection since he is on his second consecutive term as senator.
"This is not an attack on his person. I am saddened that Senator Pimentel, being a lawyer and legislator is unmindful of the term limits set by the constitution. His filing of his Certificate of Candidacy while in clear violation of this provision is unconstitutional, illegal and highly immoral," Chong, RPC spokesman, says.
This is the second attempt to disqualify Pimentel from running. Lawyer Ferdinand Topacio filed a similar complaint against the former Senate president in October.
RELATED: Koko Pimentel says law on his side to seek reelection
Pimentel, a lawyer, contends that he did not get to serve a full term from 2007 to 2013 since he was locked in a poll protest against Sen. Juan Miguel Zubiri. He was only proclaimed the winning senator in 2011, after Zubiri resigned from the Senate.
"The Constitution, the law and jurisprudence are on my side. Well regarded legal minds known for their expertise in election law have likewise chimed in; they agree with my position: I can run for reelection," he said in October.
In a related development, Zubiri told reporters at a news conference at the Senate that "(Pimentel) was not able to serve the full term, not even a major portion of the term."
Zubiri says of his former rival: "I think he should be able to seek reelection."
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