Commission on Elections membership In September 2020, President
Rodrigo Duterte appointed lawyer Michael Peloton as commissioner, filling in for the seat vacated by
Luie Tito Guia's retirement. As this was a regular appointment as opposed to an ad interim one made when Congress is in recess, Peloton had to be confirmed by the
Commission on Appointments before he could take office. In November, Duterte appointed
Davao del Norte election supervisor
Aimee Ferolino-Ampoloquio to the seat vacated by Al Parreño. By October 2021, there were reports that Duterte would appoint Melvin Matibag, the secretary-general of the
PDP–Laban faction preferred by the former, as chairman. Matibag denied he knew about talks of him being appointed as chairman. Several weeks later, Duterte appointed Rey Bulay, chief prosecutor of
Manila, as commissioner, with a term ending in 2027, replacing Peloton, who was rejected by the Commission on Appointments. Bulay was accepted by the Commission on Appointments on December 1. Chairman
Sheriff Abas and commissioners
Rowena Guanzon and
Antonio Kho Jr. retired on February 2, 2022. Over a month later, acting presidential spokesperson
Martin Andanar announced the appointments of
Saidamen Balt Pangarungan as chairman, and George Erwin Garcia and Aimee Neri as commissioners. Garcia, who lists presidential candidate
Bongbong Marcos as a previous client, promised to inhibit (i.e., recuse) himself from cases involving his former clients, including Marcos.
Voter registration Voter registration began on January 20, 2020, and was scheduled to end on September 30, 2021. The commission expects 4.3 million eligible voters to register. Registration was suspended in some areas in
Cavite,
Laguna and
Batangas due to the
Taal Volcano eruption, and in
Makilala, Cotabato due to
an earthquake. However, even before registration for 2022 opened, many voters enrolled early between August 1 and September 30, 2019, ahead of the
barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections. These were initially scheduled for May 11, 2020, but were eventually postponed after the general election to December 5, 2022. On March 10, 2020, the commission suspended voter registration in the entire country due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines. By June, the commission announced its initial resumption on July 1. However, the commission suspended voter registration anew up to August 31. The commission later stated on August 15 that voter registration would resume on September 1 in areas under
general community quarantine (GCQ) or modified general community quarantine (MGCQ). Areas under enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) and modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ) will have their registration suspended. Registration in the province of
Palawan was also suspended due to the
plebiscite to divide it into three provinces on March 13, 2021. The plebiscite was originally set for May 11, 2020, but was rescheduled due to the pandemic. In some areas, almost eight months of voter registration were lost due to lockdowns. There were calls to extend voter registration after September 30, 2021, but the commission rejected this, saying that this will delay other election-related activities. The commission instead allowed voter registration to continue in areas under MECQ starting on September 6, with longer hours and in malls. With barely a week before the close of registration, the Senate passed a bill on
second reading extending registration for another month. The House of Representatives passed a similar bill days later, also on second reading. Earlier, both chambers separately passed resolutions urging the commission to extend registration, while the Senate threatened to cut the commission's 2022 budget if registration was not extended. On the eve of the end of registration, Sheriff Abas announced that they approved extending registration from October 11 to 30 for voters in the Philippines, and from October 1 to 14 for overseas voters. On the same day, President Duterte signed into law extending registration for 30 days from when it was made effective. After extended registration ended, the commission announced that 400,000 people registered in October. The commission tallied 65,745,529 voters in the Philippines, with
Calabarzon being the
region with the most voters, with 9.1 million. The total was almost 4 million more compared to
2019. By January 2022, the commission announced that they will print 67,442,714 ballots, with 1,697,202 of these for overseas
absentee voting. The commission later released per-location total of registered voters, with
Cebu (including
independent cities associated with it) as the most vote-rich
province,
Quezon City as the most vote-rich
city, and Calabarzon as the most vote-rich region. In connection to the
2021 Southeast Asian Games which were held in Vietnam from May 12 to 23, 2022, the
Philippine Sports Commission lobbied the commission to allow the participants to vote as local absentee voters. The commission denied the request, saying that unless a participant is a government official or employee, a member of either the
Philippine National Police or
Armed Forces of the Philippines who was assigned in places where one is not a voter, or media covering the games, the athlete cannot vote as a local absentee voter.
Election automation and logistics Camarines Sur Representative
Luis Raymund Villafuerte proposed to use a hybrid electoral system in 2022, or manual counting of votes, then electronic transmission of results. This is in contrast to the automated counting and transmission system
used since 2010. He cited 40 lawsuits on the current system used by the Commission on Elections as evidence to shift away from automated counting of votes. President Rodrigo Duterte suggested junking
Smartmatic as the automation partner for future elections because of problems from the
previous election. However, Smartmatic expressed its interest to participate in future elections. In May 2021, the commission awarded the contract to conduct automated elections, specifically the software that will be used in the voting machines, to Smartmatic. Administration of logistics related to the election was awarded to
F2 Logistics in August 2021. A former commissioner questioned the deal because of the company's association with
Dennis Uy, who donated to
Duterte's 2016 presidential campaign. The commission stated that the deal with F2 Logistics is legal and valid.
Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic In April 2020,
COMELEC Commissioner Rowena Guanzon proposed
voting by mail as an option in the elections, mainly due to the COVID-19 pandemic. By May 2021, Commissioner Antonio Kho Jr. said that voting hours would be extended, as the eight-hour timeframe given for previous elections could not be used any longer. As for multiple days of voting, Kho said that only a law passed by Congress would allow that to happen. Senator
Migz Zubiri, in a
privileged speech, disclosed that he commissioned a
Pulse Asia survey in July 2021 which said that 46% of voters will not vote if
COVID-19 cases in their
barangay are high on election day, with 35% willing to vote and 19% undecided. Zubiri questioned if the public would accept the results if less than a majority of voters turned out to vote.
Postponement of the elections due to COVID-19 The 1987
Constitution of the Philippines states that
unless otherwise provided by law, the election of members of Congress is held on the second Monday of May. According to Republic Act No. 7166, the election for national, provincial, city and municipal positions are held on the second Monday of May, since 1992, and every three years thereafter, with the president and vice president being elected in six-year intervals. It has been three years since the 2019 general election and six years since the
2016 presidential election, and with no law postponing the election to date, this meant that the election was scheduled to be held on May 9, 2022. However, some congressmen and government officials suggested postponing the election due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines. Sherriff Abas, the chairman of the commission, said that it had not entered their minds, that the terms are fixed, adding that they are planning on having the vote over two days. Postponement is only possible if Congress passes a law permitting such, and if it is approved by the people in a plebiscite. The commission has no part in scheduling the election outside from what is mandated by the constitution. A group called Coalition for Life and Democracy petitioned the commission to postpone the elections due to the ongoing pandemic. The group conceded that only Congress can postpone the election, and that their petition contained different dates to hold the election: the body of the petition called for it to be rescheduled to May 2023, but the prayer in it called for May 2025. Another petition that would affect the election's date was filed on December 31 by the Cusi wing of PDP–Laban. Their petition aimed to re-open the filing of candidacies, and to suspend the printing of ballots. The commission tackled both petitions, and announced that both were unanimously dismissed on January 12.
Postponement of the Bangsamoro Parliament election In November 2020, the 80-person
Bangsamoro Parliament passed a resolution urging Congress to extend the transition from June 2022 to 2025. If Congress agreed, no election would be held. By July 2021, Senator Migz Zubiri said that postponing the Bangsamoro election to 2025 is likely. In September, the Senate passed a bill postponing the election to 2025. A few days later, the House of Representatives passed their own version of the bill. The
conference committee approved the Senate version, giving the winner of the 2022 presidential election the power of appointing the next transitional parliament. Duterte then signed the bill into law, postponing the election to 2025. == Electoral system ==