Actor Poe cleared to run for RP president
Actor Poe cleared to run for RP president
Actor Poe
cleared
to run for
RP president
Reuters
Manila
Fernando Poe Jr. is eligible to run for Philippine president in
May's election, the Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday, handing the
film star a critical victory in his bid to unseat President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
Poe supporters danced jubilantly at his campaign headquarters
after hearing the ruling, which can still be appealed.
"Justice prevails," said Butch Cadsawan, president of one
movement supporting Poe.
A transcript of the court's decision released to reporters
said its justices had ruled by eight votes to five to support a
previous ruling by election body Comelec that Poe was a natural-
born Filipino qualified to run for office.
"An hour ago, the Supreme Court decided to dismiss the
petition to disqualify Fernando Poe Jr, holding Fernando Poe Jr
as a natural-born Filipino qualified to run for president," court
spokesman Ismael Khan told reporters.
The long uncertainty over Poe's status has kept the peso near
its record low of 56.35 to the dollar. Despite the ruling, the
market is unlikely to find much relief in the short term.
The lawyers who filed the petitions against Poe have 15 days
to file a motion for reconsideration. Arroyo has denied being
behind the petitions, saying she thinks Poe should run.
Poe boasts massive support from the movie-loving poor for his
roles as a champion of the oppressed who lets his fists and guns
do most of the talking.
But a Poe presidency is viewed with anxiety by markets worried
about his lack of economic or political experience.
The prospect of mass unrest by his supporters if he was
disqualified had loomed as an even bigger worry.
Earlier, SWAT teams with assault rifles and riot squads backed
by water cannon had surrounded the Supreme Court in central
Manila as police restricted traffic.
By late afternoon, there no signs of a major gathering of his
supporters, despite earlier reports of a massing of pro-Poe
backers.
Opinion polls show him neck-and-neck with President Gloria
Macapagal Arroyo as both run far ahead of four others seeking the
nation's highest office.
Ironically, many analysts viewed a "yes" verdict as positive
for Arroyo, who has struggled to establish her legitimacy in the
eyes of millions of poor after she rode a wave of anticorruption
protests to oust their hero Joseph Estrada, another ex-film star,
in early 2001.
But the verdict is sure to boost Poe's campaign, which had
been showing signs of flagging as doubts rose over his candidacy.