Old-style politics, ads score
win, ruin of party-list groups

IN A move that bewildered political analysts, 66 party-list groups went the way of mainstream political organizations during the three-month campaign period for the recently concluded polls and placed tri-media ads worth a total of P597.54 million, based on data from the media monitoring agency Nielsen.

But some big ad spenders among the party-list groups may be in for a very rude surprise themselves.

As it is, the 90.22-percent partial unofficial election returns tally of GMANews.TV reveals that at least 10 party-list groups that had a combined P187.77-million worth of TV airtime are unlikely to land seats in Congress.

Yet the same data indicate that 27 of the 43 party-list groups that have high chances of securing at least one seat in the House of Representatives did not even spend a single centavo for a TV ad.

Of all the ads credited to party-list groups, those on TV accounted for 89 percent with P534.57 million. Radio ads made up 10 percent, with P57.31 million, and print ads one percent, with P5.67 million. These sums already reflect the 30-, 20-, and 10-percent discounts broadcast and media entities are legally required to apply for TV, radio and print, respectively. (See Table 1)

Table 1. Tri-Media Ad Expenditure of Party-List Groups by Rank

Rank Party-List Group TV1 Radio2 Print3 Total
1 PBA PARTY-LIST 78,132,128.25 730,444.80 1,697,233.50 80,559,806.55
2 KAAKBAY PARTY-LIST 69,774,828.75 0.00 0.00 69,774,828.75
3 AGHAM PARTY-LIST 59,340,574.15 1,027,440.00 0.00 60,368,014.15
4 AKBAYAN PARTY-LIST 52,922,850.75 67,200.00 0.00 52,990,050.75
5 AAPS PARTY-LIST 48,892,641.05 0.00 0.00 48,892,641.05
6 BUHAY PARTY-LIST 38,728,710.35 0.00 0.00 38,728,710.35
7 PEP PARTY-LIST 35,810,223.35 0.00 178,978.50 35,989,201.85
8 AGAP PARTY-LIST 29,603,849.00 0.00 279,265.50 29,883,114.50
9 BUTIL PARTY-LIST 29,398,644.00 0.00 0.00 29,398,644.00
10 AKAP-BATA PARTY-LIST 24,340,972.45 0.00 0.00 24,340,972.45
11 LPGMA PARTY-LIST 0.00 20,460,115.20 48,600.00 20,508,715.20
12 AKB AKO BICOL PARTY-LIST 16,138,835.90 1,778,340.80 0.00 17,917,176.70
13 AN WARAY PARTY-LIST 6,678,816.10 6,315,792.00 1,802.70 12,996,410.80
14 ALAY BUHAY PARTY-LIST 10,435,217.65 732,768.00 1,361,084.45 12,529,070.10
15 KABATAAN PARTY-LIST 8,572,553.00 485,729.60 0.00 9,058,282.60
16 BAGONG HENERASYON PARTY-LIST 7,372,507.45 0.00 253,303.20 7,625,810.65
17 KASANGGA PARTY-LIST 1,971,332.00 3,289,307.20 0.00 5,260,639.20
18 KAKUSA PARTY-LIST 4,027,485.00 0.00 0.00 4,027,485.00
19 AMS PARTY-LIST 2,801,470.10 977,011.20 0.00 3,778,481.30
20 DIWA PARTY-LIST 547,592.10 2,907,840.00 49,449.60 3,504,881.70
21 AAMBIS PARTY-LIST 0.00 3,446,080.00 0.00 3,446,080.00
22 KALINGA PARTY-LIST 0.00 3,362,400.00 0.00 3,362,400.00
23 BANDILA PARTY-LIST 2,890,206.00 0.00 0.00 2,890,206.00
24 CIBAC PARTY-LIST 2,711,209.60 8,640.00 0.00 2,719,849.60
25 ABANTE KA PARTY-LIST 2,154,655.80 0.00 0.00 2,154,655.80
26 ANAK-PAWIS PARTY-LIST 0.00 1,399,662.40 0.00 1,399,662.40
27 ABA ILONGGO PARTY-LIST 0.00 1,322,400.00 4,050.00 1,326,450.00
28 COOP-NATCCO PARTY-LIST 0.00 912,000.00 154,797.30 1,066,797.30
29 CONSLA PARTY-LIST 0.00 1,038,880.00 0.00 1,038,880.00
30 ABAMIN PARTY-LIST 0.00 959,400.00 27,540.00 986,940.00
31 ABS PARTY-LIST 0.00 839,520.00 0.00 839,520.00
32 ASAHAN MO PARTLIST 738,705.00 0.00 0.00 738,705.00
33 1 ANG PAMILYA PARTY-LIST 0.00 696,960.00 0.00 696,960.00
34 KATRIBU PARTY-LIST 0.00 660,800.00 0.00 660,800.00
35 BAYAN MUNA PARTY-LIST 0.00 656,828.00 0.00 656,828.00
36 KAAGAPAY PARTY-LIST 0.00 580,704.00 0.00 580,704.00
37 ATING COOP PARTY-LIST 0.00 560,000.00 0.00 560,000.00
38 ABONO PARTY-LIST 0.00 165,600.00 231,012.00 396,612.00
39 AHON PINOY PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 363,430.80 363,430.80
40 GABRIELA WOMEN’S PARTY-LIST 0.00 334,480.80 0.00 334,480.80
41 ABAKADA PARTY-LIST 0.00 320,320.00 0.00 320,320.00
42 ANAK MINDANAW PARTY-LIST 313,632.00 0.00 0.00 313,632.00
43 AA KASOSYO PARTY-LIST 0.00 313,440.00 0.00 313,440.00
44 KASAMA PARTY-LIST 0.00 310,272.00 0.00 310,272.00
45 TUCP PARTY-LIST 0.00 204,240.00 63,769.50 268,009.50
46 AGBIAG PARTY-LIST 222,750.00 0.00 0.00 222,750.00
47 ORAGON PARTY-LIST 0.00 100,396.80 73,872.00 174,268.80
48 BAYANI PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 168,642.00 168,642.00
49 ABROAD PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 168,282.00 168,282.00
50 1ST PRISA PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 154,142.10 154,142.10
51 BANTAY PARTY-LIST 0.00 126,720.00 0.00 126,720.00
52 ABP-BICOLNON PARTY-LIST 0.00 92,160.00 9,787.50 101,947.50
53 ANG LADLAD PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 99,684.00 99,684.00
54 ALE PARTY-LIST 49,500.00 0.00 44,203.50 93,703.50
55 ADD TRIBAL PARTY-LIST 0.00 76,800.00 0.00 76,800.00
56 SENIOR CITIZENS PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 73,299.60 73,299.60
57 ANAD PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 56,826.00 56,826.00
58 ANAKALUSUGAN PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 33,831.00 33,831.00
59 AKMA-PTM PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 27,432.00 27,432.00
60 ACT TEACHERS PARTY-LIST 0.00 22,795.20 0.00 22,795.20
61 APO PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 20,412.00 20,412.00
62 APEC PARTY-LIST 0.00 16,396.80 0.00 16,396.80
63 PCL PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 14,094.00 14,094.00
64 VFP PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 5,832.00 5,832.00
65 KATUTUBO PARTY-LIST 0.00 5,760.00 0.00 5,760.00
66 ABO PARTY-LIST 0.00 0.00 1,296.00 1,296.00
Grand Total 534,571,889.80 57,305,644.80 5,665,952.75 597,543,487.35

All figures in Philippine Peso.

1 – Indicative Ad Cost for TV (less 30 percent)

2 – Indicative Ad Cost for Radio (less 20 percent)

3 – Indicative Ad Cost for Print (less 10 percent)

Source: Nielsen Media, May 2010
Note: Ad expenditure for radio and print covering May 1 to 8, 2010 is not included.

Marginalized?

Analysts point out that as representatives of marginalized sectors of society, party-list organizations are not expected to incur much campaign expenses since they are assumed to have small budgets – if at all.

Too, they are expected to pull in their resources and effort on the ground, where their constituencies are.

“The very essence of a party-list group is that it has a recognized constituency already,” says campaign analyst Ronald Jabal. “Kilala ka na ng sector (The sector already knows you). Constituency is already built.”

“Normally, a party-list group would have already identified its baluartes, or the areas that will deliver the votes,” political analyst Ramon Casiple also says. This is why, he says, a “genuine” and not “peke” party-list group would find it fairly easy to get the minimum required percentage of total votes for it to have a seat in Congress.

Analysts, though, concede that some party-list groups were pushed to placing numerous ads this time around in a bid to stand out from the other 186 party-list names listed in the ballot.

Jabal also says that some groups may have been aiming to get more than one seat and therefore thought they would have a better chance to do this with ads.

Party-list groups are allowed to get the maximum of three seats in Congress proportional to the percentage of votes that they will get.

But as even mainstream political parties have found out, ads can only do so much. PR professional Jones Campos points this out as well, adding, “(Ads) can create awareness, but you have to know your target market.”

Winning, losing

To identify the party-list groups that are likely to win, PCIJ sought help from Ateneo de Manila University mathematics professor Dr. Felix Muga II, who is doing a running computation of the partial and unofficial results of the party-list polls.

A senior fellow of nongovernmental organization Center for People Empowerment in Governance (CenPEG), Muga has also written several articles on the party-list proportional representation voting system.

Muga applied the so-called “Carpio formula” in which party-list groups that garner a minimum of two percent of the total valid votes cast for the party-list elections are qualified to have a seat in Congress. Parties with less than two percent of the votes may also receive a slot if there is a second round of seat allocation.

Table 2. Party-list groups not likely to win with TV ads

Party-List Group Total Indicative Ad Cost
(in peso)
KAAKBAY 69,774,828.75
AAPS 48,892,641.05
PEP 35,989,201.85
AKAP-BATA 24,340,972.45
AMS 3,778,481.30
BANDILA 2,890,206.00
ABANTE KA 2,154,655.80
ASAHAN MO 738,705.00
ANAK MINDANAO 313,632.00
ALE 93,703.50

Source: Nielsen Media, May 2010 / 90.22-percent partial unofficial election returns tally, GMANews.TV

The 10 party-list groups that aired TV ads but are not likely to get seats in Congress based on the 90.22-percent election returns tally are Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan / All Filipino Democratic Movement (Kaakbay), Association of Administrators, Professionals and Seniors (AAPS), Parents Enabling Parents (PEP), Akap-Bata, Alyansa ng Media at Showbiz (AMS), Bagong Bayan ng Nagtataguyod ng Demokratikong Ideolohiya at Layunin (Bandila), Abante Katutubo (Abante Ka), Advocates for Special Children and Handicapped Movement (Asahan Mo), Anak Mindanao (AMIN), and the Association of Laborers and Employees (ALE). (See Table 2)

The combined P187.77 million worth of TV ads of these groups represents 31 percent of the total ad expenditure of party-list organizations. Reelectionist AMIN is the only veteran in the group; the rest are new contenders in the party-list elections.

Ads apparently failed to raise awareness about these newcomers, as well as their respective advocacies. Four – Kaakbay, AAPS, Akap-Bata, and PEP — even spent tens of millions of pesos each for TV ads, to no avail.

Casiple offers that paid ads might not be that effective in capturing the market vote because it will be like competing in a costly air war where presidential and other national candidates already dominate.

Table 3. Party-list groups likely to win with TV ads

Party-List Group Votes1 Possible No.
of Seats
Total Indicative Ad Cost
(in peso)
AKO BICOL 1,401,939 3 17,917,176.70
BUHAY 1,177,866 2 38,728,710.35
AKBAYAN 986,799 2 52,990,050.75
AN WARAY 640,755 2 12,996,410.80
CIBAC 608,692 2 2,719,849.60
AGAP 482,359 1 29,883,114.50
BUTIL FARMERS PARTY 470,343 1 29,398,644.00
KABATAAN PARTYLIST 389,044 1 9,058,282.60
BAGONG HENERASYON 274,289 1 7,625,810.65
ANG KASANGGA 268,390 1 5,260,639.20
PBA 239,214 1 80,559,806.55
AGBIAG 237,657 1 222,750.00
AGHAM 224,948 1 60,368,014.15
DIWA 217,250 1 3,504,881.70
KAKUSA 208,486 1 4,027,485.00
ALAY BUHAY 153,606 1 12,529,070.10

Source: Nielsen Media, May 2010
1 90.22-percent partial unofficial election returns tally, GMANews.TV

Lucky 16

Yet at least 16 party-list organizations proved luckier with their TV ads and now look headed for Congress.

Their tri-media ad expenditure amounts to P367.79 million or 62 percent of the total ad spend of all party-list groups. But the bulk of the ad total of these went to TV commercials, which reached P346.81 million in value.

The 16 party-list likely winners that had TV ads are Ako Bicol Political Party (AKB), Buhay Hayaan Yumabong (Buhay), Akbayan! Citizen’s Action Party (Akbayan), An Waray, Citizens’ Battle Against Corruption (CIBAC), Agricultural Sector Alliance of the Philippines (AGAP), Butil Farmers Party (Butil), Kabataan, Bagong Henerasyon, Kasangga sa Kaunlaran (Ang Kasangga), Puwersa ng Bayaning Atleta (PBA), Kapatiran ng mga Nakakulong na Walang Sala (Kakusa), Agham at Teknolohiya Para sa Mamamayan (AGHAM), Democratic Independent Workers’ Association (Diwa), Alay Buhay Community Development Foundation (Alay Buhay), and Agbiag! Timpuyog Ilocano (Agbiag). (See Table 3)

Newcomer Ako Bicol is even the top vote-getter with 1,401,939 votes and is very likely to get the maximum number of three seats in Congress.

Claiming to advocate progress and development in the Bicol region, Ako Bicol incurred a total of P17.92 million in political ads. Ninety percent of that amount or about P16.14 million went to airing TV ads while P1.78 million was used to buy spots in various radio stations.

Reelectionist Buhay of El Shaddai leader Brother Mike Velarde is at No. 3 with 1,177,866 votes and has chances of getting at least two seats. The group spent P38.73 million in ads, all of them for TV.

Akbayan, another reelectionist, is next with 986,799 votes, with the possibility of getting two seats as well. The party spent P52.99 million on ads.

Table 4. Party-list groups likely to win with no TV ads

Party-List Group Votes1 Possible No.
of Seats
Total Indicative Ad Cost
(in peso)
SENIOR CITIZENS 1,192,875 3 73,299.60
GABRIELA 938,857 2 334,480.80
COOP-NATCCO 847,155 2 1,066,797.30
BAYAN MUNA 694,864 2 656,828.00
1-CARE 693,620 2 0.00
ABONO 675,760 2 396,612.00
A TEACHER 565,902 2 0.00
ABC 439,633 1 0.00
ANAKPAWIS 412,141 1 1,399,662.40
LPGMA 386,095 1 20,508,715.20
ABAMIN 353,373 1 986,940.00
ACT TEACHERS 338,360 1 22,795.20
AAMBIS 316,783 1 3,446,080.00
YACAP 288,212 1 0.00
APEC 282,774 1 16,396.80
ANAD 255,405 1 56,826.00
ANG GALING PINOY 250,696 1 0.00
ABS 241,024 1 839,520.00
TUCP 226,657 1 268,009.50
ALAGAD 214,808 1 0.00
KALINGA 212,299 1 3,362,400.00
1-UTAK 205,535 1 0.00
ALIF 200,543 1 0.00
AVE 198,816 1 0.00
1-ANG PAMILYA 198,323 1 696,960.00
ATING-COOP 160,738 1 560,000.00
AANGAT TAYO 155,242 1 0.00

Source: Nielsen Media, May 2010
1 90.22-percent partial unofficial election returns tally, GMANews.TV

Winning without ads

But the rest of the 43 party-list groups that might win either spent relatively smaller amounts on ads or none at all. Among these is reelectionist Coalition of Associations of Senior Citizens in the Philippines, which is currently second in terms of the number of votes (1,192,875).

Led by incumbent Representative and lawyer Godofredo V. Arquiza, Senior Citizens is very likely to get the three seats even with just P73,299.60 worth of ads. Nielsen data show that these ads were even in print, and came to a grand total of 17 in all.

Groups that may find two seats reserved for them include Gabriela, Cooperative NATCCO Network Party (Coop-NATCCO), Bayan Muna, 1st Consumers Alliance for Rural Energy (1-CARE), and Abono. None of the five aired any TV ad during the campaign period as well.

According to Nielsen, 1-CARE did not even spend a single peso on ads. As for Coop-NATCCO, Gabriela, Bayan Muna, and Abono, the media monitoring agency lists their ad expenditure at P1.07 million (radio and print), P334,480.80 (radio), P656,828 (radio), and P396,612 (radio and print), respectively.

Groups that are likely to win at least one seat even without any TV ad are Advocacy for Teacher Empowerment Through Action, Cooperation and Harmony Towards Educational Reforms (A TEACHER), Alliance for Barangay Concerns Party (ABC), Anak-Pawis, LPG Marketers Association (LPGMA), Abante Mindanao (ABAMIN), ACT Teachers, Ang Asosasyon Sang Mangunguma Nga Bisaya – Owa Mangunuma (AAMBIS-OWA), Youth Against Corruption and Poverty (YACAP), Association of Philippine Electric Cooperatives (APEC), Alliance for Nationalism and Democracy (ANAD), Ang Galing Pinoy, Arts, Business and Science Professionals (ABS), Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP), Kalinga-Advocacy for Social Empowerment and Nation Building Through Easing Poverty (Kalinga), 1-United Transport Koalisyon (1-UTAK), Ang Laban ng Indiginong Filipino (ALIF), Alliance of Volunteer Educators (AVE), Una ang Pamilya (1-Ang Pamilya), Adhikaing Tinataguyod ng Kooperatiba (Ating Koop), Aangat Tayo (AT), and Alagad Party-List. (See Table 4)

Party-list 1-UTAK, Aangat Tayo, ABC, Alagad, ALIF, Ang Galing Pinoy, AVE, A TEACHER and YACAP did not spend for any ad at all.

Effective ground war

Campaign analyst Jabal says that the success of these groups despite their relatively modest (and sometimes nearly nonexistent) expenditures shows how effective their campaign on the ground was carried out.

Then again, majority or 16 of the 27 groups that did not air TV ads hold current positions in Congress. Incumbents may feel they have less need for ads since they are already established in their respective sectors and have gathered supporters over their years in public office.

PR man Campos also comments, “Naturally, incumbent groups would win because they have the base already. Party-list elections are mass-based and primarily dependent on supporters.”

Jabal himself says that incumbents gain advantage by way of its pork barrel allocation. This allows some “patron politics” to take place, which Jabal refers to as the “anathema of party-list groups.”

“They have little more to spend around,” he says, noting that when election time comes, some voters will vote for a particular candidate because they “received help” from him or her.

As for the 11 newcomers, Campos says, “They have probably been preparing ever since, finding out where they can get the votes they need.”

He also says that the two-percent rule serves as a helpful guide for party-list candidates.

“More or less, groups would have an indication of their chances prior to elections because they would know their numbers,” explains Campos. “So maghahabol ‘yan para makarami pa ng boto (They would thus work on their strategies to get the rest of the numbers they need).” –PCIJ, May 2010