(UPDATE) THE Commission on Elections (Comelec) has deferred the reconstitution of parliamentary districts in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) due to lack of time.
Comelec Chairman George Erwin Garcia said on Thursday that with BARMM elections scheduled on Oct. 13, Comelec could not wait much longer for the passage of Parliament Bill 351, or the Bangsamoro Parliamentary Redistricting Act of 2025, which is still to be signed by the parliament speaker and the chief minister.
Garcia said the commission en banc has deferred the reconstitution to the next BARMM parliamentary elections “due to its impractical applications considering the time-bound milestone preparatory activities, onset of election and campaign periods, and to avoid voter confusion and disenfranchisement in the Bangsamoro Region.”

He said the commission expects some opposition to its decision, but it is ready to defend it.
“If they want to question, then so be it,” Garcia said.
“No changes will be made on the ballots, in our preparations, the list of candidates. Our plans on the deployment of ballots, machines, election paraphernalia, among others, will stay,” Garcia said., This news data comes from:http://rnae-upv-tqu-nwg.gyglfs.com
The Comelec has imposed a gun ban in the region following the start of the election period on Aug, 14, which will run until Aug. 28.
Comelec defers BARMM district reconstitution
The campaign period started on Aug. 28.
Comelec defers BARMM district reconstitution
The printing of the 2.3 million ballots also resumed on Aug. 28 after it was temporarily stopped on Aug. 21, a day before the scheduled start of printing by the National Printing Office.
But President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed another law resetting the BARMM polls to Oct. 13.
- Pope Leo XIV to Israeli president: 2-state solution needed to end Gaza war
- Palace hits Discayas over ‘misinformation’ on PH film center project
- LBC Express Holdings top executive to retire in Oct.
- Putin threatens to target Western troops in Ukraine
- Recto: No exemption for US tech firms from digital tax
- DPWH engineer denies role in Bulacan flood control ‘ghost projects’
- Kanlaon Volcano spews ash
- Gasoline, diesel price hikes seen next week
- Trump moves to cut more foreign aid, risking shutdown
- Dizon to abolish DPWH internal special investigation team created to look into the flood control anomalies