REMOTE VOTING AS INSTITUTIONAL CHECKMATE: The Ontological Persistence of Representation Against the Politics of Absence
REMOTE VOTING AS INSTITUTIONAL CHECKMATE: The Ontological Persistence of Representation Against the Politics of Absence Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ May 31, 2026 In the theater of Philippine Senate proceedings, where ritual, quorum, and physical presence have long served as both sacrament and strategy, Senator Rodante Marcoleta’s motion to institutionalize remote participation and online voting emerges not merely as a procedural adjustment but as a profound ontological intervention. It invokes the living letter of the Senate’s own rules—specifically **Section 136, Rule XLIV**—to assert that the body politic need not be chained to the physical body of its representatives. This is no mere technocratic convenience; it is a philosophical reclamation of democratic substance over theatrical form. ### The Legal Ontology of Self-Amendment Section 136, in its second paragraph, carries a deceptively simple yet constitutionally potent declaration: > “These R...
