The year 2026 is shaping up to be a pivotal moment in Philippine democracy. Two major electoral exercises loom on the horizon: the elections in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) and the Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections (BSKE). Together, they will determine leadership at both the regional and the most grassroots levels of governance. These impending elections underscore a renewed urgency for voter registration, elevating it from a routine administrative requirement into a vital act of democratic participation.
To safeguard the integrity of these electoral exercises, the Commission on Elections (COMELEC), through Resolution No. 11177, has resumed the system of continuing voter registration. The objectives are clear and deliberate: to ensure a clean, complete, permanent, and updated list of voters. Central to this effort is the mandatory capture of biometric data, which serves as a crucial safeguard against fraud, double registration, and identity manipulation—persistent threats that undermine public confidence in the electoral system.
Recognizing the practical challenges faced by many voters, COMELEC has taken steps to make registration more accessible. Satellite registration sites have been established in barangays, schools, malls, and other convenient locations, allowing more Filipinos to register without incurring any cost. Limited online filing has likewise been introduced for applications involving reactivation and other related requests, reflecting an attempt to balance accessibility with security.
Accessibility, however, does not mean automatic approval. All applications for registration, reactivation, transfer, or correction of entries remain subject to scrutiny. They are reviewed through hearings conducted by the Electoral Registration Board (ERB), which convenes quarterly to hear and decide on these applications. For non-BARMM areas, ERB hearings are scheduled after each registration period—on January 19, April 13, and June 1, 2026. For BARMM, the hearing is scheduled on June 1, 2025. These hearings determine whether applications should be approved or disapproved, following due process.
This structured hearing process is more than a procedural formality. It functions as a critical checkpoint that allows stakeholders, citizens’ arms, and concerned parties to examine and, if necessary, oppose questionable applications. In doing so, it helps safeguard the integrity of the voters’ list and reinforces the principle that elections must be both accessible and credible.
The system directly addresses long-standing electoral problems: flying voters, multiple registrants, and the clustering of voters under identical or fictitious addresses—old tactics that continue to erode public trust and distort electoral outcomes. The combination of biometric validation, public notice, and ERB hearings serves as a strong firewall against these abuses. It is a reminder that electoral integrity is not achieved by a single measure, but by layers of protection working together.
As the 2026 elections draw nearer, the message is clear. Citizens must register early, verify their records, and remain vigilant. Democracy does not begin on election day. It begins with registration. It is preserved through constant scrutiny and sustained by an engaged and watchful citizenry. The call, therefore, is not only to vote—but to actively defend the integrity of the democratic process itself.




