Senator Koko Pimentel III may run “alone” in the 2013 senatorial race under the Partido
Demokratikong Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban).
PDP is half of the United Nationalist Alliance (UNA), a newly-formed political coalition with
former President Joseph Estrada’s Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino (PMP).
“There’s no reason for me to rush. I’m not party-less,” Pimentel said.
Pimentel has no official “suitors” at the
moment after he formally bolted the UNA, after Estrada said that UNA would have former Senator Migz Zubiri, Pimentel's arch-rival, in its 2013 senatorial slate..
Pimentel on said he was not in a hurry to join any
other political party as a possible guest candidate, noting that the
filing of certificates of candidacy for next year’s midterm elections
would not start until October.
LP interested
Officials of the Liberal Party (LP) had publicly expressed interest
in getting Pimentel soon after he had announced that he was leaving UNA.
Pimentel said he could not “in conscience” run with former Senator Juan
Miguel Zubiri under the same ticket.
Pimentel failed to serve the first four years of his six-year term
after Zubiri was declared winner of the 12th and final spot in the 2007
senatorial race. Zubiri resigned in August last year amid an election
fraud investigation, and months before the Senate Electoral Tribunal was
to rule on Pimentel’s election protest against him.
‘I will survive’
Pimentel said none from the LP or the Nacionalista Party of Senator
Manuel Villar had formally approached him in connection with the 2013
senatorial elections. He said he was ready for what he described as a
“worst-scenario” of having to run only under his own party, the
PDP-Laban.
“I would look lonely, but I won’t feel lonely,” he said. “With no
other party helping me out, I think I would still survive. I have to
survive but if I don’t, that’s the price I have to pay.”
Pimentel acknowledged the possibility that he might not get a slot in
other political parties should they decide to field a complete
senatorial lineup. Going by media reports, he said the LP, for instance,
appeared to have a lot of prospective candidates of its own.
“But that should not affect me because I’m not party-less,” he said.
Pimentel said getting the endorsement of any of UNA’s Big 3 was also not out of the question.
He said he could still secure the backing of Estrada, Vice President
Jejomar Binay, or Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile—but only if UNA
would not come up with a complete slate.
“I can approach them individually, but of course it would depend on
them,” he said, agreeing with Enrile’s previous statement that the
Senate President could only do so after he had fulfilled his party
obligations.
“I would completely understand that. As a party leader, I would also do the same,” Pimentel said.PDI
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