BANGSAMORO parliament. (BARMM)
DAVAO CITY – The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) Parliament passed on third and final reading on Tuesday Parliament Bill No. 415, a redistricting measure that will pave the way for the conduct of the region’s first parliamentary elections.
In a special session, the bill was passed through nominal voting. Forty-eight members voted yes, 19 voted no, and four abstained.
The law seeks to establish 32 single-member parliamentary districts, allocating seats to Basilan (four), Lanao del Sur (nine), Maguindanao del Norte (five), Maguindanao del Sur (five), Tawi-Tawi (four), the Special Geographic Area (two), and Cotabato City (three).
Parliament Bill No. 415 was authored by Member of Parliament Naguib Sinarimbo, along with nine other lawmakers.
The Bangsamoro government had to craft a new redistricting law after the Supreme Court ruled that Bangsamoro Autonomy Act (BAA) Nos. 58 and 77 were unconstitutional.
The SC ruled that BAA 77 violated the Bangsamoro Organic Law’s requirements of contiguity, compactness, adjacency, and minimum population for districts, and unconstitutionally granted Congress and the President powers over apportionment and interim appointments reserved exclusively to the Bangsamoro Parliament.
It said BAA 77 was enacted after the start of the election period, contrary to the Voter’s Registration Act.
The High Court added that implementing BAA 58 after Sulu’s exclusion was unconstitutional because it would result in a Parliament with fewer than the 32 district seats required under the BOL’s 80-seat composition.
With the enactment of the redistricting bill, it now awaits the signature of BARMM interim Chief Minister Abdulraof Macacua to become a law.
Last year, the Commission on Elections set a deadline for the Bangsamoro Parliament to pass a new districting law by Nov. 30, 2025.
According to the Comelec, the parliament should pass the districting law by Nov. 30, 2025 to comply with the Voters' Registration Act that states that no law modifying electoral districts shall be passed 120 days before the elections.
Initially, the Comelec set the election date on March 30, 2026.
However, the Bangsamoro government failed to comply with the deadline.
The poll body urged Congress to pass a law to reset the elections to November 2026.