MANILA (AFP) – The Philippines’ highest court overturned a ban on voting machine company Smartmatic that prevented it from bidding for election contracts, court documents showed yesterday.
Manila’s poll administrator Commission on Elections (Comelec) imposed the ban against Smartmatic Philippines Inc in November, after the company was implicated in a corruption probe launched by the United States (US) government.
The ban meant the local unit of the London-headquartered firm was not allowed to take part in the tender for the 2025 midterm elections, which was later awarded to another company.
The ban stemmed from an investigation launched by the US Justice Department against former Comelec chairman Andres Bautista for “receiving bribes in exchange for awarding a contract for election machines to Smartmatic Corp”, according to Comelec.
Smartmatic, which was involved in the last five Philippine national elections between 2010 and 2022, went to court last December to challenge the ban.
The Supreme Court ruled that the Comelec had “committed grave abuse of discretion” by sanctioning Smartmatic, according to a summary of the decision released yesterday.
But it did not scrap the results of the 2025 tender for the PHP18.8 billion (USD329 million) 2025 election system contract, which had excluded Smartmatic. In a statement, Smartmatic hailed the ruling as “a significant victory for fairness and the rule of law”.