To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

List of presidents of the Philippines by tickets

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Philippine presidents by tickets. The list contains the candidates for the offices of President of the Philippines and Vice President of the Philippines that their parties have nominated since 1935.

This list only includes the major parties and coalitions during the elections and their closest rivals during the elections. For full results and candidates, see the list of Philippine presidential elections.

From the Commonwealth period to the last election prior the declaration of martial law, the major parties always split their ticket: one candidate was from Luzon and another either from the Visayas or Mindanao (the so-called "North-South" ticket). In the post-martial law period, this has been less pronounced as most candidates have been from Luzon.[1] Only the elections in 2010, 2016, and 2022 have had a "North-South" ticket.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    4 512
    8 388
    1 089
    1 048 128
    5 483
  • List of presidents of the Philippines
  • List Of All Philippine Presidents (Timeline)
  • List of President of the Senate of the Philippines
  • Quick History Rundown of Philippine Presidents
  • PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES LIST

Transcription

List

This table includes presidential candidates who've either won 10% of the vote, or placed second, or whose vice presidential running mate won.

This doesn't include elections where only the presidency is on the ballot, nor candidates who had no running mates.

In 1935, there was no "administration ticket" as it was the first election, but the Nacionalista Party had control of the Philippine Legislature at this time, and was considered as the ruling party.

In 1992, there was no clear "administration ticket". Incumbent president Corazon Aquino endorsed the Lakas ticket of Fidel V. Ramos, but Congress was controlled by the LDP of Ramon Mitra, whom she originally endorsed. Both Lakas and LDP tickets are considered administration, while all other tickets were labeled as opposition tickets.

In 2022, the administration party, PDP–Laban, put up two presidential candidates in sequence, but both withdrew before ballots were printed.

Opposition tickets are ordered by number of votes for president.

Year Administration ticket Party Province or city Opposition ticket Party Province or city Opposition ticket Party Province or city
1935 Pres Manuel L. Quezon Nacionalista Tayabas Pres Emilio Aguinaldo National Socialist Cavite Pres Gregorio Aglipay Republican Ilocos Norte
VP Sergio Osmeña Nacionalista Cebu VP Raymundo Melliza National Socialist Iloilo VP Noberto Nabong Republican Manila
1941 Pres Manuel L. Quezon Nacionalista Tayabas Pres Juan Sumulong Popular Front Rizal
VP Sergio Osmeña Nacionalista Cebu VP Emilio Javier Popular Front Iloilo
Japan invades the Philippines in 1941, then the Commonwealth establishes a government in exile. Japan sets up the Second Philippine Republic in 1943, with Jose P. Laurel as president. Manuel L. Quezon died in 1944 and was succeeded by Sergio Osmeña. Allied forces invade the Philippines in 1944 and re-establishes the Commonwealth government in 1945, and Second Republic was dissolved later that year.
1946 Pres Sergio Osmeña Nacionalista Cebu Pres Manuel Roxas Liberal Capiz
VP Eulogio Rodriguez Nacionalista Rizal VP Elpidio Quirino Liberal Ilocos Sur
Philippines granted independence on July 4, 1946. Manuel Roxas died in 1949 and was succeeded by Elpidio Quirino.
1949 Pres Elpidio Quirino Liberal Ilocos Sur Pres Jose P. Laurel Nacionalista Batangas Pres José Avelino Liberal Samar
VP Fernando Lopez Liberal Iloilo VP Manuel Briones Nacionalista Cebu VP Vicente J. Francisco Liberal Cavite
1953 Pres Elpidio Quirino Liberal Ilocos Sur Pres Ramon Magsaysay Nacionalista Zambales Pres
VP José Yulo Liberal Negros Occidental VP Carlos P. Garcia Nacionalista Bohol VP
Ramon Magsaysay died in 1953 and was succeeded by Carlos P. Garcia.
1957 Pres Carlos P. Garcia Nacionalista Bohol Pres José Yulo Liberal Negros Occidental Pres Manuel Manahan Progressive Manila
VP José Laurel Jr. Nacionalista Batangas VP Diosdado Macapagal Liberal Pampanga VP Vicente Araneta Progressive Negros Occidental
1961 Pres Carlos P. Garcia Nacionalista Bohol Pres Diosdado Macapagal Liberal Pampanga
VP Gil Puyat Nacionalista Manila VP Emmanuel Pelaez Liberal Misamis Oriental
1965 Pres Diosdado Macapagal Liberal Pampanga Pres Ferdinand Marcos Nacionalista Ilocos Norte
VP Gerardo Roxas Liberal Capiz VP Fernando Lopez Nacionalista Iloilo
1969 Pres Ferdinand Marcos Nacionalista Ilocos Norte Pres Sergio Osmeña Jr. Liberal Cebu
VP Fernando Lopez Nacionalista Iloilo VP Genaro Magsaysay Liberal Zambales
Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law in 1971, ruled by decree, and won a presidential election in 1981.
1986 Pres Ferdinand Marcos KBL Ilocos Norte Pres Corazon Aquino UNIDO Tarlac
VP Arturo Tolentino KBL Manila VP Salvador Laurel UNIDO Batangas
People Power Revolution in 1986 deposed Ferdinand Marcos from power. Corazon Aquino assumed presidency after claiming victory in disputed election.
1992 Pres Fidel V. Ramos Lakas Pangasinan Pres Miriam Defensor Santiago PRP Iloilo Pres Danding Cojuangco NPC Tarlac
VP Emilio Osmeña Lakas Cebu City VP Ramon Magsaysay Jr. PRP Zambales VP Joseph Estrada NPC San Juan
Pres Ramon Mitra Jr. LDP Palawan Pres Imelda Marcos KBL Leyte Pres Jovito Salonga Liberal Pasig
VP Marcelo Fernan LDP Cebu VP Vicente Magsaysay KBL Zambales VP Aquilino Pimentel Jr. PDP–Laban Cagayan de Oro
1998 Pres Jose de Venecia Jr. Lakas Pangasinan Pres Joseph Estrada LAMMP San Juan Pres Raul Roco Aksyon Naga
VP Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Lakas Pampanga VP Edgardo Angara LAMMP Aurora VP Irene Santiago Aksyon Davao City
Pres Emilio Osmeña PROMDI Cebu City Pres Alfredo Lim Liberal Manila
VP Ismael Sueño PROMDI South Cotabato VP Serge Osmeña Liberal Cebu City
2001 EDSA Revolution deposed Joseph Estrada from power and was succeeded by Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
2004 Pres Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Lakas Pampanga Pres Fernando Poe Jr. KNP Pangasinan
VP Noli de Castro Independent Oriental Mindoro VP Loren Legarda KNP Malabon
2010 Pres Gilberto Teodoro Lakas Tarlac Pres Benigno Aquino III Liberal Tarlac Pres Joseph Estrada PMP San Juan
VP Edu Manzano Lakas Iloilo VP Mar Roxas Liberal Capiz VP Jejomar Binay PDP–Laban Makati
Pres Manuel Villar Nacionalista Las Piñas
VP Loren Legarda NPC Malabon
2016 Pres Mar Roxas Liberal Capiz Pres Rodrigo Duterte PDP–Laban Davao City Pres Grace Poe Independent San Juan
VP Leni Robredo Liberal Naga VP Alan Peter Cayetano Independent Taguig VP Francis Escudero Independent Sorsogon
Pres Jejomar Binay UNA Makati
VP Gregorio Honasan UNA Baguio
2022 Pres Bongbong Marcos PFP Ilocos Norte Pres Leni Robredo Independent Naga Pres Isko Moreno Aksyon Manila
VP Sara Duterte Lakas Davao City VP Francis Pangilinan Liberal Cavite VP Willie Ong Aksyon Makati
Pres Manny Pacquiao PROMDI Sarangani Pres Panfilo Lacson Reporma (later Independent) Cavite
VP Lito Atienza PROMDI Manila VP Tito Sotto NPC Quezon City

Per election

This only includes the top two or three tickets of the election.

1935

1941

1946

1949

1953

1957

1961

1965

1969

1986

1992

1998

2004

2010

2016

2022

Maps

  • Only those include above are listed. The larger pog refers to the presidential candidate.

Commonwealth elections

  • Green: Nacionalista Party
  • Blue: Nationalist Socialist Party
  • Red: Democratic Party
  • Pink: Popular Front
  • Yellow: Liberal Party
1935 1941 1946

Third Republic elections

  • Green: Nacionalista Party
  • Yellow: Liberal Party
  • Purple: Progressive Party
1949 1953 1957
1961 1965 1969

Fourth Republic elections

  • Red: KBL
  • Bright yellow: UNIDO
1986

Fifth Republic elections

If ticket contains members from different parties, the presidential nominee's color is used.

  • Cyan: Lakas
  • Orange: LAMMP/KNP/PMP
  • Blue: LDP
  • Light green: NPC
  • Bright yellow: PDP-Laban
  • Red: KBL
  • Pink: Aksyon
  • Bright pink: PRP
  • Turquoise: PROMDI
  • Green: Nacionalista
  • Yellow: Liberal
1992 1998 2004
2010 2016 2022

References

  1. ^ Quezon, Manuel III (2008-04-10). "Senate the victim of a design flaw". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2011-06-09.
This page was last edited on 18 January 2024, at 04:54
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.