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Manila's 2nd congressional district is one of the six congressional districts of the Philippines in the city of Manila. It has been represented in the House of Representatives of the Philippines since 1916 and earlier in the Philippine Assembly from 1907 to 1916. [ 3 ]
The 1987 Constitution of the Philippines initially provided for a maximum 200 congressional districts or 80 percent of the maximum 250 seats for the lower house, with the remaining 20 percent or 50 seats allotted for sectoral or party-list representatives. [1] This number has since been revised with the enactment of several laws creating more ...
The city was last apportioned upon the proclamation of the 1987 Constitution, where it was granted six seats in Congress.The city's current congressional delegation composes of three members of Lakas-CMD, two members of the National Unity Party, amd one member of the Nationalist People's Coalition; five members are also members of the Asenso Manileño local party.
Members [2] Party Province/City District Chairperson Wilfrido Mark Enverga NPC: Quezon: 1st: Vice Chairpersons Florencio Noel An Waray: Party-list: Wilfredo Caminero: NUP: Cebu: 2nd: Jose Francisco Benitez PDP–Laban: Negros Occidental: 3rd: Anna Marie Villaraza-Suarez ALONA Party-list: Antonio Albano NUP: Isabela: 1st: Jose Ong Jr. NUP ...
2019 Philippine House of Representatives election in the Manila's 2nd District; Party Candidate Votes % Asenso: Rolan Valeriano : 34,861 : 36.52 : Nacionalista: Alex Lopez 32,215 33.75 NUP: Rodolfo "Ninong" Lacsamana 28,379 29.73 Valid ballots 95,455 95.0 Invalid or blank votes 5,062 5.0 Total votes 100,517 : 100.00 : Asenso gain from PDP–Laban
3.3.2 Makati's 2nd city district. ... 6.3.2 Manila's 2nd councilor district. ... the number of elected councilors in the Taguig City Council increased from 16 to 24, ...
2.4 2nd Commonwealth Congress (1946)/1st Congress of the Republic of the Philippines (1946–1949) 2.5 2nd Congress (1949–1953) 2.6 3rd Congress (1954–1957)
In 1978, regional at-large assembly districts were created for the national parliament with Manila included in the 21-seat Region IV's at-large district. The city returned to its own single multi-member at-large district in 1984 with a six-seat delegation for the Regular Batasang Pambansa of the Fourth Philippine Republic. [3]