Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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).
This list of presidential elections in the Philippines includes election results of both presidential and vice presidential elections since 1899 with the candidates' political party and their corresponding percentage. The offices of the president and vice president are elected separately; hence a voter may split their vote.
Entered candidates for vice-president 35 41 46 49 53 57 61 65 69 81 86 92 98 04 10 16 22 Aksyon: Aksyon Demokratiko: Yes: Yes: Yes DPP: Democratic Party of the Philippines: Yes KTPNAN: Katipunan ng Kamalayang Kayumanggi: Yes KBL: Kilusang Bagong Lipunan: Yes: Yes: Yes: LPP: Labor Party Philippines: Yes Lakas LKS-KAM: Lakas-NUCD/Lakas-NUCD-UMDP ...
Allow the president to continue beyond 1973 and finish the reforms under martial law Yes 90.67% Details: 1975 Referendum Approval of the president's actions Yes 88.69% Details: Approval of the president continuing the same powers Yes 87.51% Selection of local officials By appointment 60.51%: 1976 Referendum Allowing martial law to continue Yes ...
Each party hosts candidates who go through a process to determine the presidential nominee for that party. The Commission on Elections released its list of 16 approved candidates for president and vice-president on December 15. [83] One disqualified candidate, Perlas, was reinstated. [84] This is arranged by the presidential candidates' surname.
On September 1, 2009, at the Club Filipino, in a press conference, Senator Mar Roxas, president of the Liberal Party and standard-bearer of the Liberal Party for President of the Philippines, announced his withdrawal from the presidential race and expressed his support for Aquino, as the standard-bearer of the Liberal Party for president. [7]
[3] [4] The president is directly elected by qualified voters to a six-year term and must be "a natural-born citizen of the Philippines, a registered voter, able to read and write, at least forty years of age on the day of the election, and a resident of the Philippines for at least ten years immediately preceding such election". No elected ...
In the 1992 elections, the party merged with the Lakas-NUCD. [4] For the 1998 elections, the party merged with the Partido ng Demokratikong Reporma (Party for Democratic Reform). [7] For the 2010 presidential election, the party announced its nomination of Secretary of Public Works and Highways Hermogenes Ebdane for president. [8] Ebdane ...