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Muntinlupa was initially represented as part of the at-large district of the province of Manila in the Malolos Congress from 1898 to 1899. The then-town was later incorporated into the province of Rizal, established in 1901, and was represented as part of the first district of Rizal from 1907 to 1941 (including its time as part of Taguig until 1918) and from 1945 to 1972.
Muntinlupa is composed of a lone congressional district, and two legislative districts which are politically subdivided into nine barangays. [29] The 1st legislative district includes barangays Bayanan, Putatan, Poblacion and Tunasan in the southern half of the city, while the 2nd legislative district are barangays Alabang, Buli, New Alabang ...
Las Piñas district; Makati 1st and 2nd districts; Malabon district; Mandaluyong district; Manila 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th districts; Marikina 1st and 2nd districts; Muntinlupa district; Navotas district; Parañaque 1st and 2nd districts; Pasay district; Pasig district; Pateros-Taguig district; Quezon City 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th ...
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Muntinlupa first elected a single representative city-wide at-large for the 11th Congress following its conversion into a highly urbanised city through Republic Act No. 7926 on March 1, 1995. [4] Before 1998, its territory was represented as part of Las Piñas–Muntinlupa , Taguig–Pateros–Muntinlupa , Rizal's 1st and at-large district, and ...
Congressional districts of the Philippines (Filipino: distritong pangkapulungan) refers to the electoral districts or constituencies in which the country is divided for the purpose of electing 253 of the 316 members of the House of Representatives (with the other 63 being elected through a system of party-list proportional representation).
Instead, the region is divided into four geographic areas called "districts." [1] The districts have their district centers at the four original cities in the region: the city-district of Manila (Capital District), Quezon City (Eastern Manila), Caloocan (Northern Manila, also informally known as Camanava), and Pasay (Southern Manila). [2]
The number of barangays in other local government units in Metro Manila range from 9 in Muntinlupa to 38 in Taguig. In 1989, Republic Act 6714 called for a plebiscite reducing the seventy barangays constituting the first congressional district of Caloocan to only thirty barangays. [5]