Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kabataan, also known as the Kabataan Partylist (KPL, lit. ' Youth Partylist ') and formerly known as Ang Nagkakaisang Kabataan Para sa Sambayanan (ANAK ng BAYAN, lit. ' The United Youth for the People '), is a partylist in the Philippines affiliated with the leftist political coalition Makabayan.
Party Province/City District Chairperson Allen Jesse Mangaoang Nacionalista: Kalinga: Lone: Vice Chairpersons Amihilda Sangcopan Anak Mindanao: Party-list: Juan Fidel Felipe Nograles Lakas: Rizal: 2nd: Elias Bulut Jr. NPC: Apayao: Lone: Maximo Dalog Jr. Nacionalista: Mountain Province: Lone: Members for the Majority Leonardo Babasa Jr. PDP ...
Cardema defended his eligibility insisting that the party while it represents the youth, also represents professionals in general as well. [6] Cardema's bid was criticized by Senator Panfilo Lacson who said that the Duterte Youth partylist and its leader "are one of the many reasons" that the party-list representation system has become a "joke ...
Boy Scouts of the Philippines versus Commission on Audit: Ruling "After looking at the legislative history of its amended charter and carefully studying the applicable laws and the arguments of both parties, we find that the BSP is a public corporation and its funds are subject to the COAs audit jurisdiction." 7 June 2011: Supreme Court en banc
The Ako Bicol Political Party (AKB) is a political party in the Philippines participating in the party-list elections in the Philippines. It represents the Bicol Region and the Bicolano people . In the 2016 elections , AKB was the top partylist with 1,664,975 votes, earning it 3 seats in Congress.
Furthermore, Akbayan is the only party to surpass the 2% election threshold in all elections until the 2016 election where they fell short by 0.12%. In September 2024, the COMELEC proclaimed it as a winner after the Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the COMELEC Resolution which revoked the party-list's registration of An Waray. [31] [32]
Included in this larger agenda is the overhaul of the country's K-12 system. [18] The removal of Philippine History in high school became one of the reasons to call for the suspension of the K-12 system by the Suspend K to 12 Alliance, an umbrella movement affiliated with ACT-Teachers and other left-wing groups of the Makabayan Bloc. [10]
The pre-existing elite was entrenched within the new political system, and the dominant Nacionalista Party steadily gained more control over its institutions. In 1935 the autonomous Commonwealth of the Philippines was established, giving the Philippines its own constitution and a powerful President.