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The Laban ng Masa (transl. Struggle of the Masses) coalition launched a campaign to collect 300,000 signatures to urge activist and former party-list lawmaker Walden Bello to run for president in the 2022 elections. In a statement, Laban ng Masa said it wants to "push for an ambitious platform that focuses on the poor, prioritizes the neglected ...
This is a list of notable individuals and organizations who endorsed the campaign of Bongbong Marcos for President of the Philippines and Sara Duterte for Vice President of the Philippines (unless denoted otherwise) in the 2022 Philippine presidential election. Endorsements listed once each.
The 2022 Philippine presidential and vice presidential elections were held on May 9, 2022, as part of the 2022 general election. This was the 17th direct presidential election and 16th vice presidential election in the Philippines since 1935 , and the sixth sextennial presidential and vice presidential election since 1992 .
Joey Lina, Senator of the Philippines (1987–1995), Secretary of the Interior and Local Government (2001–2004), Governor of Laguna (1995–2001), Governor of Metro Manila (1986–1987), 2022 Ang Komadrona party-list representative nominee and radio personality [42]
There are now 253 congressional districts, each electing one representative, and 63 seats elected via the party-list system on a nationwide vote. [1] There were 733 people who filed to run in congressional districts. [150] A total of 177 parties contested the party-list election. [159]
In 2022, the incumbent's coalition was split into two, the Tuloy ang Pagbabago and MP3 Alliance, with the latter becoming part of the opposition. Hugpong was superseded by the UniTeam Alliance of Bongbong Marcos who won the presidential election. 2022: UniTeam Alliance Tuloy ang Pagbabago: Team Robredo–Pangilinan (TRoPa) MP3 Alliance (MP3)
Both candidates were the offspring of presidents – Sara Duterte’s father Rodrigo was the incumbent then - and had strong support in different regions of the Philippines. Both had populist appeal.
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).