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The 2025 Philippine general election will be held on May 12, 2025. During this midterm election, where the winners take office mid-way the term of President Bongbong Marcos, all 317 seats in the House of Representatives and 12 of the 24 seats in the Senate will be contested to form the 20th Congress of the Philippines.
The Philippines has a 24-member Senate elected at-large. Every three years since 1995, 12 seats are contested. For 2025, the seats last elected in 2019 will be contested. Each voter has 12 votes, of which one can vote for one to twelve candidates, or a multiple non-transferable vote; the twelve candidates with the most votes are elected.
7 NPC 5 Nacionalista 4 Liberal 1 PFP 1 Navoteño 1 Independent 1 Vacant 1 The 2025 Philippine House of Representatives elections in Metro Manila are scheduled to be held on May 12, 2025, as part of the 2025 Philippine general election. Caloocan Caloocan's 1st district Incumbent Oscar Malapitan (Nacionalista Party) is running for a second term. He was elected in 2022 with 74.27% of the vote ...
Local elections are scheduled to be held in Manila on May 12, 2025, as part of the 2025 Philippine general election. The electorate will elect a mayor, a vice mayor, 36 members of the Manila City Council, and six district representatives to the House of Representatives of the Philippines. The officials elected in the election will assume their ...
Registration gets underway in the Philippines on Tuesday for one of the world's biggest midterm elections, headlined by what could be a bitter proxy battle between President Ferdinand Marcos Jr ...
The Philippines uses parallel voting for its lower house elections. For this election, there are 317 seats in the House of Representatives; 254 of these are district representatives, and 63 are party-list representatives. [7] Philippine law mandates that there should be one party-list representative for every four district representatives.
Master of Public Administration, University of the Philippines Diliman, Master in National Security Administration, National Defense College of the Philippines 46 Jose Montemayor Jr. Independent — Doctor of Medicine, Far Eastern University, Bachelor of Laws, Philippine Law School 47 Subair Mustapha WPP — 48 Jose Olivar Independent — 49
The results are then printed as the election return and sent electronically to the city or municipal Board of Canvassers. In 2016, for the third time in a row, the Philippines automated their elections using electronic vote counting machines. The deployment of 92,500 of these machines was the largest in the world.