Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1907 Philippine Assembly elections

1st Philippine Assembly elections


1st Philippine Assembly elections

FieldValue
election_name1907 Philippine Assembly elections
countryPhilippines
typelegislative
flag_year1898
ongoingno
previous_election1898 Malolos Congress elections
previous_year1898
next_election1909 Philippine Assembly elections
next_year1909
election_dateJuly 30, 1907
seats_for_electionAll 80 seats in the Philippine Assembly
majority_seats41
image1Sergio Osmeña 1908.jpg
leader1Sergio Osmeña
leaders_seat1Cebu–2nd
party1Nacionalista Party
seats132 + 27 coalition
popular_vote164,281
percentage165.43%
image2Arsenio Cruz-Herrera.jpg
leader2Arsenio Cruz Herrera
leaders_seat2Rizal–1st *(lost)*
party2Progresista Party
seats216
popular_vote224,234
percentage224.67%
map_image1907PhilippineAssemblyElections.png
map_captionCoalitions that won a plurality of votes in each province.
titleSpeaker
before_electionNone (Pedro Paterno served as Malolos Congress President)
after_electionSergio Osmeña
after_partyNacionalista Party

The first Philippine Assembly elections were held across the Philippines on July 30, 1907. The Philippine Organic Act of 1902, enacted by the United States Congress, established a bicameral Philippine Legislature composed of the appointed Philippine Commission as the upper house and the elected Philippine Assembly as the lower house.

The first national election for a legislative body in the Philippines, and considered to be a de facto independence referendum, the newly formed Nacionalista Party, advocating independence, defeated the more established Progresista Party, which were conservative.

Formation of political parties

With the conclusion of the Philippine–American War (then known as the "Philippine Insurrection") and the establishment of the American colonial Insular Government under the Philippine Organic Act of 1902, elections were held in various parts of the Philippines. Divisions developed between the Federalistas who advocated for statehood within the United States, and the Independistas those who advocated for independence. Opponents to American rule were unable to mount a united front for the 1906 local elections, with only the Comitė de Intereses Filipinos who were a united, yet limited, organization. By mid-1906, those opposed to American rule began organizing themselves into political parties.

The Comitė de la Union Nacional and the Partido Popular Independista merged to create the Partido de la Union Nacionalista. The Union Nacionalistas rejected a hardline path and instead chose an evolutionary position. Meanwhile, the Independistas urged immediate independence from the U.S. After failing to broker a deal with the Independistas, the Union Nacionalista proposed a merger with the Federalistas. Juan Sumulong, who led the Federalistas, advocated a radical policy, more in line with the "conservative" wing of the Union Nacionalistas led by Rafael Palma. The Federalistas consulted Governor-General James Francis Smith, who then sought to advise Taft on the matter. Both Smith and Taft opposed the union, with Smith saying to Sumulong that a fusion will "result in the complete obliteration of the conservative element as a political actor in the community." The refusal of Federalistas reopened talks between the Union Nacionalista and the Independistas.

The Independistas organized themselves in January 1907 with a leadership election. To prevent further split, Alberto Barretto and Justo Lukban were elected co-leaders of the party. The election of Fernando Guerrero, Sergio Osmeña, Teodoro Sandiko and Isauro Gabaldon as counselors marked the first time that a Manila-based political group established links with provincial leaders.

The Nacionalistas and the Progresistas

In late January, the Federalistas organized themselves under a new name, Partido Nacional Progresista and launched a campaign to win seats in provinces around Manila. The nationalist-leaning groups launched negotiations to present a unified slate in the elections; Meanwhile, Palma insisted on having the word "Immediata" (immediate) to the party name of the proposed merger of the Union Nacionalistas and the Independistas. On March 12, 1907, the Union Nacionalista and the Independistas merged to form the Partido Nacionalista.

While the Nacionalistas had a rotating leadership, the manner of selection of the candidates was a source of major dispute and the party convention at the Manila Grand Opera House ended in disarray. The Progresistas, on the other hand, dropped Federal from the party name seeing that the word had outlived its usefulness and had changed their name to Partido Nacional Progresista (National Progressive Party).

Campaign

While the Nacionalistas were in disarray, the Progresistas orchestrated a well-organized "popular assembly". The Progresistas established networks of local strongmen already associated with the Nacionalistas; however, they were only able to field candidates in half of the districts in Central and southwestern Luzon. The Progresistas were unable to recruit supporters even in places where a Progresista was already in office, apart from Tarlac. In Manila, the Progresistas resorted to encouraging Americans to register and vote for them. However, the Federalistas were able to field candidates in rural areas in Visayas and Mindanao.

While the Progresistas were struggling to increase their ranks, they instead relied on a strategy to ensure the defeat of Nacionalistas candidates who opposed Progresista policies.

The Nacionalistas split their ranks when Guerrero and Lukban, members of the old Independista group were dropped from the ticket in favor of Dominador Gomez and Felipe del Pan. Quezon, brokered a deal that set a party convention to settle candidacies but it was never convened; Gomez and del Pan remained the official candidates for the "regular" Nacionalistas. Guerrero and Lukban ultimately set up the Liga Nacional Independecia whose sole purpose was to contest the 1907 elections.

The Progresistas led by Trinidad Pardo de Tavera, on the other hand, opposed "immediate" independence. The reception at Progresista political rallies ranged from lukewarm to hostile, with people heckling "Hang them, kill them".

On election day, the Partido Nacionalista, with its national organization in disarray, was able to field a candidate in 68 of the 80 districts.

Results

Nacionalista Party}};"**Nacionalista**Progresista Party}};"**Progresista****Others**Independent}};"**Ind**

|}

Votes by province

Province/CityNacionalistaProgresistaImmediatistaIndependistaCatholicPhilippine Independent ChurchIndependentRejectedScattered**Total**
Albay**2,196**1,41555
Ambos Camarines**1,577**33424458
Antique**604**35247
Bataan**379**35911
Batangas**2,113**851,45555
Bohol**1,594**76
Bulacan**1,950**948
Cagayan**1,434**72558
Capiz8891,177**2,600**13739
Cavite**2,686**61
Cebu**3,088**445159
Ilocos Norte747**1,421**9185106
Ilocos Sur1,619**2,005**9554
Iloilo1,7732,275**1,779**75
Isabela**549**52919934
La Laguna**2,635**795132
La Union**1,297**1,284585
Leyte**3,025**5101259869
Manila**5,671**1,3615998143
Mindoro**437**15332
Misamis**1,038**112
Negros Occidental1,005**1,405**100179
Negros Oriental**912**61431
Nueva Ecija**1,385**69713
Palawan48**217**23
Pampanga874**1,448**45613
Pangasinan615570**2,637**6001,90969
Rizal1,9571,4778845
Samar13719370**2,565**184
Sorsogon665430**1,510**53
Surigao**745**44
Tarlac**1,234**9461818
Tayabas857**3,823**2,23724
Zambales**502**16273
**34,277**24,2347,1266,1791,1929122,8782692,005
Source: Government Printing Office

Aftermath

Main article: 1st Philippine Legislature

While the candidates representing the Nacionalistas won the majority of the seats in the assembly, the maneuvering around the election for the Speaker of the Assembly began, as the Speaker would be the most powerful Filipino in government. Quezon and Osmeña focused on aggregating the delegates around Osmeña's leadership, a task that was easier than anticipated. With less than two dozen delegates, the Progresistas were not be able to elect a Speaker from their ranks and were marginalized from talks amongst the Nacionalistas. Osmeña found two opponents for the Speakership: Gomez, who defeated Lukban by 31 votes, and Pedro Paterno. However, Gomez's citizenship was questioned, and Paterno found himself to be Osmeña's leading opponent.

Gomez was found to be a Spanish citizen and a new election for his seat was called. Gomez still ran in the special election in 1908 and beat Lukban by a larger margin, about 400 votes. Gomez was permitted to take his seat, but not after seven months had passed, and after Osmeña was elected Speaker on October 16, 1907, with Quezon as the majority floor leader.

The defeat of the Progresistas in the elections hastened their downfall; the Nacionalista Party would continue to dominate the elections for the legislature, while the Progresistas, and later their successor the Democratas, would remain in opposition.

Notes

References

References

  1. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 287
  2. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 291
  3. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 292
  4. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 293
  5. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 294
  6. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 295
  7. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 296-302
  8. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 304
  9. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 305
  10. [[#Mojares2006. Mojares (2006)]], p. 151
  11. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 306
  12. (1908). "Eighth Annual Report of the Philippine Commission to the Secretary of War 1907 Part 1". Government Printing Office.
  13. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 318
  14. [[#Cullinane1989. Cullinane (1989)]], p. 326
  15. [[#Halili2004. Halili (2004)]], p. 184
  16. [[#Brownlee2007. Brownlee (2007)]], p. 75
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1907 Philippine Assembly elections — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report