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1949 Philippine Senate election

11th Philippine senatorial election


11th Philippine senatorial election

FieldValue
election_name1949 Philippine Senate election
countryPhilippines
typelegislative
ongoingno
previous_election1947 Philippine Senate election
previous_year1947
next_election1951 Philippine Senate election
next_year1951
seats_for_election8 (of the 24) seats in the Senate
majority_seats13
election_dateNovember 8, 1949
image1Mariano Jesus Cuenco.jpg
leader1Mariano Jesús Cuenco
party1Liberal Party (Philippines)
seats_before112 (2 up)
seats18
seats_after117
seat_change15
popular_vote112,782,449
percentage152.52
swing12.20
image2Carlos P Garcia.jpg
leader2Carlos P. Garcia
party2Nacionalista Party
seats_before28 (4 up)
seats20
seats_after24
seat_change24
popular_vote28,900,568
percentage236.57
swing28.47
titleSenate President
before_electionMariano Jesús Cuenco
before_partyLiberal Party (Philippines)
after_electionMariano Jesús Cuenco
after_partyLiberal Party (Philippines)

Elections for the members of the Senate were held on November 8, 1949 in the Philippines.

While President Elpidio Quirino won a full term as President of the Philippines after the death of President Manuel Roxas in 1948, and his running mate, Senator Fernando Lopez won as Vice President, their Liberal Party won all of the contested seats in the Senate. Despite factions created in the administration party, Quirino won a satisfactory vote from the public.

It was the only time in Philippine history where the duly elected president, vice president and senators all came from the same party, the Liberal Party.

Carlos P. Romulo and Marvin M. Gray, publisher of the Manila Evening News, accuse Quirino in their book The Magsaysay Story (The John Day Company, 1956, updated - with an additional chapter on Magsaysay's death - re-edition by Pocket Books, Special Student Edition, SP-18, December 1957) of widespread fraud and intimidation of the opposition by military action, calling it the "dirty election".

Electoral system

Philippine Senate elections are held via plurality block voting with staggered elections, with the country as an at-large district. The Senate has 24 seats, of which 8 seats are up every 2 years. The eight seats up were won by the 9th to 16th placed candidates in 1946; each voter has eight votes and can vote up to eight names, of which the eight candidates with the most votes winning the election.

Retiring incumbents

  1. Alauya Alonto (Nacionalista)
  2. Ramon Diokno (Nacionalista)
  3. Prospero Sanidad (Liberal)

Incumbents running elsewhere

  1. Fernando Lopez (Liberal), elected as vice president, left office on December 30, 1949

Results

The Liberal Party wing led by President Elpidio Quirino (the "Quirinistas") won all 8 seats, shutting out the wing led by former Senate President Jose Avelino (the "Avelinistas"), and the Nacionalista Party.

Two incumbents, Tomas Cabili and Enrique Magalona of the Quirinistas defended their seats, while four incumbents, Avelinistas Olegario Clarin and Salipada Pendatun, and Alejo Mabanag and Jose O. Vera of the Nacionalistas lost their seats.

Newcomers include Esteban Abada, Teodoro de Vera, Justianiano Montano, Quinttin Paredes, Macario Peralta Jr. and Lorenzo Sumulong, all Quirinistas.

Senator Fernando Lopez ran and won in concurrent vice presidential elections. He left office on December 30, 1949, when his vice presidential term started.

123456789101112131415161718192021222324Before electionElection resultAfter election
Popular Front (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}
Not upLiberal Party (Philippines)}}**LP**Not up
^Popular Front (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}Liberal Party (Philippines)}}*Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}+Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}Nacionalista Party}}
  • ‡ Seats up
  • *+Gained by a party from another party
  • √ Held by the incumbent
    • Held by the same party with a new senator
  • ^ Vacancy

Per candidate

Per party

The Liberals originally had 19 seats entering the 2nd Congress, but the election of Senator Fernando Lopez to the vice presidency meant that his seat is vacant until 1951, when it was contested in a special election.

Defeated incumbents

  1. Olegario Clarin (Liberal–Avelino wing) retired from politics
  2. Alejo Mabanag (Nacionalista) ran in 1953 and won
  3. Salipada Pendatun (Liberal–Avelino wing) ran in 1953 and lost, ran for House representative from Cotabato in 1957 and won
  4. Jose O. Vera (Nacionalista) retired from politics

References

References

  1. (15 November 2001). "Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook: Volume II: South East Asia, East Asia, and the South Pacific". OUP Oxford.
  2. [[Julio Teehankee]]. "Electoral Politics in the Philippines". quezon.ph.
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