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2001 Philippine Senate election

27th election of members to the Senate of the Philippines


27th election of members to the Senate of the Philippines

FieldValue
election_name2001 Philippine Senate election
countryPhilippines
typelegislative
ongoingno
previous_election1998 Philippine Senate election
previous_year1998
next_election2004 Philippine Senate election
next_year2004
election_dateMay 14, 2001
seats_for_election12 (of the 24) seats to the Senate of the Philippines and one mid-term vacancy
majority_seats13
color1
alliance1People Power Coalition
seats18
popular_vote1123,491,617
percentage150.81
color2
alliance2Puwersa ng Masa
seats24
popular_vote295,072,114
percentage239.12
color3
alliance3Independent politician
seats31
popular_vote322,303,310
percentage39.18
titleSenate President
before_electionAquilino Pimentel Jr.
before_partyPartido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan
after_electionFranklin Drilon
after_partyIndependent (politician)
image2Puwersa ng Masa logo.png

The 2001 election of members to the Senate of the Philippines was the 27th election to the Senate of the Philippines. It was held on Monday, May 14, 2001, to elect 12 of the 24 seats and one mid-term vacancy in the Senate. Independent candidate Noli de Castro, a journalist and former television anchor, was announced as the topnotcher. This became the first synchronized national and local elections held after the ouster of former President Joseph Estrada in January due to a military-backed civilian uprising, popularly known as EDSA II.

The PPC won eight seats, the Puwersa ng Masa won four, and Noli de Castro as an independent won one; PPC's Ralph Recto edged out Puwersa ng Masa's Gregorio Honasan for the twelfth place and Honasan was elected to serve the remainder of Guingona's term. On February 20, 2007, the Supreme Court of the Philippines ruled that Honasan did lose the election but declared the special election constitutional for the remaining three-year term of Teofisto Guingona Jr.

Electoral system

Philippine Senate elections are via pluraity block voting, with the entire country as an at-large "district". Each voter has 12 votes, and can vote for up to 12 candidates. Seats up were the seats last contested in 1995.

With the appointment of Teofisto Guingona Jr. as vice president in 2001, the COMELEC ruled that the thirteenth placed candidate shall serve for Guingona's unexpired term.

Candidates

The two competing coalitions in this election were the anti-Estrada People Power Coalition (PPC) and the pro-Estrada Puwersa ng Masa coalition.

The PPC was composed of Lakas—National Union of Christian Democrats—United Muslim Democrats of the Philippines, Partido para sa Demokratikong Reporma—Lapiang Manggagawa, Aksyon Demokratiko, Probinsya Muna Development Initiative, Liberal Party and Partido Demokratiko Pilipino—Lakas ng Bayan.

The Puwersa ng Masa included Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino and Partido ng Masang Pilipino along with pro-Estrada independent candidates.

The Kilusang Bagong Lipunan put up a 4-candidate slate, while three parties had one candidate each. There were also 4 independents not associated with the PPC, Puwersa ng Masa, or other parties.

With the mid-term vacancy due to Guingona's appointment, both slates now had 13 candidates instead of the usual 12.

Administration coalition

NameParty
Joker Arroyo
Liwayway Vinzons-Chato
Franklin Drilon
Juan Flavier
Ernesto Herrera
Ramon Magsaysay Jr.
Winnie Monsod
Serge Osmeña
Roberto Pagdanganan
Kiko Pangilinan
Ralph Recto
Wigberto Tañada
Manny Villar

Opposition coalition

NameParty
Edgardo Angara
Reuben Canoy
Noli de Castro
Miriam Defensor Santiago
Juan Ponce Enrile
Loi Ejercito
Gregorio Honasan
Panfilo Lacson
Jamby Madrigal
Orly Mercado
Dong Puno
Nina Rasul
Ombra Tamano

Others

NameParty
Juan Casil
Melchor Chavez
Oliver Lozano
Norma Nueva
NameParty
Homobono Adaza
Moner Bajunaid
Eddie Gil
NameParty
Manuel Morato
Rod Navarro
Camilo Sabio
Perfecto Yasay

Note: Party affiliation based on Certificate of Candidacy.

Retiring and term limited incumbents

  1. Nikki Coseteng (NPC), term limited; ran for senator in 2007 and lost
  2. Francisco Tatad (PRP), term limited; ran for senator in 2004 and in 2010 and lost both times

Mid-term vacancies

  1. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Lakas), ran for Vice President of the Philippines and won in 1998
  • Arroyo subsequently became president on January 20, 2001, after the Second EDSA Revolution which resulted in the overthrow of Joseph Estrada.
  1. Marcelo Fernan (LDP), died on July 11, 1999
  2. Teofisto Guingona Jr. (Lakas), appointed Vice President of the Philippines on February 7, 2001
  3. Raul Roco (Aksyon), appointed Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports on February 10, 2001

Results

The People Power Coalition (PPC) won eight seats, the Puwersa ng Masa won four, and an independent candidate won one. Of the four seats Puwersa ng Masa won, one was for the seat of Vice President Teofisto Guingona Jr., whose senatorial term would have ended on June 30, 2004.

Four incumbent senators won: Franklin Drilon, Juan Flavier, Ramon Magsaysay Jr. and Serge Osmeña of PPC. Puwersa ng Masa's Gregorio Honasan finished 13th and served the Guingona's unexpired term.

There are seven neophyte senators: PPC's Joker Arroyo, Francis Pangilinan, Ralph Recto, Manny Villar, Puwersa ng Masa's Loi Ejercito and Panfilo Lacson, independent candidate Noli de Castro.

Returning is Edgardo Angara, who was term limited in the previous election.

Puwersa ng Masa senators Miriam Defensor Santiago and Juan Ponce Enrile did not successfully defend their seats.

123456789101112131415161718192021222324Before electionElection resultAfter electionSenate bloc
PDP–Laban}}"Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Grand Alliance for Democracy}}"People's Reform Party}}"Independent}}"Independent}}"Independent}}"‡^‡^‡^‡^Lakas-NUCD}}"Nationalist People's Coalition}}"PDP–Laban}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Nationalist People's Coalition}}"
Not upPuwersa ng Masa}}"**[](puwersa-ng-masa)**People Power Coalition}}"**People Power Coalition**Independent}}"**Ind**Not up
PDP–Laban}}"Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}}"PDP–Laban}}"Independent}}"+Independent}}"+Independent}}"Independent}}"Independent}}"*Independent}}"+Liberal Party (Philippines)}}"+Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"+Lakas-NUCD}}"+Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Lakas-NUCD}}"Nationalist People's Coalition}}"
PDP–Laban}}" colspan="11"Minority blocIndependent}}" colspan="13"Majority bloc

Key:

  • ‡ 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 coalition

Per party

Defeated incumbents

  1. Miriam Defensor Santiago (PRP/Puwersa ng Masa), ran in 2004 and won
  2. Juan Ponce Enrile (LDP/Puwersa ng Masa), ran in 2004 and won

Notes

References

Info: Wikipedia Source

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