1947 Philippine Senate election

Elections for the Senate of the Philippines were held on November 11, 1947, with eight of the 24 seats in the Senate being contested. These eight seats were elected regularly; the winners were eligible to serve six-year terms from December 30, 1947, until December 30, 1953. Gubernatorial and local elections were held on the same date.

1947 Philippine Senate election

← 1946 November 11, 1947 (1947-11-11) 1949 →

8 (of the 24) seats in the Senate of the Philippines
13 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader José Avelino Carlos P. Garcia
Party Liberal Nacionalista
Seats before 10 seats 14 seats
Seats won 6 2
Seats after 15 seats 8 seats
Seat change Increase 4 Decrease 4
Popular vote 12,241,929 10,114,453
Percentage 54.5% 45.0%

Senate President before election

José Avelino
Liberal

Elected Senate President

José Avelino
Liberal

Summary edit

Going into the 1947 election, the Senate consisted of nine Liberals, 14 Nacionalista, and one Popular Front (Vicente Y. Sotto). Of the seats up for election in 1947, all eight seats were held by Nacionalistas.

Senate President Jose Avelino, president of the Liberal Party, scored the opposition and said, "the Nacionalista Party of today is not the party of Quezon and Osmeña ... (it is) the party of Hukbalahaps and other dissident elements." In response, Nacionalista Party President Eulogio Rodriguez appealed for the voters to give the opposition a stronger mandate to fiscalize the administration, which they accused of being corrupt and incompetent.[1]

In the 1st Congress, the Liberals held 14 seats in the Senate, thereby retaining control of the Senate. The Liberals' total was reduced to 13 seats pursuant to the Senate Electoral Tribunal resolution in which Senator Carlos Tan (Liberal) was unseated and replaced by Eulogio Rodriguez (Nacionalista) in 1949.

Geronima Pecson became the first woman to be elected in the Senate.

Retiring incumbents edit

Nacionalista Party edit

  1. Alauya Alonto
  2. Esteban dela Rama
  3. Pedro Hernaez
  4. Vicente Rama
  5. Proceso Sebastian

Results edit

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Before election
Election result Not up LP NP Not up
After election + + + + * *

Key:

  • ‡ Seats up
  • + Gained by a party from another party
  • √ Held by the incumbent
  • * Held by the same party with a new senator

Per candidate edit

CandidatePartyVotes%
Lorenzo TañadaLiberal Party1,570,39048.11
Vicente MadrigalLiberal Party1,562,82547.87
Geronima PecsonLiberal Party1,559,51147.77
Emiliano Tria TironaLiberal Party1,552,54547.56
Fernando LopezLiberal Party1,543,83047.29
Camilo OsíasNacionalista Party1,512,19646.32
Pablo Ángeles y DavidLiberal Party1,489,01445.61
Carlos Tan[a]Liberal Party1,480,30545.35
Primitivo LovinaLiberal Party1,473,88845.15
Eulogio Rodriguez[a]Nacionalista Party1,346,17441.24
Felixberto SerranoNacionalista Party1,236,64937.88
Jose Maria VelosoNacionalista Party1,225,34737.54
Emilio JavierNacionalista Party1,210,41937.08
Sotero CabahugNacionalista Party1,209,59837.05
Jesus BarreraNacionalista Party1,201,32936.80
Jose ImperialNacionalista Party1,172,74135.92
Fabian R. TenebroLiberal Party33,7851.03
Fabian AbelleraLiberal Party22,5230.69
Ponciano AbordoYoung Philippines13,4410.41
Hilario MoncadoModernist Party11,2610.34
Manuel DikitModernist Party10,1360.31
Rosendo ZaldarriagaDemocrat (Osmeña)9,0100.28
Leonardo TenebroModernist Party7,8840.24
Melchor LagascaGoodwill Party1,6410.05
Total22,456,442100.00
Total votes3,264,423
Registered voters/turnout4,233,52877.11
  1. ^ a b Carlos Tan was later removed from office in favor of Eulogio Rodriguez who won an election protest.

Per party edit

 
PartyVotes%+/–Seats
UpBeforeWonAfter+/−
Liberal Party12,241,92954.47+6.76211615+4
Nacionalista Party10,114,45345.00+3.7861228−4
Young Philippines13,4410.06New00000
Goodwill Party1,6410.01New00000
Independent102,9980.46+0.2000000
Popular Front01010
Total22,474,462100.008248240
Total votes3,264,423
Registered voters/turnout4,233,52877.11
Source: Dieter Nohlen; Florian Grotz; Christof Hartmann; Graham Hassall; Soliman M. Santos (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. ISBN 9780199249596.

& Julio Teehankee. "Electoral Politics in the Philippines" (PDF). quezon.ph.
Vote share
LP
54.47%
NP
45.00%
Others
0.53%
Senate seats
LP
75.00%
NP
25.00%
Others
0.00%

Defeated incumbents edit

Nacionalista Party edit

  • Eulogio Rodriguez originally lost the election, but won an election protest and was seated in 1949.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Philippine Electoral Almanac. The Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office. 2013. p. 22. Archived from the original on 2014-04-09.

External links edit