House of Representatives of the Philippines
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The House of Representatives of the Philippines (Filipino: Kapulungan ng mga Kinatawan ng Pilipinas) is the lower chamber of the Congress of the Philippines. The Senate is the upper chamber. The House is often informally called the Congress. Members of the house are called congressmen (mga kinatawan or mga konggresista) and their title is Representative. Congressmen are elected to a three-year term, and can be reelected to a maximum of three terms. A congressman can either be a district representative, which represents a particular geographical area, or a sectoral representative, which represents a significant minority of society.
The official headquarters of the House of Representatives is at the Batasang Pambansa (literally national lawmaking place) located at the Constitution Hill in Quezon City in Metro Manila. The building is often simply called Batasan.
- 1 List of the Speakers of the House of Representatives
- 1.1 Revolutionary Government
- 1.2 First Republic
- 1.3 Philippine Legislature
- 1.4 Commonwealth of the Philippines
- 1.5 Second Republic
- 1.6 Commonwealth (Restored)
- 1.7 Third Republic
- 1.8 Fourth Republic
- 1.9 Fifth Republic
- 2 Latest election
- 3 District Representation
- 4 Sectoral Representation
- 5 See also
- 6 External links
List of the Speakers of the House of Representatives
Revolutionary Government
Revolutionary Congress (1898-1899)- 1898-1899 Pedro Paterno (Manila)
First Republic
Assembly of Representatives (1899)- 1899-1899 Pedro Paterno (Manila)
Philippine Legislature
Philippine Assembly (1907-1916)- 1907-1916 Sergio Osmeña (NP, Cebu)
- 1916-1922 Sergio Osmeña (NP, Cebu)
- 1922-1933 Manuel Roxas (NP, Capiz)
- 1933-1935 Quintin Paredes (NP, Abra)
Commonwealth of the Philippines
National Assembly (1935-1941)- 1935-1938 Gil M. Montilla (NP, Negros Occidental)
- 1938-1941 Jose Yulo (NP, Negros Occidental)
Second Republic
National Assembly (1943-1945)- 1943-1945 Benigno S. Aquino, (KALIBAPI, Tarlac)
Commonwealth (Restored)
House of Representatives (1941-1946)Third Republic
House of RepresentativesFirst Congress (1946-1949)
- 1946-1949 Eugenio Perez, (LP, Pangasinan)
- 1949-1953 Eugenio Perez, (LP, Pangasinan)
Fourth Republic
Interim Batasang Pambansa (1978-1984)- 1978-1984 Querube Makalintal, (KBL, National Capital Region)
- 1984-1986 Nicanor E. Yñiguez, (KBL, Region VIII)
Fifth Republic
House of RepresentativesEighth Congress (1987-1992)
- 1987-1992 Ramon V. Mitra, (LDP, Palawan)
- 1992-1995 Jose C. De Venecia, Jr., (Lakas-NUCD, Pangasinan)
- 1995-1998 Jose C. De Venecia, Jr., (Lakas-NUCD, Pangasinan)
- 1998-2000 Manuel Villar, (LAMP, Las Piñas City)
- 2000-2001 Arnulfo Fuentebella, (NPC, Camarines Sur)
- 2001-2001 Feliciano Belmonte, Jr., (Lakas-CMD, Quezon City)
- 2001-2004 Jose C. De Venecia, Jr., (Lakas-CMD, Pangasinan)
- 2004-pres Jose C. De Venecia, Jr., (Lakas-CMD, Pangasinan)
Latest election
District Representation
All provinces and several cities have at least one congressional/legislative district, whose residents vote for their own congressman. Each district covers a population of approximately 250,000 to 500,000 people. Provinces that have only one congressional/legislative district are divided into two provincial districts. For provinces that have more than one congressional/legislative district, the provincial districts are identical to the corresponding congressional/legislative district.Congressional/Legislative Districts
City and Municipality Districts
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Sectoral Representation
The party-list system is the name designated for the sectoral representation. Under the 1987 Constitution, the electorate can vote for certain party-list organizations in order to give voice to significant minorities of society that would otherwise not be adequately represented through geographical district. From 1987-1998, sectoral representatives were appointed by the President.
Since 1998, Each voter votes for a single party-list organization. Organizations that garner at least 2% of the total number of votes are awarded one representative for every 2% up to a maximum of three representatives. Thus, there can be at most 50 sectoral representatives in Congress, though usually no more than 20 are elected because many organizations do not reach the required 2% minimum number of votes.
See also
- Politics of the Philippines
- President of the Philippines
- Executive Departments of the Philippines
- Congress of the Philippines
- Senate of the Philippines
- Ombudsman of the Philippines
- Supreme Court of the Philippines
- Republic Acts of the Philippines
External links
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