Elpidio Quirino

This article is about the Philippine president. For the province, see Quirino. For the train station, see Quirino LRT Station. For the grandstand, see Quirino Grandstand. For the municipality, see Quirino, Ilocos Sur.
This name uses Philippine naming customs. The first or maternal family name is Rivera and the second or paternal family name is Quirino.
His Excellency
Elpidio Quirino
6th President of the Philippines
In office
April 17, 1948  December 30, 1953
Vice President None (1948–1949)
Fernando López (1949–1953)
Preceded by Manuel Roxas
Succeeded by Ramon Magsaysay
2nd Vice President of the Philippines
In office
May 28, 1946  April 17, 1948
President Manuel Roxas
Preceded by Sergio Osmeña
Succeeded by Fernando López
Secretary of Foreign Affairs
In office
September 16, 1946  April 17, 1948
President Manuel Roxas
Preceded by Post established
Succeeded by Vacant
Post later held by Joaquín Miguel Elizalde
Secretary of Finance
In office
May 28, 1946  November 24, 1946
President Manuel Roxas
Preceded by Jaime Hernandez
Succeeded by Miguel Cuaderno
In office
July 25, 1934  February 18, 1936
President Manuel L. Quezon
Preceded by Vicente Encarnacion
Succeeded by Antonio de Las Alas
Secretary of Interior
In office
1935–1938
President Manuel L. Quezon
Preceded by Severino de las Alas
Succeeded by Rafael Alunan
4th President pro tempore of the Senate of the Philippines
In office
July 9, 1945  May 25, 1946
President Sergio Osmeña
Preceded by José Avelino (acting)
Succeeded by Melecio Arranz
Senator of the Philippines
In office
July 9, 1945  May 28, 1946
Senator of the Philippines from the First Senatorial District
In office
1925  November 15, 1935
Served with:
Isabelo de los Reyes (1925–1928)
Melecio Arranz (1928–1935)
Preceded by Santiago Fonacier
Succeeded by Position abolished
Member of the Philippine House of Representatives from Ilocos Sur's 1st District
In office
1919–1925
Preceded by Alberto Reyes
Succeeded by Vicente Singson Pablo
Personal details
Born Elpidio Quirino y Rivera
(1890-11-16)November 16, 1890
Vigan, Ilocos Sur, Captaincy General of the Philippines
Died February 29, 1956(1956-02-29) (aged 65)
Quezon City, Philippines
Resting place Heroes' Cemetery, Taguig, Philippines
Political party Liberal Party
Nacionalista Party
Spouse(s) Alicia Syquia (m. 1921; d. 1945)
Relations Monique Lagdameo (great-granddaughter)
Children Tomas Quirino
Armando Quirino
Norma Quirino
Victoria Quirino-Gonzalez
Fe Angela Quirino
Alma mater University of the Philippines
Profession Lawyer
Religion Roman Catholicism
Signature

Elpidio Rivera Quirino (born Elpidio Quirino y Rivera; November 16, 1890 – February 29, 1956) was a Filipino politician of ethnic Ilocano descent who served as the sixth President of the Philippines from 1948 to 1953.

A lawyer by profession, Quirino entered politics when he became a representative of Ilocos Sur from 1919 to 1925. He was then elected as senator from 1925–1931. In 1934, he became a member of the Philippine independence commission that was sent to Washington, D.C., which secured the passage of Tydings–McDuffie Act to American Congress. In 1935, he was also elected to the convention that drafted the 1935 constitution for the newly established Commonwealth. In the new government, he served as secretary of the interior and finance under President Manuel Quezon's cabinet.

After World War II, Quirino was elected vice-president in the 1946 election, consequently the second and last for the Commonwealth and first for the third republic. After the death of the incumbent president Manuel Roxas in 1948, he succeeded the presidency. He won the president's office under Liberal Party ticket, defeating Nacionalista vice president and former president José P. Laurel as well as fellow Liberalista and former Senate President José Avelino.

The Quirino administration was generally challenged by the Hukbalahaps, who ransacked towns and barrios. Quirino ran for president again in the 1953 presidential election, but was defeated by Nacionalista Ramon Magsaysay.

After his term, he retired to his new country home in Novaliches, Quezon City, where he died of a heart attack on February 29, 1956.

Early life and career

Elpidio Quirino was a native of Caoayan, Ilocos Sur although born in Vigan, Ilocos Sur to Don Mariano Quebral Quirino of Caoayan, Ilocos Sur and Doña Gregoria Mendoza Rivera of Agoo, La Union. He was baptized on November 19, 1890.[1] Quirino spent his early years in Aringay, La Union. He studied and graduated from his elementary education to his native Caoayan, where he became a barrio teacher. He received secondary education at Vigan High School, then went to Manila where he worked as junior computer technician at the Bureau of Lands and as property clerk in the Manila police department. He graduated from Manila High School in 1911 and also passed the civil service examination, first-grade.

Quirino attended the University of the Philippines. In 1915, he earned his law degree from the university's College of Law, and was admitted to the bar later that year. He was engaged in the private practice of law. He was later inducted into the Pan Xenia Fraternity, a professional trade fraternity in the University of the Philippines, in the year 1950.

Personal life

Quirino was married to Alicia Syquia on January 16, 1921. The couple had five children: Tomas, Armando, Norma, Victoria, and Fe. Only Quirino, his son Tomas, and his daughter Victoria, survived when the Japanese massacred the family during the war. His brother Antonio Quirino was the owner of Alto Broadcasting System, which later merged with Chronicle Broadcasting Network to form the ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation.

Congressional career

House of Representatives

Quirino was engaged in the private practice of law until he was elected as member of the Philippine House of Representatives from 1919 to 1925, succeeding Alberto Reyes. In 1925 he was succeeded as Congressman by Vicente Singson Pablo.

Senate

Quirino was elected as Senator from 1925 to 1931 representing the First Senatorial District. He then served as Secretary of Finance and Secretary of the Interior in the Commonwealth government.

In 1934, Quirino was a member of the Philippine Independence mission to Washington, D.C., headed by Manuel L. Quezon, that secured the passage in the United States Congress of the Tydings–McDuffie Act. This legislation set the date for Philippine independence by 1945. Official declaration came on July 4, 1946.

Before the Second World War, Quirino was re-elected to the Senate but was not able to serve until 1945. During the Battle of Manila in World War II, his wife, Alicia Syquia, and three of his five children were killed as they fled their home.

After the war, the Philippine Commonwealth Government was restored. The Congress was likewise re-organized and in the Senate Quirino was installed was Senate President pro tempore.

Vice-Presidency

President Elpidio Quirino weeps beside the coffin of his predecessor, Manuel Roxas during the latter's wake in 1948

Soon after the reconstitution of the Commonwealth Government in 1945, Senators Manuel Roxas, Elpidio Quirino and their allies called for an early national election to choose the president and vice president of the Philippines and members of the Congress. In December 1945 the House Insular Affairs of the United States Congress approved the joint resolution setting the election date at not later than April 30, 1946.

Prompted by this congressional action, President Sergio Osmeña called the Philippine Congress to a three-day special session. Congress enacted Commonwealth Act No. 725, setting the election on April 23, 1946, and was approved by President Osmeña on January 5, 1946.

Senate President pro tempore Elpidio Quirino was nominated as the running mate by newly formed Liberal Party of presidential candidate and then-Senate President Manuel Roxas. The tandem won the election. Vice-President Quirino was later appointed as Secretary of Foreign Affairs.

Presidency

Presidential styles of
Elpidio R. Quirino
Reference style His Excellency
Spoken style Your Excellency
Alternative style Mr. President

Elpidio Quirino's five years as president were marked by notable postwar reconstruction, general economic gains, and increased economic aid from the United States.

Administration and Cabinet

Office Name Term
President Elpidio Quirino1948–1953
Vice-President Fernando López1949–1953
Secretary of Foreign Affairs Elpidio Quirino (acting)April 17, 1948 – January 6, 1950
Felino NeriJanuary 6, 1950-May 1950
Carlos P. RomuloMay 1950 – 1951
Joaquín Miguel ElizaldeApril 18, 1952 – December 30, 1953
Secretary of the Interior Sotero BaluyutSeptember 21, 1948 – 1951
Secretary of Finance Miguel CuadernoApril 17, 1948 – January 2, 1949
Pío PedrosaJanuary 5, 1949 – September 12, 1951
Aurelio Montinola, Sr.April 18, 1952 – December 30, 1953
Secretary of Justice Roman OzaetaMay 28, 1946 – September 1948
Sabino PadillaSeptember 17, 1948 – June 1949
Ricardo NepomucenoJuly 1949 – July 1950
Jose BengzonDecember 15, 1950 – September 1951
Oscar CasteloApril 18, 1952 – August 1953
Roberto GianzonAugust 1953 – December 30, 1953
Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources Plácido MapaSeptember 21, 1948 – 1950
Fernando LópezDecember 14, 19501953
Secretary of Public Works and Communications Ricardo NepumocenoApril 17, 1948 – 1949
Prospero SanidadFebruary 21, 1950 -1951
Sotero BaluyotJanuary 6, 1951 – 1952
Secretary of Public Works, Transportation and Communications Pablo LorenzoMay 6, 1952 – 1953
Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports Prudencio LangcauonSeptember 1948 – September 13, 1950
Pablo LorenzoSeptember 14, 1950 – April 3, 1951
Teodoro T. Evangelista Sr.May 18, 1951 – September 30, 1951
Cecilio PutongApril 18, 1952 – December 30, 1953
Benito PangilinanSeptember 22, 1953
Secretary of Labor Primitivo LovinaSeptember 21, 1948 – December 21, 1950
Jose FiguerasDecember 21, 1950 – December 30, 1953
Secretary of National Defense Ruperto KangleonApril 17, 1948 – August 31, 1950
Ramon MagsaysayDecember 14, 1950 – February 28, 1953
Oscar T. CasteloMarch 1, 1953 – December 19, 1953
Secretary of Health and Public Welfare Antonio VillaramaApril 17, 1948 – December 31, 1949
Juan S. SalcedoDecember 14, 1950 – November 10, 1953
Administrator of Social Services Asunción A. PérezMay 6, 1952 – 1953
Secretary of Trade and Industry Cornelio BalmacedaSeptember 21, 1948 – February 12, 1949
Placido L. MapaFebruary 12, 1949 – December 30, 1953
Executive Secretary Emilio AbelloApril 21, 1948 – September 14, 1948
Teodoro T. Evangelista Sr.September 16, 1948 – May 8, 1951
Marciano RoqueFebruary 2, 1952 – December 29, 1953
Budget Commissioner Pío Joven1948–1953

First term (1948–1949)

Accession

Vice-President Elpidio Quirino was inaugurated as the 6th President of the Philippines on April 17, 1948 at the Council of State Room, Executive Building, Malacañan Palace.

Quirino assumed the presidency on April 17, 1948, taking his oath of office two days after the death of Manuel Roxas. His first official act as the President was the proclamation of a state mourning throughout the country for Roxas' death. Since Quirino was a widower, his surviving daughter Victoria Quirino Gonzalez [Vicky] would serve as the official hostess and perform the functions traditionally ascribed to the First Lady.

New capital city

On July 17, 1948, the Congress approved Republic Act No. 333, amending Commonwealth Act No. 502, declaring Quezon City the capital of the Philippines in place of Manila.[2] Nevertheless, pending the official transfer of the government offices to the new capital site, Manila remained to be such for all effective purposes.[2]

HukBaLaHap

The term HukBaLaHap was a contraction of Hukbong Bayan Laban sa mga Hapones (in English: The Nation's Army Against the Japanese Soldiers), members of which were commonly referred to as Huks.

With the expiration of the Amnesty deadline on August 15, 1948, the government found out that the Huks had not lived up to the terms of the Quirino-Taruc agreement. Indeed, after having been seated in Congress and collecting his back pay allowance.[2] Luis Taruc surreptitiously fled away from Manila, even as a number of his followers had either submitted themselves to the conditions of the Amnesty proclamation or surrendered their arms. In the face of countercharges from the Huk to the effect that the government had not satisfied the agreed conditions, President Quirino ordered a stepped-up campaign against dissidents, restoring once more an aggressive policy in view of the failure of the friendly attitude previously adopted.[2]

Fireside chats

To bring the government closer to the people, he revived President Quezon's "fireside chats", in which he enlightened the people on the activities of the Republic by the periodic radio broadcasts from Malacañan Palace.

Impeachment attempt

Riding on the crest of the growing wave of resentment against the Liberal Party, a move was next hatched to indict President Quirino himself.[2] Led by Representative Agripino Escareal, a committee composed of seven members of the House of Representatives prepared a five-count accusation ranging from nepotism to gross expenditures. Speaker Eugenio Pérez appointed a committee of seven, headed by Representative Lorenzo Sumulong to look into the charges preparatory to their filing with the Senate, acting as an impeachment body. Solicitor General Felix Angelo Bautista entered his appearance as defense counsel for the chief executive.[2] Following several hearings, on April 19, 1949, after a rather turbulent session that lasted all night, the congressional committee reached a verdict completely exonerating the President.

Quirino waving to the crowd

Romulo becomes President of the UN General Assembly

Great honor[2] was paid the Philippines when, in September 1949, the Fourth General Assembly of the United Nations elected delegate Carlos P. Romulo as its President. The first[2] Oriental to hold the position, Romulo was strongly supported[2] by the Anglo-Saxon bloc, as well as by the group of Spanish-speaking nations,[2] thus underscoring the hybrid nature of the Filipino people's culture and upringing.[2]

1949 Presidential election

Incumbent President Elpidio Quirino won a full term as President of the Philippines after the untimely death of President Manuel Roxas in 1948. His running mate, Senator Fernando López won as Vice President. 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.

Second term (1949–1953)

President Elpidio Quirino was inaugurated for his first full term as President of the Philippines on December 30, 1949 at the Independence Grandstand (now Quirino Grandstand), Manila.

Baguio Conference

In May 1950, upon the invitation of President Qurino, through the insistent suggestion of United Nations President Carlos P. Romulo, official representatives of India, Pakistan, Ceylon, Thailand, Indonesia, and Australia met in the city of Baguio for a regional conference sponsored by the Philippines.[2] China and Korea did not attend the conference because the latter did not contemplate the formation of a military union of the Southeast Asian nations. On the other hand, Japan, Indonesia, China, and others were not invited because, at the time, they were not free and independent states. Due to the request of India and Indonesia, no political questions were taken up the conference.[2] Instead, the delegates discussed economic and, most of all, cultural, problems confronting their respective countries. Strangely enough however, the Baguio Conference ended with an official communiqué in which the nations attending the same expressed their united agreement in supporting the right to self-determination of all peoples the world over. This initial regional meet held much promise of a future alliance of these neighboring nations for common protection and aid.[2]

HukBaLaHap continued re-insurgence

Quirino's administration faced a serious threat in the form of the communist HukBaLaHap movement. Though the Huks originally had been an anti-Japanese guerrilla army in Luzon, communists steadily gained control over the leadership, and when Quirino's negotiation with Huk commander Luis Taruc broke down in 1948, Taruc openly declared himself a Communist and called for the overthrow of the government.

Peace campaign

With the Communist organization estimated to still have more than 40,000 duly registered members by March 1951, the government went on with its sustained campaign to cope with the worsening peace and order problem.[2] The 1951 budget included the use of a residue fund for the land resettlement program in favor of the surrendered HUKS. The money helped maintain the Economic Development Corps (EDCOR), with its settlements of 6,500 hectares in Kapatagan (Lanao) and 25,000 hectares in Buldon (Cotabato). In each group taken to these places there was a nucleus of former Army personnel and their families, who became a stabilizing factor and ensured the success of the program. Indeed, less than ten percent of the Huks who settled down gave up this new lease in life offered them by the government.[2]

To promote the smooth restructuring of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, the military were made to undergo a reorganization.[2] Battalion combat teams of 1,000 men each were established. Each operated independently of the High Command, except for overall coordination in operational plans. A total of 26 Battalion Combat Teams were put up. New army units were also established, such was the first Airborne Unit, the Scout Rangers, the Canine Unit, and the Cavalry Unit. These units all showed considerable ability.[2]

1951 midterm election

After a sweep by the Liberals in 1949, many Filipinos doubted the election result. This brought a sweep by the Nacionalistas in the 1951 elections. There was a special election for the vacated senate seat of Fernando Lopez, who won as Vice President in 1949. The Liberals won no seats in the senate.

1953 Presidential election

Quirino ran for re-election to the presidency with José Yulo as vice president in 1953 despite his ill health. His defense secretary Ramon Magsaysay, resigned his office and joined the Nacionalista Party. Other prominent Liberalists, like Vice President Fernando López, Ambassador Carlos P. Romulo, Senators Tomás Cabili and Juan Sumulong, also bolted Quirino's party.

On August 22, 1953, Nacionalista and Democratic Parties formed a coalition to ensure Quirino's full defeat. On the election day, Quirino was defeated by Ramon Magsaysay with a majority vote of 1.5 million.

Domestic policies

Economy of the Philippines under
President Elpidio Quirino
1948–1953
Population
1948 19.23 million
Gross Domestic Product
1948 Increase Php 99,628 million
1953 IncreasePhp 146,070 million
Growth rate, 1948–53 9.32 %
Per capita income
1948 Increase Php 5,180
1953 Increase Php 7,596
Total exports
1948 Increase Php 35,921 million
1953 Decrease Php 34, 432 million
Exchange rates
1 US US$ = Php 2.00
1 Php = US US$ 0.50
Sources: Philippine Presidency Project
Malaya, Jonathan; Eduardo Malaya. So Help Us God... The Inaugurals of the Presidents of the Philippines. Anvil Publishing, Inc. 

Economy

Upon assuming the reins of government, Quirino announced two main objectives of his administration: first, the economic reconstruction of the nation and second, the restoration of the faith and confidence of the people in the government. In connection to the first agenda, he created the President's Action Committee on Social Amelioration or PACSA to mitigate the sufferings of indigent families, the Labor Management Advisory Board to advise him on labor matters, the Agricultural Credit Cooperatives Financing Administration or ACCFA to help the farmers market their crops and save them from loan sharks, and the Rural Banks of the Philippines to facilitate credit utilities in rural areas.

Social program

Enhancing President Manuel Roxas' policy of social justice to alleviate the lot of the common mass, President Quirino, almost immediately after assuming office, started a series of steps calculated to effectively ameliorate the economic condition of the people.[2] After periodic surprise visits to the slums of Manila and other backward regions of the country, President Quirino officially made public a seven-point program for social security, to wit:[2]

  1. Unemployment insurance
  2. Old-age insurance
  3. Accident and permanent disability insurance
  4. Health insurance
  5. Maternity insurance
  6. State relief
  7. Labor opportunity

President Quirino also created the Social Security Commission, making Social Welfare Commissioner Asuncion Perez chairman of the same.[2] This was followed by the creation of the President's Action Committee on Social Amelioration, charges with extending aid, loans, and relief to the less fortunate citizens. Both the policy and its implementation were hailed by the people as harbingers of great benefits.[2]

Agrarian reform

As part of his Agrarian Reform agenda, President Quirino issued on October 23, 1950 Executive Order No. 355 which replaced the National Land Settlement Administration with Land Settlement Development Corporation (LASEDECO) which takes over the responsibilities of the Agricultural Machinery Equipment Corporation and the Rice and Corn Production Administration.[3]

Integrity Board

To cope with the insistent clamor for government improvement, President Quirino created the Integrity Board to probe into reports of graft and corruption in high government places. Vice-President Fernando Lopez was most instrumental, through his courageous exposes, in securing such a decision from President Quirino.[2]

Foreign policies

Photograph of President Truman in the Oval Office, evidently receiving a cane as a gift from the President of the Philippines, Elpidio Quirino, as another man (most likely ambassador Joaquín Elizalde) looks on.

Quirino's administration excelled in diplomacy, impressing foreign heads of states and world statesmen by his intelligence and culture. In his official travels to the United States, European countries, and Southeast Asia, he represented the Philippines with flying colors. During his six years of administration, he with his Foreign Secretary Helen Cutaran Bennett was able to negotiate treaties and agreements with other nations of the Free World. Two Asian heads of state visited Philippines–President Chiang Kai-shek of the Republic of China in July 1949 and President Achmed Sukarno of Indonesia in January 1951.

In 1950, at the onset of the Korean War, Quirino authorized the deployment of over 7,450 Filipino soldiers to Korea, under the designation of the Philippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea or PEFTOK.

While I recognise the United States as a great builder in this country, I have never surrendered the sovereignty, much less the dignity and future of our country.

Elpidio Quirino[4]

Korean War

On June 25, 1950, the world was astonished to hear the North Korean aggression against the independent South Korea. The United Nations immediately took up this challenge to the security of this part of the world. Carlos P. Romulo soon stood out as the most effective spokesman for the South Korean cause.[2] On behalf of our government, Romulo offered to send a Philippine military contingent to be under the overall command of General Douglas MacArthur, who had been named United Nations Supreme Commander for the punitive expedition. The Philippines, thus, became the first country to join the United States in the offer of military assistance to beleaguered South Korea.[2]

President Quirino took the necessary steps to make the Philippine offer. On a purely voluntary basis, the first contingent – the Tenth Battalion Combat Team – was formed under Col. Azurin, and dispatched to Korea, where its members quickly won much renown for their military skill and bravery. The name of Captain Jose Artiaga, Jr., heroically killed in action, stands out as a symbol of our country's contribution to the cause of freedom outside native shores. Other Philippine Combat Teams successively replaced the first contingent sent, and they all built a name for discipline, tenacity, and courage, until the truce that brought the conflict to a halt.[2]

Quirino-Foster Agreement

By the time of the creation of the integrity board, moreover, the Bell Mission, led by Daniel W. Bell, an American banker, and composed of five members, with a staff of twenty workers, following their period of stay in the Philippines, beginning in July 1950, finally submitted its report on October of the same year.[2] The Report made several proposals, most noteworthy, of which were that the United States on, President Quirino gamely and patriotically,[2] took in the recommendations and sought to implement them. Thus in November 1950, President Quirino and William Chapman Foster, representing the United States Government, signed an agreement by virtue of which the former pledged to obtain the necessary Philippine legislation, in keeping with the Bell Mission Report, while envoy Foster promised the necessary by the same Report.[2]

However, much as he tried to become a good president, Quirino failed to win the people's affection. Several factors caused the unpopularity of his administration, namely:[5]

Post-presidency and death

The former tomb of Elpidio Quirino at the Manila South Cemetery

Following his failed bid for re-election, Quirino retired from politics to private life in 1953. He offered his dedication to serve the Filipino people, becoming the "Father of Foreign Service" in the Republic of the Philippines.

Qurino died of a heart attack during the leap year day of February 29, 1956. He was buried at Manila South Cemetery in Makati. On February 29, 2016, Quirino's remains were relocated and reinterred at a special tomb site in the Heroes' Cemetery in Taguig, in time for the former President's 60th death anniversary.[6]

Notes

  1. Catholic Church, Conversion of St. Paul, the Apostle (Vigan, Ilocos Sur) (November 19, 1890). "Registros parroquiales, 1713-1994". Family Search. Retrieved October 29, 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Molina, Antonio. The Philippines: Through the centuries. Manila: University of Sto. Tomas Cooperative, 1961. Print.
  3. Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) – Organizational Chart
  4. "Elpidio Quirino". Retrieved 2009-08-09.
  5. Quoted from Zaide, Gregorio (1956). "25". Philippine Political and Cultural History: the Philippines since British Invasion. 2 (1957 Revised ed.). Manila, Philippines: McCullough Printing Company. p. 25.
  6. "Elpidio Quirino reinterred at Libingan ng mga Bayani after 60 years". GMA News. February 26, 2016. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
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