Philippine local elections, 2013

For the barangay elections in October, see Philippine barangay elections, 2013.
Philippine local election, 2013
Philippines
May 13, 2013
Provincial governors and vice governors 80 each Steady
Provincial boards 80 Steady
Provincial board members 766 Increase 4
Mayors and vice mayors 1,634 each Increase 3
City and municipal councils 1,634 Increase 3
City and municipal councilors 13,530 Increase 212
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Philippines

Local elections were held on the Philippines on May 13, 2013, the same day and on the same ballot as national elections. Elected were governors, mayors and council members of Philippine provinces, Philippine cities and Philippine municipalities. Separate elections for barangay officials were held on October.

Positions to be elected are mayors, vice mayors, and councilors, and if applicable, governors, vice governors and provincial board members. There will be elected 80 provincial governors, 80 provincial vice governors, 766 members of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial board), 138 city mayors, 138 city vice mayors, 1,532 members of the Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council), 1,496 municipal mayors, 1,496 municipal vice mayors, and 11,972 members of the Sangguniang Bayan (municipal council).[1]

Also included are elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) that were supposed to have been held in 2011 but were postponed and synchronized with the triennial elections. Voters in the ARMM will be electing one regional governor, one regional vice governor and 24 members of the regional assembly.

Elections by position

Position Number of positions Notes
Senators 12
Party-list representatives 58
District representatives 234
Regional governor 1 ARMM only
Regional vice governor 1
Regional assemblymen 24
Provincial governors 80 Some cities don't elect provincial officials.
Provincial vice governors 80
Provincial board members 766
Mayors 1,634
Vice mayors 1,634
Councilors 13,530
Total 18,054

Regional-level elections

The voters in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) elect a regional government, composed of a regional governor and a regional vice governor voted separately and under the first past the post system, and a regional assembly composed of three assemblymen elected from each district under the plurality-at-large voting system.

The election was scheduled for 2011, but was postponed to 2013 to be synchronized with the rest of the country. The winning candidates will take over from the appointees of President Benigno Aquino III, who replaced the officials who had their terms expire on 2011.

Provincial-level elections

Provincial governor elections results.
Provincial board elections results.

Each province is headed by a governor and a vice governor. The governor is the chief executive of the province, while the vice governor acts as the governor once the latter is unable to perform his duties, and has the casting vote in the provincial board in case of a tie on a measure, among other powers. While most governors and vice governors run on one ticket, the positions are elected separately, and the winners may come from different tickets.

Each province has a Sangguniang Panlalawigan or provincial board, the legislative body of the province. A province's number of provincial board members depends on its financial standing (generally, the more populous provinces are richer), with the richest provinces having up to 14 board members. In addition, the provincial board has a seat reserved for the president of the provincial chapter of the League of Councilors which are indirectly elected from the city and municipal levels, and two more seats reserved for the presidents of the provincial chapters of the Association of Barangay (village) Captains (ABC) and of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK; youth councils). These ex officio members are indirectly elected from the municipal and city levels, which were elected by the people in 2010; an election later in the year may change the membership of those two ex officio members.

Election for the provincial board is via first past the post for single-member districts, and plurality-at-large voting for multi-member districts.

Gubernatorial results
Party Won %
Liberal 36 45%
NPC 14 18%
NUP 8 10%
Nacionalista 7 9%
UNA 4 5%
Bangon Pilipinas 1 1%
PDP-Laban 1 1%
Lakas 1 1%
Other parties 3 4%
Independent 6 8%
Total 80 100%

Vice gubernatorial results
Party Won %
Liberal 36 45%
NPC 12 15%
Nacionalista 11 14%
UNA 5 6%
NUP 4 5%
Lakas 3 4%
LDP 2 3%
Bangon Pilipinas 1 1%
Other parties 1 1%
Independent 5 6%
Total 80 100%

Provincial board results
Party Boards
controlled
Seats
won
Total % Total %
Liberal 25 9% 300 30%
NPC 6 2% 112 11%
Nacionalista 5 2% 102 10%
NUP 4 1% 74 7%
UNA 1 0% 44 4%
Lakas 0 0% 18 2%
Bangon Pilipinas 0 0% 8 1%
LDP 0 0% 5 0%
PDP-Laban 0 0% 4 0%
PMP 0 0% 3 0%
Aksyon 0 0% 1 0%
Other parties 2 1% 38 4%
Independent N/A 57 6%
Ex officio members N/A 240 24%
No majority 36 12% N/A
Totals 79 100%* 1006 100%

*Winning candidates for Camarines Sur are incomplete.

Details

Province Winning vice
governor's party
Provincial board composition Notes
Abra Liberal
11 seats
Agusan del Norte Liberal
11 seats
Agusan del Sur NUP
13 seats
Aklan Nacionalista
13 seats
Albay Liberal
13 seats
Antique UNA
13 seats
Apayao Liberal
11 seats
Aurora LDP
11 seats
Basilan Liberal
11 seats
Bataan Liberal
13 seats
Batanes Independent
9 seats
Batangas Liberal
13 seats
Benguet Liberal
13 seats
Biliran Liberal
11 seats
Bohol Liberal
13 seats
Bukidnon Bukidnon Paglaum
13 seats
Bukidnon Paglaum won 8 board seats.
Bulacan NUP
13 seats
Cagayan Nacionalista
13 seats
Camarines Norte Liberal
13 seats
Camarines Sur Nacionalista
13 seats
Camiguin NPC
9 seats
Capiz Liberal
13 seats
Catanduanes Lakas
11 seats
Cavite Lakas
17 seats
Cebu Liberal
15 seats
Bakud won 2 board seats.
Compostela Valley Liberal
13 seats
Cotabato Independent
13 seats
Davao del Norte Liberal
13 seats
Kusog Baryohanon won 4 board seats,
Davao del Sur NPC
13 seats
Davao Oriental Lakas
13 seats
Dinagat Islands Nacionalista
13 seats
Eastern Samar LDP
13 seats
Guimaras Liberal
11 seats
Ifugao Liberal
11 seats
Ilocos Norte Nacionalista
13 seats
Ilocos Sur Nacionalista
13 seats
Iloilo Liberal
13 seats
Ugyon won 1 board seat; 2 UNA board seats elected under the "UNA/Abyan Ilonggo" ticket. Vice governor elected under the "Liberal/Ugyon" ticket.
Isabela Independent
13 seats
Kalinga Nacionalista
11 seats
La Union NPC
13 seats
Laguna Nacionalista
13 seats
Lanao del Norte NPC
13 seats
Lanao del Sur Liberal
13 seats
Ompia Party won 1 board seat.
Leyte Liberal
13 seats
Maguindanao Liberal
13 seats
Marinduque Liberal
11 seats
Masbate NPC
13 seats
Misamis Occidental Independent
13 seats
Misamis Oriental UNA
13 seats
Mountain Province Independent
11 seats
Negros Occidental NPC
15 seats
United Negros Alliance (UNEGA) won 2 board seats, one NPC board member elected under the "NPC/UNEGA" ticket.
Negros Oriental Liberal
13 seats
Northern Samar NUP
13 seats
Nueva Ecija Liberal
13 seats
All NPC board members elected under the "NPC/BALANE" ticket; Unang Sigaw won 4 board seats.
Nueva Vizcaya Nacionalista
13 seats
Occidental Mindoro Liberal
13 seats
Oriental Mindoro Liberal
13 seats
Sandugo won 2 board seats
Palawan NUP
13 seats
Vice governor elected under the "NUP/PPP" ticket.
Pampanga NPC
13 seats
Kambilan won 7 board seats. Vice governor elected under "NPC/Kambilan" ticket
Pangasinan NPC
15 seats
8 of NPC elected under "NPC/Biskeg" ticket. Vice governor elected under the "NPC/Biskeg" ticket.
Quezon Liberal
13 seats
Quirino Liberal
11 seats
Rizal NPC
13 seats
Romblon Liberal
11 seats
Samar Nacionalista
13 seats
Sarangani UNA
13 seats
All UNA board members elected under "UNA/People's Champ Movement" ticket. Vice governor elected under the "UNA/PCM" ticket.
Siquijor Liberal
9 seats
Sorsogon NPC
13 seats
South Cotabato UNA
13 seats
Southern Leyte NUP
11 seats
Sultan Kudarat UNA
13 seats
Sulu Liberal
13 seats
Surigao del Norte Liberal
13 seats
Padajon Surigao won 1 board seat.
Surigao del Sur Liberal
13 seats
Tarlac NPC
13 seats
Tawi-Tawi Liberal
11 seats
Zambales Sulong Zambales
13 seats
Sulong Zambales won 6 board seats.
Zamboanga del Norte Liberal
13 seats
Zamboanga del Sur NPC
13 seats
Zamboanga Sibugay Nacionalista
13 seats

City-level elections

The executive and legislative branches of cities are modeled after provinces, with a mayor, vice mayor and a city council made up of councilors. The city council has up to 36 regular members elected via plurality-at-large voting. Some cities are divided into councilor districts; if a city is divided into two or more congressional districts, the councilor districts would be coextensive with these. Some cities aren't divided into councilor districts; in cases such as this, the entire membership is elected at-large, with the city as one "district". Aside from these regular members, city councils also have two ex officio members composed of the president of the city chapters of the Association of Barangay (village) Captains (ABC) and of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK; youth councils). These ex officio members are indirectly elected from the barangay level, which were elected by the people in 2010; an election later in the year may change the membership of those two ex officio members.

Mayoral results
Party Won %
Liberal 61 33%
NPC 22 15%
UNA 16 11%
NUP 10 7%
Nacionalista 9 6%
Lakas 6 4%
PDP-Laban 3 2%
Aksyon 1 1%
Bangon Pilipinas 1 1%
PMP 1 1%
Other parties 8 6%
Independent 5 3%
Total 143 100%

Vice mayoral results
Party Won %
Liberal 57 40%
NPC 19 13%
UNA 16 11%
Nacionalista 12 8%
NUP 11 8%
Lakas 4 3%
Bangon Pilipinas 2 1%
LDP 2 1%
Aksyon 1 1%
Bagumbayan-VNP 1 1%
PDP-Laban 1 1%
PMP 1 1%
Other parties 9 6%
Independent 7 5%
Total 143 100%

City council results
Party Won %
Liberal 647 34%
NPC 206 11%
UNA 169 9%
Nacionalista 153 8%
NUP 88 5%
Lakas 41 2%
PDP-Laban 24 1%
LDP 10 1%
Bangon Pilipinas 7 0%
Bagumbayan-VNP 7 0%
PMP 6 0%
Aksyon 3 0%
Other parties 118 6%
Independent 119 6%
Ex-officio seats 286 15%
Total 1,884 100%

In the results tables above, in cases when a candidate ran under two parties, a national party and a local party, the seat is credited to the national party. Therefore, all seats won by local parties here refer to parties that did not include a name of a national party on the ballot.

Largest 10 cities

City Details Mayor's party Vice mayor's party Sangguniang Panlungsod (City Council) members
LP NP NPC NUP UNA Others
Quezon City Details Liberal Liberal
27 / 38
1 / 38
2 / 38
2 / 38
4 / 38
Manila Details UNA UNA
6 / 38
1 / 38
25 / 38
4 / 38
Caloocan Details UNA PMP
6 / 14
5 / 14
1 / 14
Davao City Hugpong Hugpong
3 / 26
1 / 26
1 / 26
19 / 26
Cebu City Details UNA UNA
12 / 18
4 / 18
Zamboanga City Details Liberal LDP
1 / 18
1 / 18
3 / 18
10 / 18
Taguig Details Nacionalista Nacionalista
15 / 18
1 / 18
Antipolo NPC Liberal
5 / 18
4 / 18
4 / 18
1 / 18
Pasig Nacionalista Independent
1 / 14
10 / 14
1 / 14
Cagayan de Oro Liberal Nacionalista
4 / 18
5 / 18
5 / 18
2 / 18

Other cities

City Details Mayor's party Vice mayor's party Sangguniang Panlungsod (City Council) members
LP NP NPC NUP UNA Others
Batangas City NPC UNA
2 / 12
8 / 12
Biñan Details Liberal Liberal
8 / 12
2 / 12
Calamba Details Nacionalista Nacionalista
7 / 14
3 / 14
Dasmariñas Details NUP NUP
1 / 12
11 / 12
Iligan Details NUP Liberal
8 / 14
1 / 14
3 / 14
Imus Details Liberal Liberal
10 / 12
2 / 12
Koronadal Liberal NPC
7 / 10
1 / 10
1 / 10
1 / 10
Makati Details UNA UNA
16 / 18
Marikina Details Liberal Liberal
15 / 18
1 / 18
Naga, Camarines Sur Details Liberal Liberal
10 / 12
Navotas Details UNA UNA
12 / 14
San Pablo Details UNA UNA
1 / 12
2 / 12
6 / 12
1 / 12
Santa Rosa Details Liberal Liberal
10 / 12
Valencia Details Aksyon Bukidnon Paglaum
1 / 12
9 / 12
Valenzuela Details NPC Liberal
1 / 14
8 / 14
1 / 14
2 / 14

Municipal-level elections

The executive and legislative branches of cities are modeled after cities, with the municipal councils being composed of eight (twelve in Pateros) regular members elected at-large. As with city councils, municipal councils have two ex officio members: one each from the municipal presidents of the Association of Barangay Captains, and of the Sangguniang Kabataan, all indirectly elected from the barangay level.

Mayoral results
Party Won %
Liberal 604 41%
NPC 224 15%
Nacionalista 150 10%
NUP 128 9%
UNA 113 8%
Lakas 35 2%
PMP 21 1%
PDP-Laban 18 1%
Bangon Pilipinas 17 1%
LDP 9 1%
Aksyon 7 0%
Other parties 73 5%
Independent 85 6%
Total 1484 100%

Vice mayoral results
Party Won %
Liberal 570 38%
NPC 220 15%
Nacionalista 154 10%
UNA 114 8%
NUP 112 8%
Lakas 33 2%
PDP-Laban 16 1%
Bangon Pilipinas 15 1%
PMP 13 1%
LDP 11 1%
Aksyon 4 0%
PDSP 4 0%
Other parties 67 4%
Independent 154 10%
Total 1484 100%

Municipal council results
Party Won %
Liberal 4,269 29%
NPC 1,560 10%
Nacionalista 1,219 8%
NUP 882 6%
UNA 841 6%
Lakas 282 2%
PDP-Laban 132 1%
Bangon Pilipinas 113 1%
PMP 91 1%
LDP 66 1%
Aksyon 25 0%
KBL 3 0%
PDSP 1 0%
Other parties 543 4%
Independent 1,834 12%
Ex-officio seats 2,968 20%
Total 14,829 100%

Municipality Province Details Mayor's party Vice mayor's party Sangguniang Bayan (Municipal Council) members
LP NP NPC NUP UNA Others
Boac Marinduque NUP Liberal
2 / 8
6 / 8
Isulan Sultan Kudarat Independent Liberal
1 / 8
7 / 8
Kawit Cavite Liberal Liberal
6 / 8
2 / 8
Mogpog Marinduque Liberal Independent
7 / 8
1 / 8
Pateros Metro Manila Nacionalista Liberal
3 / 12
8 / 12
1 / 12
Rosario Cavite Lakas Lakas
2 / 8
6 / 8
San Pedro Laguna Details Nacionalista Nacionalista
9 / 12
1 / 12
Santa Cruz Marinduque Liberal Liberal
4 / 8
4 / 8

Barangay-level elections

Elections for barangay level were held on October 2013. Each barangay has a chairman and seven kagawads (councilors) elected at large.

Elections by locality

By locality:

Campaign

For the 14 April weekend, Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines' Vice President Archbishop Socrates Villegas instructed priests to tell their flock during mass "not to vote for the candidate if the candidate cannot declare a categorical and clear 'no' to divorce, abortion, euthanasia, total birth control and homosexual marriages or death issues." This was seen as a setback for President Benigno Aquino's allies who had passed a birth control law the previous year.[2]

See also

References

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