General Emilio F. Aguinaldo (March 22, 1869 - February 6, 1964). He was 29 years old
when he became Chief of State, first as head of the dictatorship he thought
should be established upon his return to Cavite in May 1898 from voluntary
exile in Hongkong, and then a month later as President of the Revolutionary
Government that Apolinario Mabini had persuaded him should instead be instituted. Aguinaldo’s presidential term formally began in 1898 and
ended on April 1, 1901, when he took an oath of allegiance to the United States
a week after his capture in Palanan, Isabela. His term also featured the
setting up of the Malolos Republic, which has its own Congress, Constitution,
and national and local officialdom -- proving Filipinos also had the capacity
to build. Aguinaldo
is best remembered for the proclamation of Philippine Independence on June 12,
1898, in Kawit, Cavite.
Manuel L. Quezon
(August 19, 1878 - August 1, 1944). He won the elections held in September 1935
to choose the head of the Commonwealth Government. It was a government made
possible by the Tydings-McDuffie Law, which Quezon secured from the U.S.
Quezon had emerged as the acknowledged leader of Philippine
politics and possessed the kind of background and experience that appealed to
Filipinos. He had a bachelor of arts degree, studied law, and landed fourth
place in the 1903 Bar examinations. He served in the revolution, fighting in
Tarlac, Pampanga, and Bataan, and ended up with the rank of major. He was
appointed provincial fiscal of Mindoro and Tayabas, his home province. He was
elected governor of Tayabas in 1905 and in 1907, first assemblyman from the
province to the First Philippine National Assembly. In 1909, he was appointed
resident commissioner to the U.S. and when he finished his term after eight
years, he returned to the Philippines to become President of the Philippine
Senate, created by the Jones Law. He was also top man of the ruling
Nacionalista Party.
Quezon’s term (1935 - 1944), though chiefly known for making
Pilipino the national language, tried to solve nagging problems inherited from
the Spanish and American administrations. He directed his main efforts to bring
about political stability, build up national defense against the threat of
Japanese militarism, and strengthen an economy that was extremely dependent
upon the U.S. He was also remembered for taking executive and legislative
actions to implement his “social justice” program aimed at the underprivileged. The Commonwealth Government was interrupted by
the Japanese invasion of 1941. Quezon and his government were forced to go into
exile in the U.S. He died on August 1, 1944, in New York.
Jose
P. Laurel (March 9, 1891 -
November 5, 1959). He was elected by the National Assembly as President of the
Republic on September 25, 1943 and inducted on October 14, 1943. This
unicameral assembly was created through the sponsorship of the Japanese
authorities. Laurel’s controversial Presidency during the Japanese Occupation
(1943 - 1945) overshadowed his achievements as legislator, jurist, writer, and
administrator in the pre-war struggle for independence. As an elected senator
and later delegate to the Constitutional Convention, he distinguished himself
for his advocacy of women’s suffrage and his sponsorship of the Bill of Rights
of the Constitution. He also became an associate justice of the Supreme Court.
Sergio Osmena
(September 9, 1878 - October 19, 1961). He was elected Vice President of the
Philippines in 1935 and succeeded Quezon to the Presidency in-exile.Osmena was a notable figure in the struggle for
independence. A lawyer, he espoused the cause of independence through peaceful
means as editor of the Cebu newspaper El Nuevo Dia (New Day), which he
founded in 1900. He served as fiscal of Cebu and Negros Oriental. He was
appointed governor of Cebu in 1904 and elected to the same post in 1906. In
1907, he was elected as representative of Cebu and later became speaker of the
first Philippine Assembly. In 1922, he was elected as senator. He headed
important government missions to the U. S. Osmena
returned to the Philippines on October 20, 1944, together with Gen. Douglas
MacArthur. In February 1945, he took the reins of government.
Manuel A. Roxas
(January 1, 1892 - April 15, 1948). He was popularly known as the “First
President of the Third Republic.” He won the elections by a slim margin. He was
inaugurated on July 4, 1946, the day the U.S. government granted political
independence to its colony.
Roxas was born in Capiz (now Roxas City), studied law at UP
and graduated with honors in 1913. He topped the Bar examinations in the same
year, was employed as private secretary to Chief Justice Cayetano Arellano, and
taught law in 1915-1916.
His political career started when he was appointed as a
member of the Capiz municipal council. In 1919, he was elected as governor of
Capiz. He was elected as congressman in 1922, and in 1935, he was chosen as a
delegate to the Constitutional Convention. He was elected as a senator in 1941
and eventually became Senate president.
The short-lived Roxas administration (1946 - 1948) embarked
on a course that resulted in what were considered as his greatest achievements,
namely: the ratification of the Bell Trade Act; the inclusion of the Parity
Amendment in the Constitution; and the signing of the 1947 Military Bases
Agreement.
Roxas
was not able to complete his presidential term; he died from a heart attack at
Clark Air base on April 15, 1948.
Elpidio Quirino
(November 16, 1890 - February 28, 1956). Being the Vice President, he took over
the Presidency after Roxas’ death. And, he managed to retain the position after
winning over Laurel in the infamous fraud-tainted 1949 elections. Quirino was born in Vigan, Ilocos Sur, finished law studies
at UP in 1915, and hurdled the Bar examinations in the same year. His political
career started with his election as a representative of Ilocos Sur in 1919,
then as a senator in 1925, and again reelected in 1931. President Quezon
appointed him as secretary of finance and then secretary of the interior in the
Commonwealth Government. As Roxas’ Vice President, he served concurrently first
as secretary of finance and later as secretary of foreign affairs. The
Quirino administration (1948 - 1953) focused on two objectives: 1) to regain
faith and confidence in the government; and 2) to restore peace and order. He
was more successful in the second objective – breaking the back of the
Hukbalahap Movement in Central Luzon. In addition, he was credited with
sponsoring the growth of industrial ventures, expanding irrigation, improving
the road system, and setting up the Central Bank and rural banking. It was also
during his term that the RP-US Mutual Defense Treaty was approved on August 30,
1951
Ramon Magsaysay
(August 31, 1907 - March 17, 1957). He was largely famous for his success in
the peace campaign. He defeated Quirino in the 1953 presidential elections by
an unprecedented margin of votes. Popularly known as “the guy,” Magsaysay was born in Iba,
Zambales. He took up mechanical engineering at UP but ended up with a commerce
degree from Jose Rizal College. He took a job as a mechanic in the bus company
Try-Tran and rose to become its branch manager. He attained fame as an able
guerilla leader in World War II and was subsequently named by MacArthur as
military governor of Zambales during the liberation. He was elected twice as a
congressman after the war. He was instrumental in having the U.S. Congress pass
the G.I. Bill of Rights, which accorded benefits to the Filipino war veterans.
But his national prominence resulted from being appointed defense secretary in
the Quirino administration, successfully fighting the Huks, and for being the
friend of the common tao.
Many regard Magsaysay as the President whose heart truly
bled for the common man. He toured the barrios, opened up Malacanang to the
public, solicited and acted upon their complaints, built artesian wells and
roads. He had Congress pass the Agricultural Tenancy Act of 1954, providing
greater protection to tenants. Death
came to Magsaysay when his plane crashed at Mount Pinatubo in the early morning
of March 17, 1957.
Carlos P. Garcia
(November 4, 1896 - June 1, 1971). He presided over the eight months of
Magsaysay’s remaining term and went on to win the 1957 elections, “the noisiest
and the most expensive in Philippine history.”Garcia hailed from Talibon, Bohol. He finished his law
studies at the Philippine Law School in Manila. He passed the Bar examinations
and was among the top ten.
His election as Bohol representative to the National
Assemblly in 1952 marked his entry into Philippine politics and public service
– one of the longest ever. He was again reelected as a representative. In 1931,
he started the first of this three terms as governor of Bohol. In 1941, he was
elected as a senator, but it was only in 1945 that he took office because of
World War II. He was again reelected as a senator and in 1953, he became Vice
President to Magsaysay. He was appointed in a concurrent capacity as secretary
of foreign affairs. Garcia’s
administration (1957 - 1961) was anchored in his austerity program. It was also
noted for its Filipino First policy – an attempt to boost economic
independence.
Diosdado Macapagal
(September 28, 1910). He defeated Garcia in the presidential elections of
November 14, 1961. Mapacagal – who styled himself as the “poor boy” from Lubao
(Pampanga) – completed pre-law and Associate in Arts at UP; however, he was a
law graduate of the University of Santo Tomas. He was the topnotcher of the Bar
examinations in 1935. He then entered into a private law practice, teaching law
at the side. In 1946, he was appointed Chief of the Legal Division of the
Department of Foreign Affairs and was eventually sent to the Philippine Embassy
in Washington as Second Secretary. In 1949, he was elected as the congressman of the first
district of Pampanga and reelected in 1953. In 1958, he was elected as Vice President
of the Philippines. Macapagal’s
administration (1961 - 1965) is best remembered for resetting the date of the
celebration of Philippine Independence Day – from July 4 when the U.S. turned
over the reins of government in 1946 to the more correct date of June 12 when
Aguinaldo declared independence in 1898. This single act overshadowed the other
distinguishing features of his administration, namely: the promotion of the
stability of the Philippine currency; the initiation of a socioeconomic program
aimed at the betterment of the poor; efforts to combat misdeeds in government,
and the launching of his version of agrarian reform.
Ferdinand E. Marcos
(September 11, 1917 - September 28, 1989). He defeated Macapagal in the 1965
presidential elections. And the two-decade era of Marcos (1965 - 1986) began.
Marcos was born in Sarrat, Ilocos Norte. He was a consistent
scholar, took up Law at UP, and graduated cum laude in 1939. At 19, he was
charged with the murder of a political enemy of his father. Thrown in jail, he
reviewed for the nearing Bar examinations and topped it. Defeated at a lower
court, he argued his own case in an appeal before the Supreme Court and won an
acquittal. He joined the guerilla forces at the outbreak of war. Marcos
entered politics with an eye to eventually capturing the presidency. In his
maiden campaign in 1949, he said: “Elect me your congressman now and I’ll give
you an Ilokano President in 20 years.” He won that election and was returned
thrice to Congress as Ilocos Norte’s congressman. In 1959, he was elected to
the Philippine Senate and in 1963, he became its president. Completing the
presidential term in 1969, he won a reelection . In 1972, he declared martial
law. The rest is history.
Corazon C. Aquino(January 25, 1933). President from 1986 to 1992, she is associated with the
EDSA Revolt. No one could have imagined that Cory Aquino would become a
president of the Philippines. Although she was born to the landed class in
Tarlac, her background was so disparate from the patterns that cut presidential
figures. In 1946, her family left for the U.S. and she enrolled at Ravenhill
Academy in Philadelphia. She finished her junior and senior years at Notre Dame
College in New York. In 1949, she entered Mount Saint Vincent College also in
New York where she finished a Bachelor of Arts course, major in French .In 1953, she returned to the Philippines to take up law at
the Far Eastern University. But, the following year, she met and married
Benigno Ninoy Aquino. Subsequently, she became content to live in her husband’s
shadow and took the role of wife and mother to her five children. However,
Ninoy’s assassination in 1983 swept aside this role and catapulted her to the
top position of the country after the tumultuous events which followed the EDSA
revolution in February 1986.
She
refused to run for reelection in the 1992 presidential elections; but instead
endorsed and worked very hard for her chosen candidate – Fidel V. Ramos.
Fidel V. Ramos
((March 18, 1928). He was the military hero of the February 1986 Philippine
People Power Revolution and victor of the first multiparty presidential
elections in 1992, thus becoming the 12th President of the Republic of the
Philippines.
Ramos was born on March 18, 1928, and grew up in Lingayen,
Pangasinan. His father - Narciso Ramos - was a lawyer, a crusading journalist,
a five-term legislator of the House of Representatives, and later, secretary of
foreign affairs.
The Ramos administration has anchored its governance on the
philosophy of “People Empowerment” as the engine to operationalize economic
growth, social equity, and national solidarity. It is focusing on a five-point
program: peace and stability; economic growth and sustainable development;
energy and power generation; environmental protection; and a streamline
democracy. The six-year term of Ramos (1992 - 1998) is looked upon with
much hope and optimism not only because of his clear vision of the future but
also because of his hands-on leadership style in meeting the challenges faced
by the country. Because of his leadership, the Philippines is expected to
attain full political stability, sustained economic development and social
justice by the turn of the 21st century.
Joseph "Erap" Ejercito Estrada (born Jose Marcelo Ejercito; April 19, 1937) is a Filipino politician who served as the 13th President of the Philippines from 1998 until 2001. Estrada was the first person in the Post-EDSA era to be elected both to the presidency and vice-presidency. He is the Mayor-elect of Manila, the country's capital, after emerging as the victor in the 2013 mid-term elections. Estrada gained popularity as a film actor, playing the lead role in over 100 films in an acting career spanning 33 years. He used his popularity as an actor to make gains in politics, serving as mayor of San Juan for seventeen years, as Senator for one term, then as Vice President of the Philippines under the administration of President Fidel V. Ramos.
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (born April 5, 1947) is a Filipino politician who served as the 14th President of the Philippines from 2001 to 2010, as the 12th Vice President of the Philippines from 1998 to 2001, and is currently a member of the House of Representatives representing the 2nd District of Pampanga. She was the country's second female president (after Corazón Aquino), and the daughter of former President Diosdado Macapagal. Arroyo was a former professor of economics at Ateneo de Manila University where Benigno Aquino III was one of her students. She entered government in 1987, serving as assistant secretary and undersecretary of the Department of Trade and Industry upon the invitation of President Corazon Aquino. After serving as a senator from 1992 to 1998, she was elected to the vice presidency under President Joseph Estrada, despite having run on an opposing ticket. After Estrada was accused of corruption, she resigned her cabinet position as Secretary of Social Welfare and Development and joined the growing opposition to the president, who faced impeachment. Estrada was soon forced from office by the EDSA Revolution of 2001, and Arroyo was sworn into the presidency by Chief Justice Hilario Davide, Jr. on January 20, 2001. She was elected to a full six-year presidential term in the controversial May 2004 Philippine elections, and was sworn in on June 30, 2004. Following her presidency she was elected to the House of Representatives, making her the second Philippine president—after José P. Laurel—to pursue a lower office after their presidency.
Benigno Simeon Cojuangco Aquino III born February 8, 1960), also known as Noynoy Aquino or PNoy, is a Filipino politician who has been the 15th President of the Philippines since June 2010. Aquino is a fourth-generation politician: his great-grandfather, Servillano "Mianong" Aquino, served as a delegate to the Malolos Congress; his grandfather, Benigno Aquino, Sr., served as Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from 1943 to 1944; and his parents were President Corazon Aquino and Senator Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino, Jr. Aquino is a member of the Liberal Party. In the Liberal Party, Aquino held various positions such as Secretary General and Vice President for Luzon. Aquino is the Chairman of the Liberal Party.
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