Election Name: | 1910 La Laguna's 1st assembly district special election |
Type: | By-election |
Country: | Philippines |
Flag Year: | 1908 |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1909 Philippine Assembly elections |
Previous Year: | 1909 |
Next Election: | 1912 Philippine Assembly elections |
Next Year: | 1912 |
Candidate1: | Marcos Paulino |
Party1: | Progresista Party |
Popular Vote1: | 1,491 |
Percentage1: | 59.66% |
Candidate2: | Servillano Platon |
Party2: | Nacionalista Party |
Popular Vote2: | 1,008 |
Percentage2: | 40.34% |
Delegate | |
Posttitle: | Subsequent delegate |
Before Election: | Potenciano Malvar |
Before Party: | Nacionalista Party |
After Election: | Marcos Paulino |
After Party: | Progresista Party |
A special election (known elsewhere as "by-elections") for the seat of La Laguna's 1st district in the Philippine Assembly, the lower house of the Philippine Legislature of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, was held on December 13, 1910. This was triggered due to the appointment of the incumbent delegate Potenciano Malvar as the governor of La Laguna (now called simply as Laguna). Marcos Paulino won the special election, defeating Servillano Platón, a flip from the Nacionalista Party to the Progresista Party.
La Laguna's 1st district composed of the province's western municipalities of Alaminos, Bay, Binang, Cabuyao, Calamba, Calauang, Los Baños, Pila, San Pablo, San Pedro Tunasan, and Santa Rosa.
Juan Cailles, a Progresista Party stalwart, was to retire as governor of La Laguna. In the immediately preceding gubernatorial election, the Nacionalista Party's Domingo Ordoveza won, but Governor-General William Cameron Forbes, upon the advice of vice governor Newton W. Gilbert, was convinced that Ordoveza bought votes and refused to seat him nor Cailles, and will appoint someone from the Nacionalista Party instead.[1] On September 22, 1910, Forbes appointed Potenciano Malvar, the younger brother of Miguel Malvar and incumbent delegate from La Laguna's 1st district, as governor, succeeding Cailles.[2] La Democracia newspaper had opposed Malvar's appointment, pointing out that he was ineligible for the post as a sitting member of the Philippine Assembly.[3] La Democracia is the official organ of the Progresistas.[4] A day later, the Philippine Commission approved the appointment of Malvar as provincial governor.[5] On October 4, Forbes scheduled the special election for the vacant assembly seat on December 13.[6]
A total of two persons ran to fill the vacant seat, namely:
Marcos Paulino of the Progresista Party defeated Servillano Platón of the Nacionalistas.[7] The latter carried Calauang, Los Baños, Santa Rosa and San Pedro Tunasan, Biñang saw a tied result, and the former won in Alaminos, Bay, Calamba, Cabuyao, Pila and San Pablo. Paulino's win increased the number of opposition Progresistas in the assembly during the 2nd Philippine Legislature.[8] Paulino took his oath of office at the Ayuntamiento de Manila on December 20, 1910.[9]
Paulino | Platon | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
Alaminos | 200 | 74.07% | 70 | 25.93% | 270 | |
Bay | 76 | 50.33% | 75 | 49.67% | 151 | |
Binang | 106 | 50.00% | 106 | 50.00% | 212 | |
Cabuyao | 91 | 60.26% | 60 | 39.74% | 151 | |
Calamba | 107 | 66.46% | 54 | 33.54% | 161 | |
Calauang | 33 | 45.21% | 40 | 54.79% | 73 | |
Los Baños | 21 | 30.88% | 47 | 69.12% | 68 | |
Pila | 64 | 51.61% | 60 | 48.39% | 124 | |
San Pablo | 725 | 67.32% | 352 | 32.68% | 1,077 | |
San Pedro Tunasan | 35 | 43.75% | 45 | 56.25% | 80 | |
Santa Rosa | 33 | 25.00% | 99 | 75.00% | 132 | |
Total | 1,491 | 59.66% | 1,008 | 40.34% | 2,499 |