1946 Philippine presidential election explained

Election Name:1946 Philippine presidential election
Country:Philippines
Flag Year:1936
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1943 Philippine presidential election
Previous Year:1943
Next Election:1949 Philippine presidential election
Next Year:1949
Election Date:April 23, 1946
Image1:Manuel Roxas 2.jpg
Nominee1:Manuel Roxas
Party1:Nacionalista Party (Liberal wing)
Running Mate1:Elpidio Quirino
Popular Vote1:1,333,392
Percentage1:53.94%
Nominee2:Sergio Osmeña
Party2:Nacionalista Party
Running Mate2:Eulogio Rodriguez
Popular Vote2:1,129,996
Percentage2:45.71%
Map Size:300px
President
Before Election:Sergio Osmeña
Before Party:Nacionalista Party
After Election:Manuel Roxas
After Party:Nacionalista Party (Liberal wing)

The 1946 Philippine presidential and vice presidential elections were held on April 23, 1946, according to Commonwealth Act No. 725. Incumbent president Sergio Osmeña ran for a full term but was defeated by Senator Manuel Roxas. Meanwhile, senator Elpidio Quirino defeated fellow senator Eulogio Rodriguez to become vice president.

Background

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, as well as the members of Congress. In December 1945, the House Insular Affairs Committee of the United States Congress approved the joint resolution, setting the election date by 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 date on April 23, 1946. President Osmeña signed the act on January 5, 1946.

Candidates

Three parties presented their respective candidates for the different national elective positions. These were the Nacionalista Party, the Conservative (Osmeña) Wing, the Liberal Wing of the Nacionalista Party, and the Partido Modernista. The Nacionalistas had Osmeña and Senator Eulogio Rodriguez as their candidates for President and vice president, respectively. The Modernistas chose Hilario Camino Moncado and Luis Salvador for the same positions. On the other hand, the standard bearers of the Liberals were Senators Manuel Roxas and Elpidio Quirino.

On January 3, 1946, President Osmeña announced his candidacy for President. On January 22, 1946, Eulogio Rodriguez was nominated as Osmeña's running mate for Vice President in a convention held at Ciro's Club in Manila. According to the Manila Chronicle:

The convention opened at 10:15 in the morning when the acting secretary of the party, Vicente Farmoso, called the confab to order.

Congressman Jose C. Romero, who delivered the keynote speech, accused Senate President Manuel Roxas and his followers of fanning the flames of discontent among the people, capitalizing on the people's hardship, and minimizing the accomplishment of the [Osmeña] Administration. These men with the Messiah complex have been the country's and world's bane. This is the mentality that produces Hitlers and Mussolinis, and in their desire to climb to power, they even want to destroy the party which placed them where they are today.

Senator Carlos P. Garcia, who delivered the nomination speech for President Sergio Osmeña, recited Osmeña's achievements and virtues as a public official and private citizen.

Entering the convention hall at about 7:30 p.m., President Osmeña, accompanied by the committee on notification, was greeted with cheer and applause as he ascended the platform. President Osmeña delivered his speech, a general outline of his plans once elected. He emphasized that as far as his party is concerned, independence is a close issue. It was coming on July 4, 1946.[1]

On January 19, 1946, Senator Roxas announced his candidacy for President in a convention held in Santa Ana Cabaret in Makati, Rizal. According to the Manila Chronicle:

...more than three thousand (by conservative estimates, there were only 1,000 plus) delegates, party members, and hero worshipers jammed into suburban, well-known Santa Ana Cabaret (biggest in the world) to acclaim ex-katipunero and Bagong Katipunan organizer Manuel Acuña Roxas as the guidon bearer of the Nacionalista Party's Liberal Wing.

The delegates from all over the Islands met in a formal convention from 10:50 a.m. and broke up at about 5:30 p.m.

They elected 1. Mariano J. Cuenco, professional Osmeñaphobe, as temporary chairman; 2. Jose Avelino and ex-pharmacist Antonio Zacarias, permanent chairman and secretary, respectively; 3. nominated forty-four candidates for senators; 4. heard the generalissimo himself deliver an oratorical masterpiece consisting of 50 per cent attacks against the (Osmeña) Administration, 50 per cent promises, pledges. Rabid Roxasites greeted the Roxas acceptance speech with hysterical applause.[2]

President Osmeña tried to prevent the split in the Nacionalista Party by offering Senator Roxas the position of Philippine Regent Commissioner to the United States, but the latter turned down the offer.

As a result of the split among the members of the Nacionalista Party, owing to marked differences of opinion on specific vital issues of which no settlement had been reached, a new political organization was born and named the Liberal Wing of the Nacionalista Party, which would later become the Liberal Party.

Results

The election was generally peaceful and orderly except in some places where passions ran high, especially in Pampanga. According to the "controversial" decision of the Electoral Tribunal of the House of Representatives on Meliton Soliman vs. Luis Taruc, Pampanga "was under the terroristic clutches and control of the Hukbalahaps. So terrorized were the people of Arayat were terrorized; at one time, 200 persons abandoned their homes, work, food, and belongings in a mass evacuation to the Poblacion due to fear and terror."

A total of 2,596,880 voters went to the polls to elect their President and Vice President, who was to be the Commonwealth's last and the Republic's first. President Osmena chose not to actively campaign, saying the Filipinos knew his record of 40 years of loyal service to the country.

Four days after election day, the Liberal candidates were proclaimed victors. Roxas registered a majority of votes in 34 provinces and nine cities: Abra, Agusan, Albay, Antique, Bataan, Batanes, Batangas, Bukidnon, Bulacan, Cagayan, Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Capiz, Cavite, Cotabato, Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Isabela, Laguna, La Union, Leyte, Marinduque, Mindoro, Misamis Oriental, Negros Occidental, Nueva Vizcaya, Palawan, Pangasinan, Rizal, Romblon, Samar, Sorsogon, Sulu, Surigao, Tayabas, Zambales, Manila, Quezon City, Bacolod (Negros Occidental), Iloilo City (Iloilo), Baguio (Mountain Province), Zamboanga City (Zamboanga), Tagaytay (Cavite), Cavite City (Cavite) and San Pablo City (Laguna)

Likewise, the Liberal Party won nine out of 16 contested senatorial seats.

In the House of Representatives, the Liberals achieved a majority with 50 seats won, while the Nacionalistas and the Democratic Alliance were only victorious in 33 and six seats, respectively.

President

By province/city

Province/CityRoxasOsmeñaMoncado
Abra6,7603,81318
Agusan9,3549,21926
Albay25,94024,34413
Antique18,27112,95219
Bataan9,4688,3094
Batanes1,32670520
Batangas56,41024,11837
Bohol30,59240,285308
Bukidnon3,0112,451150
Bulacan39,79938,54938
Cagayan15,51425,605365
Camarines Norte10,4715,4824
Camarines Sur33,26724,21421
Capiz41,84418,16114
Catanduanes5,4778,6984
Cavite38,11111,19619
Cebu53,84898,700792
Cotabato17,82616,49066
Culion Leper Colony474200
Davao11,89619,2261,536
Ilocos Norte25,46412,097243
Ilocos Sur30,32216,53034
Iloilo79,13643,52225
Isabela17,4319,220437
La Union22,49914,845157
Laguna36,52722,24626
Lanao17,21237,101991
Leyte64,23649,965155
Manila82,45731,513172
Marinduque10,5962,4878
Masbate9,73012,20727
Mindoro14,0259,2406
Misamis Occidental11,16515,926848
Misamis Oriental14,30712,737153
Mountain Province8,49011,369468
Negros Occidental62,60552,98258
Negros Oriental13,26225,594171
Nueva Ecija29,47841,61628
Nueva Vizcaya7,4583,6649
Palawan6,3175,1647
Pampanga11,29669,50542
Pangasinan82,08164,79456
Rizal60,10335,418101
Romblon9,2003,56017
Samar37,55330,79382
Sorsogon20,71517,5286
Sulu6,8339,2286
Surigao15,05312,79585
Tarlac16,86826,19339
Tayabas50,22410,95416
Zambales15,8116,85316
Zamboanga15,70619,413595
Total1,333,3921,129,9968,538
Source: Bureau of the Census and Statistics[3]

Vice-President

By province/city

Province/CityQuirinoRodriguezSalvador
Abra6,8943,0927
Agusan8,5408,13111
Albay23,44521,69612
Antique16,74912,02655
Bataan6,4248,24517
Batanes1,4662216
Batangas32,18522,195111
Bohol26,29034,296167
Bukidnon2,8992,13899
Bulacan29,27738,88150
Cagayan21,82617,226238
Camarines Norte10,0134,8944
Camarines Sur31,28223,05224
Capiz36,84517,49411
Catanduanes5,1648,6454
Cavite22,68817,88228
Cebu50,49592,253524
Cotabato17,36611,71868
Culion Leper Colony1003291
Davao12,01517,6291,090
Ilocos Norte26,7279,672109
Ilocos Sur36,1589,46012
Iloilo68,52040,34342
Isabela19,8005,786208
La Union29,1266,860104
Laguna17,72430,55226
Lanao12,63826,787594
Leyte55,87343,776139
Manila67,22843,197139
Marinduque6,4054,18127
Masbate8,37810,06632
Mindoro12,3707,4237
Misamis Occidental8,83515,046334
Misamis Oriental12,24510,172132
Mountain Province11,3406,530221
Negros Occidental56,52747,01163
Negros Oriental11,86923,00083
Nueva Ecija27,94938,69046
Nueva Vizcaya7,0953,48621
Palawan6,2194,6917
Pampanga9,29164,566119
Pangasinan84,77556,80645
Rizal35,51254,89650
Romblon7,4823,06024
Samar34,92025,586140
Sorsogon19,45515,98010
Sulu5,9537,6405
Surigao13,80011,76856
Tarlac17,52322,81350
Tayabas39,33815,96635
Zambales15,3704,92839
Zamboanga13,31718,462433
Total1,161,7251,051,2435,879
Source: Bureau of the Census and Statistics

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Celso G. Cabrera. "Rodriguez is Nominated as Osmeña's Running-Mate," Manila Chronicle, January 22, 1946, p. 2
  2. "Conventions Climax Hectic Week," Manila Chronicle This week, January 27, 1946, p. 3
  3. Book: Bulletin of Philippine Statistics No. 1. Bureau of Printing . 1946 . II . 72.