1993 Philippine House of Representatives special elections explained

Election Name:1993 Philippine House of Representatives special elections
Country:Philippines
Flag Year:1936
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1992 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Previous Year:1992
Next Election:1995 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Next Year:1995
Seats For Election:2 of 200 seats in the House of Representatives of the Philippines
Election Date:August 30, 1993
Party1:Liberal Party (Philippines)
Seats1:1
Party2:Lakas–NUCD
Seats2:1

Two special elections (known as "by-elections" elsewhere) to the House of Representatives of the Philippines, the lower house of Congress, were held on August 30, 1993. These were vacancies in the 9th Congress; the winners were to serve the rest of the term, which had ended on June 30, 1995.

These were the first special elections since the preceding ones in 1967, the downfall of Ferdinand Marcos in 1986, and the approval of the 1987 constitution. The disputed seats were for Agusan del Norte's 2nd congressional district, and for Capiz's 1st congressional district. Both winners, Edelmiro Amante and Mar Roxas, ran unopposed.

Electoral system

At this time, most seats in the House of Representatives were elected from single member districts, under the first-past-the-post voting system. Other seats were sectoral representatives appointed by the president.

Special elections

Agusan del Norte's 2nd district

See also: Agusan del Norte's 2nd congressional district. President Fidel V. Ramos announced the resignation of Executive Secretary Peter Garrucho in August 1992. Ramos then nominated Edelmiro Amante to replace him.[1] Amante was one of the officials renominated Ramos after they were bypassed by the Commission on Appointments. Amante did not want to resign as congressman without the assurance that the commission will confirm him. Amante, a Lakas–NUCD stalwart, who attends cabinet meetings as an observer, is facing a commission tasked with confirming presidential appointments dominated by the opposition Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino.[2] By December, Amante asked to resign but the president granted him a medical leave of absence instead.[3] Amante's nomination as Executive Secretary was again bypassed in April; Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. then petitioned to make him Secretary of Public Works and Highways instead.[4]

In May, Congress filed a resolution asking the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) to hold a special election in Amante's district. Amante, for his part, denied he will take part in the special election, as Ramos wanted him to stay as Executive Secretary. Amante had by then earlier said he would want to be public works secretary.[5] A month later, the COMELEC set the special elections in August 30, with Amante reportedly taking part.[6] Amante resigned as Executive Secretary, taking effect on July 1, 1993, to take part in the special election. Amante, upon his return from medical leave, saw his responsibilities exercised by other people when he left, then was not restored to him when he returned, making him disenchanted. In the special election, Amante said "I hope nobody will oppose me but should there be one, I will dispose of him". Ramos was then considering Senator Teofisto Guingona Jr. as Amante's replacement.[7]

In the ensuing special election, Amante was elected unopposed.[8]

Amante died in 2013, having 4 spells as Agusan del Norte congressman, last serving in 2010.[9]

Capiz's 1st district

See also: Capiz's 1st congressional district.

On April 4, 1993, Gerardo Roxas Jr. died. A month later, Speaker Pro-Tempore Raul Daza, acting in behalf of Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr., asked the COMELEC to hold a special election in Roxas's district. Either Roxas's mother Judy, or his brother Manuel "Mar", was slated to run.[10] The COMELEC then set the special elections on August 30.

Mar Roxas successfully defended his brother's seat unopposed.

Mar eventually became a member of the Cabinet and senator, and was defeated in the 2010 vice presidential[11] and 2016 presidential election.[12]

Aftermath

After these uncontested elections, Congress elected the Lone Candidate Law, or Republic Act No. 8295, in 1997, wherein if there was only one candidate in a special election, the election would no longer take place, and the candidate shall be declared the winner.[13]

Notes and References

  1. News: 1992-08-11 . Top Ramos aide quits, reveals rifts in Cabinet . . 19.
  2. News: Maragay . Fel V. . 1992-09-09 . FVR. renominates Amante, 16 other Cabinet heads . 2024-07-25 . . 4.
  3. News: Manalo . Merlinda . VIllanueva . Marichu A. . 1992-12-31 . Amande granted leave due to failing health . 2024-07-25 . . 3.
  4. News: Daroy . Petronilo Bn. . 1993-04-12 . Amante's call for reorganization . 2024-07-25 . . 8.
  5. News: 1993-05-15 . Amante won't run anew . 2024-07-25 . . 6.
  6. News: Atadero . Arnold . 1993-06-18 . Fate of 2 COMELEC execs uncertain . 2024-07-25 . . 5.
  7. News: Villanueva . Marichu A. . 1993-06-29 . Guingona offered exec sec post . 2024-07-25 . . 3.
  8. News: 1994-01-10 . Rainbow grouping still intact, solons claim . 2024-07-25 . . 2.
  9. Web site: Lapeña . Carmela G. . 2013-03-11 . Former Executive Secretary Rep. Edelmiro Amante, 79 . 2024-07-25 . GMA News Online . en.
  10. News: 1993-05-02 . Comelec asked to hold special elections to fill vacancy . 2024-07-25 . . 6.
  11. Web site: Ramos . Marlon . 2016-04-29 . 3 deaths marked Mar’s journey . 2024-07-25 . INQUIRER.net . en.
  12. Web site: May 27, 2016 . Duterte, Robredo win 2016 polls . ABS-CBN News.
  13. Web site: 2020-11-18 . EXPLAINER. House Speaker Velasco might pick a caretaker for Raul del Mar's seat. Plague and cost-saving, for government and candidates, may be cited against special election. . 2023-09-01 . SUNSTAR . en.