Election Name: | 2011 special election at Cagayan's 2nd congressional district |
Type: | by-election |
Country: | Philippines |
Seats For Election: | Cagayan's 2nd congressional district |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | Philippine House of Representatives elections in Cagayan Valley, 2010#2nd District |
Previous Year: | 2010 |
Next Election: | 2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections |
Next Year: | 2013 |
Election Date: | March 12, 2011 |
Candidate1: | Baby Aline Vargas-Alfonso |
Party1: | Lakas-Kampi-CMD |
Popular Vote1: | 69,461 |
Percentage1: | 73.62 |
Candidate2: | Edgar Lara |
Party2: | Liberal Party (Philippines) |
Popular Vote2: | 26,582 |
Percentage2: | 27.68 |
Representative | |
Pretitle: | Previous representative |
Posttitle: | Representative-elect |
Before Election: | Florencio Vargas |
Before Party: | Lakas-Kampi-CMD |
After Election: | Baby Aline Vargas-Alfonso |
After Party: | Lakas-Kampi-CMD |
A special election for Cagayan's 2nd district seat in the House of Representatives of the Philippines was held on March 12, 2011. The special election was called after the incumbent representative, Florencio Vargas died in July 2010. Vargas' daughter, Baby Aline Vargas-Alfonso, was elected after beating former Cagayan Governor Edgar Lara, Vargas' opponent in the 2010 election. Alfonso would then serve the remainder of her father's term which ended in 2013.
See main article: List of special elections in the Philippines. Each congressional district of the Philippines sends one representative to the House of Representatives. An election to the seat is via first-past-the-post, in which the candidate with the most votes, whether or not one has a majority, wins the seat. Based on Republic Act (RA) No. 6645, in order for a special election to take place, the seat must be vacated, the relevant chamber notifies the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) the existence of a vacancy, then the COMELEC schedules the special election. There is a dispute in the procedure as a subsequent law, RA No. 7166, supposedly amended the procedure, bypassing the need for official communication from the relevant chamber of the vacancy. The COMELEC has always waited on official communication from the relevant chamber before scheduling a special election.[1]
Meanwhile, according to RA No. 8295, should only one candidate file to run in the special election, the COMELEC will declare that candidate as the winner and will no longer hold the election.[2]
Incumbent representative Florencio Vargas of Lakas-Kampi-CMD won the general election on May 10, 2010. His term began on June 30, but he died on July 22, a few days before the 15th Congress convened.[3] The two other congressmen from Cagayan, Jack Enrile and Randolph Ting, then filed a resolution declaring Vargas' seat vacant paving way for a special election. Defeated candidate and former governor Edgar Lara had previously expressed interest in participating if a special election was called, and also said that he expects any member of the Vargas family to run as well.[4] On December 13, Enrile Jr. was designated by Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. as the caretaker of the 2nd district pending the approval of a special election.[5]
The Commission on Elections has set the election on March 12, 2011, Saturday. The period for the filing of certificates of candidacy will be from February 21 to 25, and the campaign period will be from February 26 to March 10. Unlike the general election, the special election will be conducted manually.[6]
Only two candidates ran. Lara, formerly of the Nationalist People's Coalition, was the ruling Liberal Party's nominee for the special election, while Vargas' daughter, Abulug vice mayor Baby Aline Vargas-Alfonso, was his opponent.[7]
President Aquino and the ruling Liberal Party supported Lara's candidacy, while Cagayan governor Alvaro Antonio and 1st district representative Jack Enrile's Team Cagayan coalition supported Alfonso, the daughter of the late representative. Alfonso is running under the Lakas Kampi CMD banner.[8]
Alfonso was declared the winner after the Commission on Elections finished canvassing in ten of the twelve municipalities in the district. The low turnout was blamed on residents residing outside the district not returning to their homes during the weekend, and the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in which voters were discouraged from casting their votes when residents from the coastal towns of the district evacuated due to a tsunami alert and only returned morning of election day.[9]
Alfonso was sworn in as a member of the House of Representatives on March 16, raising its membership to 284, the largest in its history.[10]