Legislative districts of Benguet explained

The legislative districts of Benguet are the representations of the province of Benguet in the various national legislatures of the Philippines. The province is currently represented in the lower house of the Congress of the Philippines through its lone congressional district.

History

In 1917, the undivided Mountain Province, of which Benguet was a component sub-province, was provided representation in the Philippine Legislature. Pursuant to the Revised Administrative Code (Act No. 2711) enacted on March 10, 1917, the non-Christian-majority areas of the Philippines, which then included the Mountain Province and Baguio, were to be collectively represented in the legislature's upper house by two senators from the 12th senatorial district, both appointed by the Governor-General. Three assembly members, also appointed by the Governor-General, were to represent the Mountain Province and the chartered city of Baguio in the lower house as a single at-large district.[1]

The residents of Benguet and the rest of the Mountain Province only began electing representatives through popular vote in 1935 by virtue of Act No. 4203; the law provided the territorial coverage for each lower house representative district, while also abolishing the senatorial district system. The sub-province was then represented as part of the Mountain Province's second district, which also included the city of Baguio.[2]

In the disruption caused by the Second World War, the Mountain Province sent two delegates to the National Assembly of the Japanese-sponsored Second Philippine Republic: one was the provincial governor (an ex officio member), while the other was elected through a provincial assembly of KALIBAPI members during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. Baguio, being a chartered city, was represented separately in this short-lived legislative body. Upon the restoration of the Philippine Commonwealth in 1945, district representation was restored to the pre-war setup: the sub-province of Benguet and Baguio remained part of Mountain Province's second district.

The enactment of Republic Act No. 4695 on June 18, 1966 made the sub-province of Benguet into a full-fledged province. Per Section 10 of R.A. 4695 Baguio was to be part of the newly independent province's representative district.[3] Benguet, along with Baguio, began electing its separate representative starting in the next general election.

Benguet was represented in the Interim Batasang Pambansa as part of Region I from 1978 to 1984. The province returned one representative, elected at-large, to the Regular Batasang Pambansa in 1984. Baguio separately elected its own representative in this election.

Under the new Constitution[4] which was proclaimed on February 11, 1987, Benguet was once more grouped with Baguio. The latter, though an independent city since 1909, comprised what was legally known between 1987 and 1995 as the first district of Benguet, while the actual province itself comprised the second district. Both elected members to the restored House of Representatives starting that same year.

Starting in 1995 the first district was re-designated as the "Legislative district of Baguio", thereby making the second district Benguet's lone district.

Since 2019, the districts used in appropriation of members is coextensive with the legislative districts of Benguet. Prior to 2019 when the province was just one congressional district, the Commission on Elections divided the province into two provincial board districts.

Lone District

PeriodRepresentative[6]
9th Congress
1992 - 1995
Samuel M. Dangwa
10th Congress
1995 - 1998
Ronald M. Cosalan
11th Congress
1998 - 2001
12th Congress
2001 - 2004
Samuel M. Dangwa
13th Congress
2004 - 2007
14th Congress
2007 - 2010
15th Congress
2010 - 2013
Ronald M. Cosalan
16th Congress
2013 - 2016
17th Congress
2016 - 2019
18th Congress
2019 - 2022
Nestor B. Fongwan
vacant
19th Congress
2022 - 2025
Eric G. Yap

1969–1972

Notes

1st District (defunct)

See also: Legislative district of Baguio.

Baguio

Notes

2nd District (defunct)

Atok, Bakun, Bokod, Buguias, Itogon, Kabayan, Kapangan, Kibungan, La Trinidad, Mankayan, Sablan, Tuba, Tublay

At-Large (defunct)

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Philippine Legislature. Revised Administrative Code of the Philippine Islands of 1917 (Act No. 2711). 1917. Bureau of Printing. February 4, 2017. Digitized Revised Administrative Code of the Philippine Islands of 1917 from the Presidential Museum and Library Collection, uploaded on February 15, 2016.
  2. Philippine Legislature. Public Laws Enacted by the Philippine Legislature, Acts No. 4203 to 4275. Public Resolutions, Etc. Laws, etc. 1937. Bureau of Printing Office . 5.
  3. Web site: Republic Act No. 4695 - An Act Creating the Provinces of Benguet, Mountain Province, Ifugao and Kalinga-Apayao. June 18, 1966. February 4, 2017. Chan Robles Law Library. Congress of the Philippines.
  4. Web site: 1987 Constitution of the Philippines - Apportionment Ordinance. 1986 Constitutional Commission. February 2, 1987. June 13, 2016.
  5. Web site: Legislative districts . https://web.archive.org/web/20190304050639/https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/attachments/hsd/pressrelease/2015_Table%201_Legislative%20Districts.xlsx . March 4, 2019 . October 5, 2023 . Philippine Statistics Authority.
  6. Web site: Roster of Philippine Legislators. Republic of the Philippines, House of Representatives. February 17, 2017. Congressional Library Bureau.