Honorific-Prefix: | The Honorable |
Ralph Recto | |
Office: | 33rd Secretary of Finance |
President: | Bongbong Marcos |
Term Start: | January 12, 2024 |
Predecessor: | Benjamin Diokno |
Office2: | Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives |
1Blankname2: | Speaker |
1Namedata2: | Martin Romualdez |
Successor2: | David Suarez |
Alongside2: | several others |
Term Start2: | July 27, 2022 |
Term End2: | January 12, 2024 |
Office3: | Member of the House of Representatives from Batangas |
Constituency3: | 6th district |
Term Start3: | June 30, 2022 |
Term End3: | January 12, 2024 |
Predecessor3: | Vilma Santos |
Successor3: | Vacant |
Constituency4: | 4th district |
Term Start4: | June 30, 1992 |
Term End4: | June 30, 2001 |
Predecessor4: | Jose E. Calingasan |
Successor4: | Oscar Gozos |
Office5: | Senate Minority Leader |
Term Start5: | July 25, 2016 |
Term End5: | February 27, 2017 |
Predecessor5: | Juan Ponce Enrile |
Successor5: | Franklin Drilon |
Office6: | President pro tempore of the Senate of the Philippines |
Term Start6: | February 27, 2017 |
Term End6: | June 30, 2022 |
Predecessor6: | Franklin Drilon |
Successor6: | Migz Zubiri (acting) |
Term Start7: | July 22, 2013 |
Term End7: | June 30, 2016 |
Predecessor7: | Jinggoy Estrada |
Successor7: | Franklin Drilon |
Office8: | Senator of the Philippines |
Term Start8: | June 30, 2010 |
Term End8: | June 30, 2022 |
Term Start9: | June 30, 2001 |
Term End9: | June 30, 2007 |
President10: | Gloria Macapagal Arroyo |
Term Start10: | July 23, 2008 |
Term End10: | August 16, 2009 |
Office11: | First Gentleman of Batangas |
Term Label11: | In role |
Term Start11: | June 30, 2007 |
Term End11: | June 30, 2016 |
Governor11: | Vilma Santos |
Predecessor11: | Edna Sanchez |
Successor11: | Regina Reyes Mandanas |
Birth Name: | Ralph Gonzalez Recto |
Birth Date: | 11 January 1964 |
Birth Place: | Quezon City, Philippines |
Party: | Nacionalista (2004–2007; 2018–present) |
Occupation: | Politician |
Profession: | Bureaucrat Economist |
Signature: | Ralph-recto-signature.svg |
Ralph Gonzalez Recto (in Tagalog pronounced as /gonˈsalɛs ˈrɛktɔ/; born January 11, 1964) is a Filipino politician currently serving as the 33rd Secretary of Finance under President Bongbong Marcos since January 12, 2024. He previously served as the representative for Batangas' 6th district and as the House Deputy Speaker from 2022 to 2024.
Recto also previously served three terms in the Senate: from 2001 to 2007 and from 2010 to 2022 and had served as president pro tempore of the Senate and Senate Minority Leader. He started his political career as the representative of Batangas' 4th district from 1992 to 2001.
In 2007, Recto lost his Senate reelection bid because, as many analysts believed, he had authored the unpopular EVAT (Expanded Value Added Tax) law. In July 2008 he was appointed to head the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) in the Arroyo administration, but resigned from his position in August 2009 in preparation for another run for the Senate in the 2010 elections.[1]
He is a grandson of statesman Claro M. Recto. His wife is actress-politician Vilma Santos.
Recto comes from a political family. His grandfather, the late nationalist and statesman Claro M. Recto, was a Senator for several terms. His father, Atty. Rafael Recto (d. 2008), was an Assemblyman during the Regular Batasang Pambansa while his older brother, Ricky Recto, was the former vice governor of the province of Batangas.
His late mother is Carmen Gonzalez-Recto (d. 2013). His sister, Plinky Recto, is an actress and TV host.
Recto acquired a Bachelor of Science in commerce at the De La Salle University in 1989. In 1990, he entered the College of Public Administration of the University of the Philippines Diliman to study Master of Public Administration, but only earned 36 academic units, hence unable to finish the graduate degree. Recto later took a Strategic Business Economics Program (SBEP) at the University of Asia and the Pacific in 1993, where he acquired a Certificate in Business Economics (CBE).[2]
Recto took up a 6-day Certificate of Leadership Scholarship Course at the John F. Kennedy School of Government of Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States in 1997.
Recto holds the distinction of being the youngest elected member of the House of Representatives during the 9th Congress. He also holds an unprecedented record in the congressional election history of Batangas for winning in all precincts, barangays, and municipalities, together with Lipa City, in the 1995 and 1998 elections. He garnered 98% of the votes cast in those two elections in the 4th District of Batangas.
During his three terms (from 1992 to 2001) as a member of the House of Representatives, most of his legislative measures enacted into law deal with economic reforms and poverty alleviation, among which are the Social Reform and Poverty Alleviation Act; the Philippine Economic Zone Law; Amendment to the Special Economic Zone Law; the Retail Trade Liberalization Law; Regional Headquarters Law; and the Comprehensive Tax Reform Law.
Recto was elected to the Senate in 2001, becoming the youngest Senator of the 12th Congress at the age of 37. In the Senate, he chaired the Committees on Ways and Means and on Trade and Industry.
He was co-chairman of the Congressional Oversight Committees on the Proper Implementation of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) and on the Official Development Assistance (ODA). He was also chairman of the Accounts committee.
During his first six-year term as Senator, he was largely responsible for the passage of laws with positive impact to consumers, small entrepreneurs, workers and industry.
After his failed bid for re-election to the Senate in 2007, Recto joined the board of the Union Bank of the Philippines.[3]
He is said to be offered the position of Secretary of Finance but it was subsequently denied by Malacañang.[4]
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, on July 23, 2008, named him as the new director-general of National Economic and Development Authority, replacing Augusto Santos, acting NEDA chief.[5] On August 11, 2009, he resigned as NEDA secretary and Presidential Adviser for Economic Planning, in preparation for another run for Senate in the 2010 election.[1]
He was proclaimed as one of the winning senatorial candidates of the 2010 Senate elections.
On July 22, 2013, at the start of the first day of the 1st Regular Session of the Senate for the 16th Congress, Recto was elected Senate President Pro-Tempore, the second highest post in the Senate and was also the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Science and Technology and member of the bicameral Commission on Appointments.
Recto ran for re-election in the 2016 Philippine Senate election under the Koalisyon ng Daang Matuwid ofLP standard bearer Mar Roxas and won placing 11th in the polls.
On the opening day of the 17th Congress, July 25, 2016, Senator Francis Escudero nominated Recto for the presidency. Senator Antonio Trillanes IV seconded Escudero's nomination. During nominal voting, Koko Pimentel and Recto voted for each other. After losing the vote, Recto automatically became the Minority Leader. He was joined by Escudero and Trillanes in the minority bloc.[6] Recto, in his acceptance speech for the post, vowed that the minority would cooperate with the Duterte administration's plans if these serve "the public interest." However, he said, they would be "duty-bound" to oppose the majority's agenda if it "hurts the nation."[7]
When the Senate underwent a reorganization on February 27, 2017, Recto, after getting 17 votes, was declared Senate President Pro Tempore, replacing Franklin Drilon.[8]
For the 17th Congress, he authored the following laws: Murang Kuryente Act, Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program Act, Child Safety in Motor Vehicles Act, Universal Health Care Act, Philhealth Coverage for PWDs, National Integrated Cancer Control Act, Tax Amnesty Act, The New Central Bank Act, Lifting Quantitative Import Restriction on Rice, Social Security Act, First 1000 Days of Life, Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education, Comprehensive National Feeding Program, Free Irrigation Service, Ease of Doing Business/Expanded Anti-Red Tape Act, Free Internet Access in Public Places, Extending the Validity of Philippine Passport and Driver's License, National ID System, and Designating Casinos as Covered Persons under the AMLA.
Recto kept his post as Senate President Pro Tempore in the 18th Congress.[9]
In September 2018, Recto left the Liberal Party to re-join the Nacionalista Party.[10]
Upon being term-limited in the Senate, in 2022, Recto ran for a comeback to the House of Representatives, this time at the 6th district of Batangas, which consists of only the city of Lipa.[11] [12] During the campaign, he had endorsed the presidential bid of Manila Mayor Isko Moreno.[13] He then won the election unopposed,[14] succeeding his wife Vilma Santos who chose not to seek reelection.[15]
On July 27, 2022, Recto was named as a House Deputy Speaker under the speakership of Martin Romualdez.[16]
On January 11, 2024, his 60th birthday, Recto was appointed by President Bongbong Marcos as Secretary of Finance.[17] He took his oath of office on January 12, 2024, succeeding Benjamin Diokno.[18] The Commission on Appointments on March 13, 2024, confirmed Recto's appointment.[19]
He is married to actress and former Batangas Representative Vilma Santos-Recto, with whom he has one son. He is the stepfather of actor Luis Philippe Manzano. He currently lives in Ayala Alabang, Muntinlupa and in Inosluban, Lipa.