History of the House of Representatives
Kapulungan ng mga Kinatawan ng Pilipinas
The representatives from the districts comprise at most 80% of the members of the House; therefore, for a party to have a majority of seats in the House, the party needs to win at least 60% of the district seats. No party since the approval of the 1987 constitution has been able to win a majority of seats, hence coalitions are not uncommon.
The House of Representatives of
the Philippines (Filipino: Kapulungan ng mga Kinatawan ng
Pilipinas), is the lower house of the Congress of the Philippines. (The Senate of the Philippines is the upper
house). It is often informally called Congress. Members of
the House are officially styled as Representative (Kinatawan) and
sometimes informally called Congressmen/Congresswomen (mga
kongresista) and are elected to a three-year term. They can be re-elected,
but cannot serve more than three consecutive terms. Around eighty percent of
congressmen are district representatives, representing a particular
geographical area. There are 234 legislative districts in
the country, each composed of about 250,000 people. There are also party-list
representatives elected through the party-list system who constitute not
more than twenty percent of the total number of representatives.
Aside from having its concurrence
on every bill in order to be passed for the President's signature to become a law,
the House of Representatives has the power to impeach certain officials, and
all money
bills must originate from the lower house.
The House of Representatives is
headed by the Speaker,
currently Pantaleon Alvarez of Davao
del Norte. The official headquarters of the House of Representatives is at
the Batasang Pambansa (literally, national
legislature) located in the Batasan Hills in Quezon
City in Metro Manila. The building is often simply called Batasan
and the word has also become a metonym to refer to the House of Representatives.
History
Joint
session of the Philippine Legislature, Manila. November 15, 1916
Philippine
legislature before 1924
Party
control of the lower house. Notice the one-party dominance of the Nacionalistas
from 1907 to 1941, the two-party system with the emergence of the Liberal Party in 1946, the return of one-party
dominance by the KBL
from 1978 to 1984, and the multiparty system from 1987 to the present.
Same
as above, but in cumulative seat totals, instead of percentages.
Philippine Assembly
At the beginning of American
colonial rule, from March 16, 1900, the sole national legislative
body was the Philippine Commission with all members
appointed by the President of the United States.
Headed by the Governor-General of the Philippines
the body exercised all legislative authority given to it by the President and
the United States Congress until October 1907
when it was joined by the Philippine Assembly. William Howard Taft was chosen to be the first
American civilian Governor-General and the first leader of this Philippine Commission,
which subsequently became known as the Taft Commission.
The Philippine Bill of 1902, a basic law, or organic
act, of the Insular Government, mandated that once certain
conditions were met a bicameral, or two-chamber, Philippine Legislature would be created with
the previously existing, all-appointed Philippine Commission as the upper
house and the Philippine Assembly as the lower
house. This bicameral legislature was inaugurated in October 1907. Under
the leadership of Speaker Sergio
Osmeña and Floor Leader Manuel
L. Quezon, the Rules of the 59th United States Congress was
substantially adopted as the Rules of the Philippine Legislature. Osmeña and
Quezon led the Nacionalista Party, with a platform of
independence from the United States, into successive electoral victories
against the Progresista Party and later the Democrata Party, which first
advocated United States statehood, then opposed immediate independence.
It is this body, founded as the
Philippine Assembly that would continue in one form or another, and with a few
different names, up until the present day.
Jones Act of 1916
In 1916, the Jones Act, officially the Philippine
Autonomy Act, changed the legislative system. The Philippine Commission was
abolished and a new fully elected, bicameral Philippine Legislature consisting
of a House of Representatives and a Senate was established. The Nacionalistas
continued their electoral dominance at this point, although they were split
into two factions led by Osmeña and Quezon; the two reconciled in 1924, and
controlled the Assembly via a virtual dominant-party system.
Commonwealth and the Third Republic
Main
article: National Assembly of the Philippines
The legislative system was changed
again in 1935. The 1935 Constitution established a unicameral
National Assembly. But in
1940, through an amendment to the 1935 Constitution, a bicameral Congress of
the Philippines consisting of a House of Representatives and a Senate was
adopted.
Upon the inauguration of the
Republic of the Philippines in 1946, Republic Act No. 6 was enacted providing
that on the date of the proclamation of the Republic of the Philippines, the
existing Congress would be known as the First Congress of the Republic. The
"Liberal bloc" of the Nacionalistas permanently split from their
ranks, creating the Liberal Party. These two will contest
all of the elections in what appeared to be a two-party
system. The party of the ruling president wins the elections in the House
of Representatives; in cases where the party of the president and the majority
of the members of the House of Representatives are different, a sufficient
enough number will break away and join the party of the president, thereby
ensuring that the president will have control of the House of Representatives.
Martial Law
This set up continued until
President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law and
abolished Congress. He would rule by decree even after the 1973 Constitution
abolished the bicameral Congress and created a unicameral Batasang Pambansa
parliamentary system of government, as parliamentary election would not occur
in 1978. Marcos' Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL; New Society
Movement) won all of the seats except those from the Central
Visayas ushering in an era of KBL dominance, which will continue until the People Power Revolution overthrew Marcos in
1986.
1987 Constitution
The 1987 Constitution restored the
presidential system of government together with a bicameral Congress of the
Philippines. One deviation from the previous setup was the introduction of the
mid-term election; however, the dynamics of the House of Representatives
resumed its pre-1972 state, with the party of the president controlling the
chamber, although political pluralism ensued that prevented the restoration of
the old Nacionalista-Liberal two-party system. Instead, a multi-party system evolved.
Corazon
Aquino who nominally had no party, supported the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino
(LDP; Struggle of the Democratic Filipinos). With the victory of Fidel
V. Ramos in the 1992 presidential election,
many representatives defected to his Lakas-NUCD
party; the same would happen with Joseph
Estrada's victory in 1998, but he lost support
when he was ousted after the 2001 EDSA Revolution that brought his vice
president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to power. This also
meant the restoration of Lakas-NUCD as the top party in the chamber. The same
would happen when Benigno Aquino won in 2010, which returned
the Liberals into power.
The presiding officer is the Speaker. Unlike
the Senate President, the
Speaker usually serves the entire term of Congress, although there had been
instances when the Speaker left office due to conflict with the president:
examples include Jose de Venecia, Jr.'s resignation as speaker
in 2008 when his son Joey de Venecia exposed alleged corrupt practices
by First Gentleman Mike Arroyo, and Manny
Villar's ouster occurred after he allowed the impeachment of President
Estrada in 2000.
Officers
The members of the House of
Representatives who are also its officers are also ex
officio members of all of the committees
and has a vote.
Speaker
The Speaker is the head of the
House of Representatives. He presides over the session; decides on all
questions of order, subject to appeal by any member; signs all acts,
resolutions, memorials, writs, warrants and subpoenas issued by or upon order
of the House; appoints, suspends, dismisses or disciplines House personnel; and
exercise administrative functions.
The speaker is elected by majority
of all the members of the house, including vacant seats. The speaker is
traditionally elected at the convening of each Congress. Before a speaker is
elected, the House's sergeant-at-arms sits as the "Presiding Officer"
until a speaker is elected. Compared to the Senate President, the
unseating of an incumbent speaker is rarer.
As of April 2016 The incumbent
speaker is Pantaleon Alvarez (PDP-Laban)
of Davao del Norte's First congressional district.
Deputy Speakers
There was a position of speaker pro
tempore for congresses prior the reorganization of the officers of the
House of Representatives during the 10th Congress in 1995. The speaker
pro tempore was the next highest position in the House after the speaker.
The position was replaced by the
deputy speakers in 1995. Originally, there was one Deputy Speaker for each island group of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.
Then, in 2001 during the 12th Congress, a Deputy Speaker
"at large" was created. On the next Congress, another "at
large" deputy speakership was created, along with a Deputy Speaker for
women. In the 15th Congress starting in 2010,
all six deputy speakers are "at large".
The deputy speakers perform the
speaker's role when the speaker is absent. Currently in the 16th Congress, the
deputy speakers represent the chamber at-large.
The Deputy Speakers are:
- Eric Singson (Ilocos Sur–2nd, PDP-Laban)
- Mercedes Alvarez (Negros Occidental–6th, NPC)
- Fredenil Castro (Capiz–2nd, NUP)
- Raneo Abu (Batangas–2nd, Nacionalista)
- Miro Quimbo (Marikina–2nd, Liberal)
Since July 25, 2016
- Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (Pampanga–2nd, Lakas)
- Pia Cayetano (Taguig–Lone, Nacionalista)
- Gwendolyn Garcia (Cebu–3rd, PDP-Laban)
- Mylene Garcia-Albano (Davao City–2nd, PDP-Laban)
- Sharon Garin (party-list member of AAMBIS-OWA)
Since August 15, 2016
Majority Floor Leader
The majority leader, aside from
being the spokesman of the majority party, is to direct the deliberations on
the floor. The Majority Leader is also concurrently the Chairman of the
Committee on Rules. The majority leader is elected in a party caucus of the
ruling majority party.
Minority Floor Leader
The minority leader is the
spokesman of the minority party in the House and is an ex-officio
member of all standing Committees. The minority leader is elected in party
caucus of all Members of the House in the minority party, although by
tradition, the losing candidate for speaker is named the minority leader.
Secretary General
The secretary general enforces
orders and decisions of the House; keeps the Journal of each session; notes all
questions of order, among other things. The secretary general presides over the
chamber at the first legislative session after an election, and is elected by a
majority of the members.
Atty. Cesar Strait Pareja is the
Secretary General of the House of Representatives.
Sergeant-at-Arms
The Sergeant-at-Arms is responsible
for the maintenance of order in the House of Representatives, among other
things. Like the secretary general, the sergeant-at-arms is elected by a
majority of the members.
Retired General Roland Detabali is
the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House of Representatives.
District representation
Congressional
districts
There are two types of
representatives in the chamber: representatives from congressional districts
and party-list representatives. Eighty percent of representatives shall come
from congressional districts, with each district returning one representative. Although
each district should have a population of at least 250,000 people, all provinces have at least one
legislative district, regardless of population, whose residents vote for their
own congressman; several cities have representation of their own,
independent of provinces, although they should have at least a population of
250,000. For provinces that have more than one legislative district, the
provincial districts are identical to the corresponding legislative district,
with the exclusion of cities that do not vote for provincial officials.
The representatives from the districts comprise at most 80% of the members of the House; therefore, for a party to have a majority of seats in the House, the party needs to win at least 60% of the district seats. No party since the approval of the 1987 constitution has been able to win a majority of seats, hence coalitions are not uncommon.
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