Philippine Senate election, 1959

Philippine Senate election, 1959
Philippines
November 10, 1959

8 (of the 24) seats in the Senate
13 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Eulogio Rodriguez Ferdinand Marcos
Party Nacionalista Liberal
Leader's seat Nationwide at-large Nationwide at-large
Seats before 20 2
Seats after 19 4
Seat change Decrease 1 Increase 2
Popular vote 17,160,618 10,850,799
Percentage 50.1% 31.7%
Swing Increase 2.9% Decrease 0.1%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Lorenzo Tañada Raul Manglapus
Party NCP Progressive
Leader's seat Nationwide at-large Nationwide at-large (lost)
Seats before 1 0
Seats after 1 0
Seat change  Steady   Steady 
Popular vote 2,029,200 3,163,609
Percentage 5.9% 9.2%
Swing Decrease 1.0% Decrease 2.8%

Senate President before election

Eulogio Rodriguez
Nacionalista

Elected Senate President

Eulogio Rodriguez
Nacionalista

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Philippines

Senatorial elections were held on November 10, 1959. The 1959 elections were known as the 1959 Philippine midterm election as the date when the elected officials take office falls halfway through President Carlos P. Garcia's four-year term.

The Liberal Party continued chipping away from the Nacionalista Party's dominance in the Senate, winning two more seats, although the Nacionalista's still possess 19 out of 24 seats in the chamber.

Results

Per candidate

 Summary of the November 10, 1959 Philippine Senate election result
Rank Candidate Party Votes %
1 Ferdinand Marcos Liberal 2,661,153 41.6%
2 Genaro Magsaysay Nacionalista 2,457,218 38.4%
3 Fernando López Nacionalista 2,366,166 37.0%
4 Estanislao Fernandez Liberal 2,071,865 32.4%
5 Mariano Jesús Cuenco Nacionalista 2,046,842 32.0%
6 Eulogio Rodriguez Nacionalista 2,037,682 31.9%
7 Lorenzo Tañada NCP 2,029,200 31.7%
8 Alejandro Almendras Nacionalista 1,857,782 29.1%
9 Edmundo Cea Nacionalista1,764,436 27.6%
10 Emmanuel Pelaez Nacionalista1,734,330 27.1%
11 Raul Manglapus Progressive 1,651,097 25.8%
12 Juan Pajo Nacionalista1,623,637 25.4%
13 Manuel Manahan Progressive1,512,512 23.7%
14 Sofronio Quimson Nacionalista1,272,525 19.9%
15 Cornelio Villareal Liberal1,266,826 19.8%
16 Eleuterio Adevoso Liberal1,035,147 16.2%
17 Jacinto Borja Liberal1,021,281 16.0%
18 Jesus Vargas Grand Alliance1,001,981 15.7%
19 Esmeraldo Eco Liberal947,261 14.8%
20 Duma Sinsuat Liberal687,622 10.8%
21 Narciso Pimentel, Jr. Grand Alliance621,915 9.7%
22 Osmundo Mondoñedo Grand Alliance537,729 8.4%
23 Alfredo Abcede Federal Party27,383 0.4%
24 Valentin Festejo Independent3,263 0.1%
25 Gualberto Cruz Independent2,801 0.0%
26 Narciso Alegre NP2,596 0.0%
27 Emilio Alcutse Aninao Independent2,379 0.0%
28 Natalio Beltran Cooperative Democratic Party2,286 0.0%
29 Gregorio Llanza Independent1,727 0.0%
30 Consuelo Fa Alvear Independent1,268 0.0%
31 Isaac Eceta Independent1,209 0.0%
32 Chenchay Reyes Juta Independent1,048 0.0%
Total turnout 6,393,724 81.7%
Total votes 28,108,309 N/A
Registered voters 6,763,897 100.0%
Note: A total of 32 candidates ran for senator. Source:[1]

Per party

Party Popular vote Seats
Total % Swing Won Before After % +/
Nacionalista 17,160,618 51.4% Increase 4.2% 5 19 19 79.2% Steady
Liberal 10,850,799 32.5% Increase 0.7% 2 2 4 16.7% Increase 2
Progressive 3,163,609 9.5% Decrease 2.6% 0 0 0 0.0% Steady
NCP 2,029,200 6.1% Decrease 0.9% 1 0 1 4.2% Increase 1
Federal 27,383 0.1% Increase 0.1% 0 0 0 0.0% Steady
Cooperative Democratic 2,286 0.0% Increase 0.2% 0 0 0 0.0% Steady
Independent 1,015,676 3.0% Increase 2.5% 0 0 0 0.0% Steady
Totals 34,249,571 100% 8 24 24 100.0% Steady

See also

References

  1. Christof Hartmann; Graham Hassall; Soliman M. Santos, Jr. (2001). Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz and Christof Hartmann, ed. Elections in Asia and the Pacific Vol. II. Oxford University Press. pp. 185–230. ISBN 0199249598.
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