1951 Philippine Senate election

1951 Philippine Senate election

← 1949 November 13, 1951 1953 →

8 (of the 24) seats in the Senate, 1 special election for a mid-term vacancy
13 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Mariano Jesús Cuenco (lost) Carlos P. Garcia
Party Liberal Nacionalista
Seats before 17 4
Seats after 13 11
Seat change Decrease 4 Increase 7
Popular vote 8,764,190 13,266,643
Percentage 39.9% 59.1%
Swing Decrease 13.5% Increase 22.5%

Senate President before election

Mariano Jesús Cuenco
Liberal

Elected Senate President

Quintin Paredes
Liberal

A senatorial election was held in the Philippines on November 13, 1951. The election was known as a midterm election as the date when elected candidates take office falls halfway through President Elpidio Quirino's four-year term.

Summary

As the Hukbalahap insurgency raged in Central Luzon, Filipinos trooped to the polling booths for the 1951 midterm elections—a referendum on President Quirino, who had won the presidency in his own right two years prior. Despite the political remarriage of the two factions of the Liberal Party, the Quirinistas and Avelinistas, the Quirino administration was still far from popular and had gained notoriety for its inability to rein in corruption and its ineffectual attempts to police lawlessness in the countryside. The Nacionalistas took advantage of the situation and mounted an active campaign to wrest back the Senate from the LP. Led by former President Jose P. Laurel, Quirino’s chief adversary in the 1949 presidential polls, the NP swept all eight Senate seats in contention, the first total victory of the opposition in the Senate. So strong was the rejection of the Quirino administration in 1951 that even LP top honcho, Senate President Mariano Jesus Cuenco, lost his seat. Laurel received the highest number of votes, which was seen as his political rehabilitation and which made him the first and only president, thus far, to have served in the Senate after his presidency.

Felisberto Verano, also a Nacionalista, won the special elections held on the same day to fill the Senate seat vacated by Vice-President Fernando Lopez.

Block voting, established in 1941, was abolished in 1951 with Republic Act No. 599. This would later lead to more fragmented results in most national elections.

Retiring incumbents

Liberal Party

  1. Melecio Arranz
  2. Jose Avelino
  3. Vicente J. Francisco
  4. Ramon Torres

Mid-term vacancies

  1. Fernando Lopez, (Liberal, took office as vice president December 30, 1949)
  2. Vicente Sotto, (Popular Front, died July 16, 1950)
  3. Tomas Confesor (Nacionalista, died June 5, 1951)

Results

The Nacionalista Party won all eight seats contested in the general election, and the seat contested in the special election.

Former Senate President Mariano Jesús Cuenco was the sole incumbent defeated, while Carlos P. Garcia successfully defended his seat.

Six winners are neophyte Nacionalista senators: Manuel Briones, Francisco Afan Delgado, Jose Locsin, Cipriano Primicias Sr., Gil Puyat and Jose Zulueta.

Nacionalista Jose P. Laurel returned to the Senate after serving from 1925 to 1931.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Before election ‡^ ‡^ ‡^
Election result Not up NP Not up
After election + + + + + + + +

Key:

  • ‡ Seats up
  • + Gained by a party from another party
  • √ Held by the incumbent
  • * Held by the same party with a new senator
  • ^ Vacancy

Per candidate

Summary of the November 13, 1951, Philippine Senate election result
Rank Candidate Party Votes %
1. José P. Laurel Nacionalista 2,143,452 48.8%
2. Gil Puyat Nacionalista 1,906,402 43.4%
3. Manuel Briones Nacionalista 1,774,687 40.4%
4. Carlos P. Garcia Nacionalista 1,573,095 35.8%
5. Francisco Afan Delgado Nacionalista 1,534,176 34.9%
6. Cipriano Primicias Sr. Nacionalista 1,487,159 33.9%
7. Jose Locsin Nacionalista 1,452,577 33.1%
8. Jose Zulueta Nacionalista 1,395,095 31.8%
9. Jose P. Bengzon Liberal 1,277,925 29.1%
10. Pio Pedrosa Liberal 1,232,791 28.1%
11. Teodoro Evangelista Liberal 1,210,815 27.6%
12. Mariano Jesús Cuenco Liberal 1,205,897 27.5%
13. Antonio Quirino Liberal 1,041,539 23.7%
14. Primitivo Lovina Liberal 982,601 22.4%
15. Juan V. Borra Liberal 869,160 19.8%
16. Raul Leuterio Liberal 850,216 19.4%
17. Josefina Phodaca National Political Party of Women 431,328 9.8%
18. Jose T. Nueno Independent 93,246 2.1%
19. Leonardo Tenebro Independent 2,132 0.0%
20. Cesar Bulacan Independent 1,371 0.0%
Total turnout 4,391,109 92.4%
Total votes 22,465,664 N/A
Registered voters 4,754,109 100.0%
Note: A total of 20 candidates ran for senator. Source:

Per party

The seat vacated by Vicente Yap Sotto (Popular Front), who died in 1950, was one of the seats up for election. This also includes the result of the concurrent special election for the seat vacated by Vice President Fernando Lopez in 1949.

PartyVotes%+/–Seats
UpBeforeWonAfter+/−
Nacionalista Party13,266,64358.81+22.4813911+8
Liberal Party8,764,19038.85−13.51518013−5
National Political Party of Women431,3281.91New00000
Independent96,7490.43−0.0000000
Vacancy3300−3
Total22,558,910100.009249240
Total votes4,391,109
Registered voters/turnout4,754,30792.36
Source: Dieter Nohlen; Florian Grotz; Christof Hartmann; Graham Hassall; Soliman M. Santos (15 November 2001).
Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook: Volume II: South East Asia, East Asia, and the South Pacific
. ISBN 9780199249596.

& Julio Teehankee. "Electoral Politics in the Philippines" (PDF). quezon.ph.
Vote share
NP
59.05%
LP
39.01%
Others
1.94%
Senate seats
NP
100.0%
LP
0.0%
Others
0.0%

Special election

To serve the unexpired term of Fernando Lopez until December 30, 1953.

e • d Summary of the November 13, 1951 Philippine Senate special election result
Rank Candidate Party Votes %
1. Felixberto Verano Nacionalista 873,457 47.7%
2. Cornelio Villareal Liberal 609,303 33.3%
3. Prospero Sanidad Liberal (Independent) 223,810 12.2%
4. Carlos Tan Liberal (Independent) 124,975 6.8%
Total 1,831,545 100%

See also


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