A breakdown of  The Philippines' system of government

(As of December 31, 1998)

 

The Philippines: Leadership type: Numbers:

Country

President

1

 

Vice-President

1

 

Senate

 

 

House of Representatives

 

 

Supreme Court

15

Cities

Mayor

83

Provinces

Governor

78

Regions

 

16

Municipalities

 

1,525

Barangays

Captain

41,940

Number of Local Government Units (LGUs), by Island Group
(As of December 31, 1999)

Island Group 1998 % Distribution 1999 % Distribution
LUZON Island        
Cities 38 45.8 39 46.4
Regions 7 43.8 7 43.8
Provinces 38 48.7 38 48.7
Municipalities 734 48.1 733 48.1
Barangays 20,475 48.8 20,475 48.8
VISAYAS Islands        
Cities 25 30.1 25 29.8
Regions 3 18.8 3 18.8
Provinces 16 20.5 16 20.5
Municipalities 383 25.1 383 25.1
Barangays 11,441 27.3 11,441 27.3
MINDANAO Island        
Cities 20 24.1 20 23.8
Regions 6 37.5 6 37.5
Provinces 24 30.8 24 30.8
Municipalities 408 26.8 409 26.8
Barangays 10,024 23.9 10,024 23.9

TOTAL

       
Cities 83 100.0 84 100.0
Regions 16 100.0 16 100.0
Provinces 78 100.0 78 100.0
Municipalities 1,525 100.0 1,525 100.0
Barangays 41,940 100.0 41,940 100.0

Administrative  Subdivisions:   As of December 31, 2000, there were 96 cities, 16 regions, 78 provinces, 1,513 municipalities, and 41,943 barangays in the Philippines.

Data Source: Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG)

web: http://www.dilg.gov.ph/


List of Chartered Cities of The Philippines:

  1. Angeles City
  2. Bacolod City
  3. Bago City
  4. Baguio City
  5. Bais City
  6. Basilan City
  7. Batangas City
  8. Butuan City
  9. Cabanatuan City
  10. Cadiz City
  11. Cagayan de Oro City
  12. Calbayog City
  13. Caloocan City
  14. Canlaon City
  15. Cavite City
  16. Cebu City
  17. Cotabato City
  18. Dagupan City
  19. Danao City
  20. Dapitan City
  21. Davao City
  22. Dipolog City
  23. Dumaguete City
  24. General Santos City
  25. Gingoog City
  26. Iligan City
  27. Iloilo City
  28. Iriga City
  29. La Carlota City
  30. Laoag City
  31. Lapu-Lapu City
  32. Legaspi City
  33. Lipa City
  34. Lucena City
  35. Mandaue City
  36. Manila City
  37. Marawi City
  38. Naga City
  39. Olongapo City
  40. Ormoc City
  41. Oroquieta City
  42. Ozamis City
  43. Pagadian City
  44. Palayan City
  45. Pasay City
  46. Puerto Princesa City
  47. Quezon City
  48. Roxas City
  49. San Carlos City (in Negros Occidental)
  50. San Carlos City (in Pangasinan)
  51. San Jose City
  52. San Pablo City
  53. Silay City
  54. Surigao City
  55. Tacloban City
  56. Tagaytay City
  57. Tagbilaran City
  58. Tangub City
  59. Toledo City
  60. Trece Martires City
  61. Zamboanga City

List of Regions of The Philippines:

Region I

Ilocos Norte Province, llocos Sur Province, La Union Province, and Pangasinan Province

Region II

Batanes Province, Cagayan Province, Isabela Province, Nueva Vizcaya Province, and Quirino Province

Region III

Bataan Province, Bulacan Province, Nueva Ecija Province, Pampanga Province, Tarlac Province and Zambales Province

Region IV

Aurora Province, Batangas Province, Cavite Province, Laguna Province, Marinduque Province, Occidental Mindoro Province, Oriental Mindoro Province, Palawan Province, Quezon Province, Rizal Province and Romblon Province

Region V

Albay Province, Camarines Norte Province, Camarines Sur Province, Catanduanes Province, Masbate Province, Sorsogon Province

Region VI

Aklan Province, Antique Province, Capiz Province, Guimaras Province, Iloilo Province, Negros Occidental Province

Region VII

Bohol Province, Cebu Province, Negros Oriental Province, Siquijor Province

Region VIII

Biliran Province, Eastern Samar Province, Leyte Province, Northern Samar Province, Samar Province and Southern Leyte Province

Region IX

Basilan Province, Zamboanga del Norte Province, Zamboanga del Sur Province, Sibugay Province

Region X

Bukidnon Province, Camiguin Province, Misamis Oriental Province, Misamis Occidental Province

Region XI

Davao del Norte Province, Davao del Sur Province, Davao Oriental Province, Compostela Valley Province, Sarangani Province, South Cotabato Province

Region XII

Cotabato Province, Lanao del Norte Province, Sultan Kudarat Province

Cordillera Autonomous Region

Abra Province, Apayao Province, Kalinga Province, Benguet Province, Ifugao Province, Mountain Province

Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)

Lanao del Sur Province, Maguindanao Province, Sulu Province, Tawi-Tawi Province, Zamboanga del Sur Province

CARAGA

Agusan del Norte Province, Agusan del Sur Province, Surigao del Norte Province, Surigao del Sur Province


List of Provinces of The Philippines:

  1. Abra Province

  2. Agusan del Norte Province

  3. Agusan del Sur Province

  4. Aklan Province

  5. Albay Province

  6. Antique Province

  7. Aurora Province

  8. Basilan Province

  9. Bataan Province

  10. Batanes Province

  11. Batangas Province

  12. Benguet Province

  13. Bohol Province

  14. Bukidnon Province

  15. Bulacan Province

  16. Cagayan Province

  17. Camarines Norte Province

  18. Camarines Sur Province

  19. Camiguin Province

  20. Capiz Province

  21. Catanduanes Province

  22. Cavite Province

  23. Cebu Province

  24. Davao Province

  25. Davao del Sur Province

  26. Davao Oriental Province

  27. Eastern Samar Province

  28. Ifugao Province

  29. Ilocos Norte Province

  30. Ilocos Sur Province

  31. Iloilo Province

  32. Isabela Province

  33. Kalinga-Apayao Province

  34. Laguna Province

  35. Lanao del Norte Province

  36. Lanao del Sur Province

  37. La Union Province

  38. Leyte Province

  39. Maguindanao Province

  40. Marinduque Province

  41. Masbate Province

  42. Mindoro Occidental Province

  43. Mindoro Oriental Province

  44. Misamis Occidental Province

  45. Misamis Oriental Province

  46. Mountain Province

  47. Negros Occidental Province

  48. Negros Oriental Province

  49. North Cotabato Province

  50. Northern Samar Province

  51. Nueva Ecija Province

  52. Nueva Vizcaya Province

  53. Palawan Province

  54. Pampanga Province

  55. Pangasinan Province

  56. Quezon Province

  57. Quirino Province

  58. Rizal Province

  59. Romblon Province

  60. Samar Province

  61. Siquijor Province

  62. Sorsogon Province

  63. South Cotabato Province

  64. Southern Leyte Province

  65. Sultan Kudarat Province

  66. Sulu Province

  67. Surigao del Norte Province

  68. Surigao del Sur Province

  69. Tarlac Province

  70. Tawi-Tawi Province

  71. Zambales Province

  72. Zamboanga del Norte Province

  73. Zamboanga del Sur Province

  74. Zamboanga Sibugay Province

 

Local government in The Philippines Government system based on US and Spanish models under review

By Andrew Stevens, Political Editor

12 February 2006:

The Philippines is a country in Southeast Asia consisting of some 7,000 islands, which sit on the Philippine Archipelago. A republic with an executive presidency elected by popular vote, its 1987 constitution is loosely modelled on that of the United States, with a 24 member Senate and a House of Representatives consisting of 250 seats. It is further divided into 79 provincial governments, with 117 cities enjoying varying powers of self-government. 1,500 municipalities also exist, with a traditional ‘parish’ unit known as the barangay also playing an important role in local affairs, of which there are 41,939.

The Philippines today represents a bridge between East and West, with profound Catholic influences (East Timor is the only other in the region) and the widespread use of the Spanish language in an East Asian setting. Two areas have majority Muslim or indigenous populations however. Spain’s colonisation of the Philippine islands began in 1565 with the creation of its East Indies outpost. The islands were then governed by the Viceroyalty of New Spain based in Mexico City, which ended in 1898 with the Spanish-American War. An insurrection waged against American forces ultimately proved futile with the US failing to acquiesce to Philippine demands for independence following its staged ‘liberation’ from Spain and in 1913 it was declared a US territorial possession. Clarification of its status was achieved under the 1935 self-governing Commonwealth, though it was then invaded by Japan in 1941. The US’ declared policy of allowing Philippine independence was achieved in 1946 following the end of the war. However, independence treaties granted the US access to natural resources and allowed it to retain possession of 23 military bases that were to prove invaluable in the Korean and Vietnam wars.

Elections to the Philippine presidency following independence were subject to covert (and not so covert) intervention by the US Central Intelligence Agency, with rule alternating between the Liberal and Nationalist parties. Its most famous post-war president, Ferdinand Marcos of the Nationalists, was elected in 1965 and again in 1969, credited with achieving considerable economic success. Against a backdrop of urban student unrest and communist-led separatist insurgency elsewhere, Marcos declared martial law in 1972 and began a period of ‘constitutional authoritarianism’ known as the ‘New Society’. The Marcos regime enjoyed the support of the US throughout this period, unsurprising given his support to military efforts during the Vietnam War and his economic liberalisation. Flawed congressional elections were held in 1978, with an all-out victory for the party headed by Marcos’ now equally infamous wife Imelda.

The 1983 assassination at Manila airport of opposition leader Benigno Aquino following his return from exile in the US was instrumental in creating the turning point that ended hitherto solid US support for the Marcos regime. The kleptocratic regime ended in 1986 following the army’s refusal to put down the ‘ESDA revolution’ on the streets of Manila that later saw the couple exiled and Aquino’s widow Cory installed as the country’s first democratically elected President in 17 years. A Constitutional Commission issued a new democratic constitution in 1987, which remains in place today. The Aquino administration suffered from repeated coup attempts and she herself alienated supporters of the ESDA revolution by backing Marcos’ army chief Fidel Ramos as her successor in 1992. Although Ramos, as head of the military and a member of Marcos’ elite guard, was responsible for overseeing the 1972 declaration of martial law, his subsequent support for the opposition in the 1980s was crucial in securing military support for Aquino. As head of armed forces under her, he also foiled no less than seven coup attempts. Ramos’ presidency, though credited with achieving peace with separatist rebels, ended with the 1997 Asian financial crisis and he left office in 1998, replaced by his vice president Joseph Estrada.

Estrada became Ramos’ vice president in 1992 when his running mate Eduardo Cojuangco (the cousin of Cory Aquino) was defeated by Ramos, even though Estrada himself won the vice president’s election. A former actor known for tough guy roles in over 100 films, Estrada cultivated a street fighter image that later played well electorally in his populist pitches to stand up for the ‘downtrodden’ masses. Estrada unsuccessfully ran for Mayor of San Juan, a district of Manila, in 1968 but was later installed after contesting the election. He served throughout the Marcos regime but was removed by an Aquino-sponsored anti-corruption drive in 1986. However, he successfully contested a senate seat in 1987 under his own party banner (the ‘Party of the Filipino Masses’). Although Estrada was successful in his 1998 presidential campaign, largely fought on an anti-elitist platform, corruption allegations quickly surfaced. The refusal of Estrada’s congressional allies to investigate the allegations (even refusing to open irrefutable evidence) led to the second ESDA revolution in 2001, which saw Estrada removed from office and placed under house arrest on anti-corruption charges, where he remains. Although ESDA II was supported by influential political figures, including ex-presidents Aquino and Ramos, the action was heavily criticised by foreign governments (especially the US) who denounced it as a de facto coup. Estrada was replaced by his former vice president, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who also won the 2004 presidential elections amid accusations of ballot fraud.

The Philippine local government system originates from the era of Spanish colonial occupation, insofar as the period was characterised by excessive centralisation under the authority of the Governor General in Manila. While decentralisation over the past half century has bequeathed the country its current system, its organic tier of barangay communal units (comparable to parishes) began under Spanish occupation with these arranged around recognisable neighbourhood entities coupled with church functions. The Filipino term barangay has been revived following the more colonial term barrio (common throughout the Latin world) and is named after the boats used by the first settlers on the island group, with each coastal settlement forming a council. Each barangay is headed by a barangay captain, who presides over the barangay council. The League of Barangays currently has 41,939 members and is the largest NGO in Filipino civil society. Barangays also have a separate youth council to oversee the provision of sporting and cultural activities for local youth.

The 1,600 municipalities are units recognised as towns under the four-yearly population audits used to classify the distinction between towns and cities. Each municipality is headed by an executive mayor, who alongside the vice mayor, eight councillors and the presidents of the youth council and the local barangay union forms the municipal council. All are elected to three-year terms and may not serve more than three consecutive terms.

The 177 recognised cities belonging to the League of Philippine Cities are regarded as belonging to the same sub-tier as the municipalities but are given more central government subsidy to fulfil their duties. Though they have the same governance arrangements as the municipalities, a number are awarded further distinctions by Congress in view of their large populations. As such, they are denoted as charter cities and fall into two classification groups for purposes of self-government - chartered cities and component cities. Chartered cities, which include a number regarded as Highly Urbanised Cities, are accorded significant powers of self-government and individual representation as congressional districts (which are otherwise based on provincial boundaries), while component cities are recognised only as titular cities. Three metropolitan areas exist in the Philippines, including the National Capital Region Manila, which consists of the city of Manila and 16 neighbouring cities, including Quezon (the largest in the country). The Manila Metropolitan Development Agency is a division of central government, with a chairman appointed by the president. The current mayor of the city of Manila is Jose "Lito" L. Atienza, currently on his third and final term, who oversees a city council consisting of the vice mayor and 36 elected councillors (six from each congressional district).

The province is however, the primary unit of local government in the Philippines, of which there are 79 in number (as well as the National Capital Region). Provinces are largely modelled on the three branches of central government, with an elected executive governor and their vice presiding over the provincial legislature. Similar to the sub-tier, there is ex-officio representation for barangay and youth council provincial presidents. The provinces are given presidential oversight through the Department of Interior and Local Government and grouped into 17 regions for administrative purposes at central government level. Two regions have political jurisdiction as recognised autonomous groupings of provinces, namely the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in the south west (adjacent to Malaysia) and the Cordillera Administrative Region of the indiginous Igorot in the north.

The 1987 constitutional settlement and the role of local government itself is currently under debate, with a presidential Constitutional Commission set up to deliberate revisions to the constitution and local government code. ‘ConCom’, which reported to the president in December 2005, has proposed shifting to a parliamentary form of government, the creation of autonomous territories and the strengthening of local autonomy. Mayor Mel Senen S. Sarmiento of Calbayog City and Mayor Oscar S. Rodriguez of San Fernando City, Pampanga were the League of Cities representatives on the commission.

 

 

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