1909 Cavite's at-large Philippine Assembly district special election

Last updated

1909 Cavite's at-large assembly district special election
US flag 46 stars.svg
  1907 January 19, 1909 (1909-01-19) November 1909  

Cavite's at-large district seat in the Philippine Assembly
 
Emiliano Tria Tirona.jpg
Candidate Emiliano Tria Tirona Catalino NicolasHugo Salazar
Party Nacionalista Independent Progresista
Popular vote1,645963611
Percentage51.10%29.92%18.98%

Delegate before election

Rafael Palma
Nacionalista

Subsequent delegate

Emiliano Tria Tirona
Nacionalista

A special election (known elsewhere as "by-elections") for the seat of Cavite's at-large district in the Philippine Assembly, the lower house of the Philippine Legislature of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, was held on January 19, 1909. This was triggered due to the appointment of the incumbent Rafael Palma as a member of the Philippine Commission. Emiliano Tría Tirona won the special election.

Contents

Background

In July 1908, during the final days of the administration of James Francis Smith as governor-general, William Cameron Forbes was appointed as vice governor-general, thereby making him Smith's successor when he retires. Additional appointments are Attorney-General Gregorio S. Araneta as Secretary of Finance and Justice, and judge Newton W. Gilbert and Cavite delegate Rafael Palma to the Philippine Commission. [1]

Preparation

Smith delayed the holding of the special election for about six months so as to avoid electioneering from local politicians; in November 1908, he ultimately scheduled the election for January 19, 1909. [2]

Campaign

More than a week before the election, Progresista candidate Hugo Salazar was assaulted by Manuel L. Quezon, a delegate from Tayabas (now Quezon in his honor), at La Democracia's offices. Quezon was disputing an article that appeared on La Democracia; the newspaper The Cablenews-American, when reporting about the incident, remarked "[W]e have nothing but words of protest against those who seek redress in this manner." [3] Salazar then challenged Quezon to a duel, which Quezon rebuffed. [4]

Candidates

A total of three persons ran to fill the vacant seat, namely:

In August 1908, Tría Tirona announced his intention of succeeding Palma in the assembly, refuting any association with the Centro Catolico or Catholic friars. [7]

Results

Tirona of the Nacionalista Party won the election; Salazar of the Progresista Party won in just 2 of 12 towns in the district. [8] Tirona was seated to the Philippine Assembly, with the assembly unanimously accepting him, on February 3, 1909. [9]

1909 Cavite's at-large Philippine Assembly district special election
CandidatePartyVotes%
Emiliano Tría Tirona Nacionalista Party 1,64551.10
Catalino Nicolas Independent 96329.92
Hugo Salazar Progresista Party 61118.98
Total3,219100.00
Majority68221.17
Nacionalista Party hold
Source: The Cablenews-American

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippine Assembly</span> Lower house of the Philippine Legislature from 1907 to 1916

The Philippine Assembly was the lower house of the Philippine Legislature from 1907 to 1916, when it was renamed the House of Representatives of the Philippines. The Philippine Assembly was the first national legislative body fully chosen by elections.

Elections for the members of the Senate were held on November 10, 1953 in the Philippines. Incumbent President Elpidio Quirino of the Liberal Party lost his opportunity to get a second full term as President of the Philippines to former Defense Secretary Ramon Magsaysay of the Nacionalista Party. Quirino's running mate, Senator Jose Yulo lost to Senator Carlos P. Garcia. Vice President Fernando Lopez did not run for re-election and ran for the Senate instead, in which he emerged as the candidate with the most votes. This was the first time that an elected president did not come from the Senate. To further compound the Liberal Party's woes, they also failed to win any seats in the Senate in this election.

General elections were held in the Philippines on November 11, 1941. Incumbent President Manuel Luis Quezon won an unprecedented second partial term as President of the Philippines via a landslide. His running mate, Vice President Sergio Osmeña also won via landslide. The elected officials however, did not serve their terms from 1942 to 1945 due to World War II. In 1943, a Japanese-sponsored Republic was established and appointed José P. Laurel as president. From 1943 to 1945, the Philippines had two presidents. Quezon died in 1944 due to tuberculosis and was replaced by Sergio Osmeña.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1935 Philippine presidential election</span> Selection of the then-US commonwealths chief executive

The 1935 Philippine presidential and vice presidential elections were held on September 16, 1935. This was the first election since the enactment of the Tydings–McDuffie Act, a law that paved the way for a transitory government, as well as the first nationwide at-large election ever held in the Philippines.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Justiniano Montano</span> Filipino politician and lawyer (born 1905)

Justiniano Solis Montano Sr. was a Filipino politician and lawyer who was elected for one term to the Philippine Senate and for multiple terms as a member of the House of Representatives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mariano Trías</span> Vice President First Philippine Republic (1868–1914)

Mariano Trías y Closas is considered to be the first de facto Philippine Vice President of that revolutionary government established at the Tejeros Convention - an assembly of Philippine revolutionary leaders that elected officials of the revolutionary movement against the colonial government of Spain. When that assembly broke into factions, a truce known as the Pact of Biak-na-Bato was signed by the group and also recognized the elected officials and Trias as the vice president of Emilio Aguinaldo, who is also considered to be the first President of the Philippines. With the promulgation of the Malolos Constitution by the Malolos Convention, the First Philippine Republic was born. Under the Aguinaldo administration, Trias served in the cabinet initially as Secretary of Finance and, later, as Secretary of War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tejeros Convention</span> Philippine elections of 1897

The Tejeros Convention, also known as the Tejeros Assembly and the Tejeros Congress, was a meeting held on March 22, 1897, between Katipunan factions of Magdiwang and Magdalo in San Francisco de Malabon, Cavite that resulted in the creation of a new revolutionary government that took charge of the Philippine Revolution, replacing the Katipunan. It followed on a previous meeting now known as the Imus Assembly. Filipino historians consider the first presidential and vice presidential elections in Philippine history to have been held at this convention, although only Katipuneros were able to take part, and not the general populace.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1907 Philippine Assembly elections</span>

The first Philippine Assembly elections were held across the Philippines on July 30, 1907. The Philippine Organic Act of 1902 established a bicameral Philippine Legislature composed of the appointed Philippine Commission as the upper house and the elected Philippine Assembly as the lower house.

The 1st Philippine Legislature was the first session of the Philippine Legislature, the first representative legislature of the Philippines. Then known as the Philippine Islands, the Philippines under the sovereign control of the United States through the Insular Government. The Philippine Legislature consisted of an appointed upper house, the Philippine Commission, and an elected lower house, the Philippine Assembly. These bodies were the predecessors of the Philippine Senate and Philippine House of the Philippine Congress.

Elections for the Senate of the Philippines were held on November 11, 1947, with eight of the 24 seats in the Senate being contested. These eight seats were elected regularly; the winners were eligible to serve six-year terms from December 30, 1947, until December 30, 1953. Gubernatorial and local elections were held on the same date.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nacionalista Party</span> Conservative political party in the Philippines

The Nacionalista Party is a political party in the Philippines and the oldest in the country and in Southeast Asia. It is responsible for leading the country throughout most of the 20th century since its founding in 1907; it was the ruling party from 1935 to 1946, 1953–1961 and 1965–1978.

Daniel Tirona y Tria was a Filipino politician. He became infamous for causing divisions within the Philippine revolutionary movement and for insulting and maligning Andres Bonifacio during the Tejeros Convention in 1897.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rafael Palma</span> Filipino writer, educator, and politician

Rafael Palma y Velásquez was a Filipino politician, Rizalian, writer, educator and a famous Freemason. He was a senator from 1916 to 1921 and was the fourth president of the University of the Philippines.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juan Sumulong</span> Philippine politician (1875–1942)

Juan Marquez Sumulong Sr. was a Filipino former revolutionary, journalist, lawyer, educator and politician from the province of Rizal. He was the president of the opposition party which ran against Manuel L. Quezon's Nacionalista Party in the 1941 presidential election of the Philippine Commonwealth. He is also the maternal great-grandfather of former President Benigno Aquino III.

The Progresista Party was a political party in the Philippines during the early 20th century. Formed in 1900 as the Federalist Party, the party originally had the Philippines becoming a U.S. state as one of its original platforms, which was later rescinded.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Francisco Tongio Liongson</span> Filipino politician

Francisco Tongio Liongson was a Filipino medical doctor and politician. He belonged to a generation of Philippine colonial subjects who struggled to evolve a national identity for their homeland in the fringes of the Spanish Empire. Late in the 18th century, the concept of being a Filipino was still nebulous and infantile. The name did not even originally apply to all the inhabitants of the Philippine archipelago, but to a small group of Spaniards born there. Motivated by the injustices prevalent in the Philippines, small colonies of native expatriate students in Europe involved themselves in the Propaganda Movement with the purpose of exposing these abuses and in the process began to assume a consciousness articulating reforms of a national interest that was consequently distinct from Spain. Liongson was one of these Filipino students in Madrid. He walked among peers who would one day become Philippine National Heroes.

Two special elections for Manila's 1st (North) district's seat in the Philippine Assembly, the lower house of the Philippine Legislature of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, were held on 1908. Justo Lukban won the second election, after Dominador Gómez, winner of the 1907 general election, was expelled from office, then won the first special election, finally only to resign his rights as member of the assembly. The district then consisted of the entire district of Tondo, Binondo, San Nicolas, and Intramuros.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emiliano Tría Tirona</span> Filipino politician

Emiliano Alegre Tría Tirona was a Filipino politician who was a member of the Philippine Assembly from 1909 to 1912, of the House of Representatives from 1916 to 1919 and from 1931 to 1934, and of the Senate from 1922 to 1928 and from 1941 to 1952. During the Japanese-sponsored Second Philippine Republic from 1943 to 1945, he was also Minister for Health, Labor and Public Education in the government of President Jose P. Laurel.

A special election for the seat of Surigao's at-large district in the Philippine Assembly, the lower house of the Philippine Legislature of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, was held on October 14, 1910. This was triggered due to the death of the incumbent Manuel Gavieres. Governor-General William Cameron Forbes ordered the election to take place. Inocencio Cortes won the special election, retaining Nacionalista Party's control over the seat.

A special election for the seat of La Laguna's 1st district in the Philippine Assembly, the lower house of the Philippine Legislature of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, was held on December 13, 1910. This was triggered due to the appointment of the incumbent delegate Potenciano Malvar as the governor of La Laguna. Marcos Paulino won the special election, defeating Servillano Platón, a flip from the Nacionalista Party to the Progresista Party.

References

  1. "Forbes To Be Next Governor-General". The Cablenews-American. 1908-07-02. p. 1.
  2. "Election for Cavite". The Cablenews-American. 1908-11-06.
  3. "Ended in round one". The Cablenews-American. 1909-01-09. pp. 1, 5.
  4. Vaflor, Marcus (2017-08-18). "15 Facts You Might Not Have Known About Manuel Quezon". SPOT.ph . Retrieved 2024-02-21.
  5. Samonte, G. S. (n.d.). Vol. VI - This is Cavite City 1954-1961.
  6. "Cavite elections". The Cablenews-American. 1910-01-10. p. 4.
  7. "Tirona announces he is a candidate". The Cablenews-American. 1908-08-05. p. 3.
  8. "Tirona from Cavite". The Cablenews-American. 1909-01-21. p. 3.
  9. "Sr. Tirona is seated". The Cablenews-American. 1909-02-04. p. 2.

See also

Other special elections held in Cavite: