Floro Crisologo

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Floro Crisologo
Floro Singson Crisologo.jpg
Member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Ilocos Sur's 1st district
In office
December 30, 1961 October 18, 1970 [1]
Branch/service Philippine Army
Years of service1941–1945
Rank Captain
Unit
Battles/wars World War II

Floro Singson Crisologo (29 July 1910 [2] - 18 October 1970) was a Filipino lawyer and politician who represented the 1st district of Ilocos Sur in the Philippine Congress from 1946 until 1959 and from 1961 until his assassination in 1970.

Contents

Early life and career

Floro Singson Crisologo was born on 29 July 1910 in Vigan, Ilocos Sur to Moisés Crisólogo y de la Peña and Victorina Singson y Pablo. He graduated from the University of the Philippines in 1933 and was admitted to the Bar shortly after. After setting up his law office in Vigan, he was elected in 1934 to the Municipal Council. [2]

During the Second World War, Crisologo joined the guerrilla movement against the Japanese, reaching the rank of Captain. He participated in the Battle of Bessang Pass in 1945 as a member of the USAFIP-NL. He also served as Assistant Inspector General and member of the Court Martial of the Philippine Army's 2nd Infantry Division. [2]

Congressional career

Crisologo's wartime conduct enabled him to get elected to the House of Representatives in 1946, where he represented the 1st district of Ilocos Sur and served until he lost reelection to Faustino Tobia in 1957. [3] In 1961, he was elected again to the position and served until his assassination in 1970. [4]

During his stint in Congress, Crisologo authored several laws such as the ones that established the University of Northern Philippines and the Social Security System, and the Tobacco Law. [5] However, Crisologo became controversial due to his attempts to monopolize the tobacco industry in the province by establishing the Farmer's Cooperative Marketing Association (Facoma), which bought the tobacco harvest of the farmers and required all farmers to process their leaves at his drying plant. To enforce this monopoly, he also organized a 300-strong private army, which residents nicknamed the “saka-saka” or the “barefooted,” and whose role was to "tax" trucks filled with tobacco bound for Manila for as much as $100 for each vehicle. [6] He was also personally embroiled in incidents of political violence such as during the 1965 elections, when he ran into a convoy of his congressional rival Pablo Sanidad and engaged them in a shootout that killed seven people and injured five others. [7]

The atrocities of the saka-saka later provoked national outrage after they assassinated a former mayor of Bantay, next to Vigan, in 1969 and burned the villages of Ora Este and Ora Centro in the same municipality in May 1970, [6] in retaliation for their residents’ support for Luis "Chavit" Singson, a nephew of Crisologo who became his political rival and had tried to circumvent his uncle's monopoly on tobacco, [8] leading to the death of an elderly woman. After his son, Vincent, was arrested for leading the saka-saka in these incidents, Crisologo reportedly went to Malacañang and appealed for help from his ally, President Ferdinand Marcos, while demanding a greater share of rewards that Marcos had promised him in exchange for supporting his presidential reelection campaign in 1969. When Marcos refused, Crisologo reportedly then threatened to expose Marcos's role and that of his cousin Fabian Ver in cornering the tobacco monopoly in the Ilocos Region. [6]

Assassination

Shortly after his reported meeting with Marcos, Crisologo was killed on 18 October 1970 after being shot in the head while kneeling inside Vigan Cathedral during a church service, by a gunman who stood directly behind him and then escaped among terrified churchgoers. [9] His killer was never found and the case remains unsolved, [6] although residents believe that the killing had something to do with tobacco excise taxes and was masterminded by ranking political and military leaders. [10]

No special election was called to replace him in Congress, [11] and his seat remained vacant until the dissolution of Congress in 1972 following the declaration of martial law by President Marcos and was only occupied again in 1987 by his nephew, Chavit Singson following Marcos's overthrow and the restoration of Congress. [4]

Crisologo's murder and the defeat of his wife Carmeling to Chavit Singson in the gubernatorial race and that of his son Vincent in the mayoralty contest in Vigan to a brother of Chavit in 1971 led to the end of his family's political dominance in the province and the rise of the Singson family to prominence. [6]

Family and legacy

Portrait of Floro Crisologo Floro Crisologo.jpg
Portrait of Floro Crisologo

Crisologo was a scion of the Crisologo dynasty that dominated politics in Ilocos Sur through much of the 20th century. One of his ancestors was Marcelino "Mena" Crisólogo, a literary authority who also served as the province's first civil governor during the American occupation. [5]

Crisologo's wife, Carmen (née Pichay; 1923–2018), better known as Carmeling, served as Governor of Ilocos Sur from 1964 to 1971 [12] while he was in Congress. His son, Vincent Crisologo (born in 1947), was convicted for the burning of Ora Este and Ora Centro and jailed until he was pardoned by Marcos in 1980. He later became a politician and congressman in his own right in Quezon City. [4]

Crisologo's ancestral home in Vigan is now a museum dedicated to his life and displaying his memorabilia. [13]

Crisologo was portrayed by Eddie Rodriguez in the 1991 film Bingbong: The Vincent Crisologo Story and by Eddie Garcia in the 2003 film Chavit . [14]

Notes

  1. The Philippines was a unincorporated territory of the United States known as the Philippine Islands at the time of Crisologo's birth.
  2. During the Commonwealth era, the US controlled the Philippines as a protectorate.

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References

  1. Assassinated on October 18, 1970; seat remained vacant until the end of the 7th Congress.
  2. 1 2 3 Official Directory of the House of Representatives (1954-1957). Bureau of Printing.
  3. "THE PHILIPPINES: Mecca for Murder". TIME. 7 September 1959. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 "ROSTER of Philippine Legislators (from 1907 to 2019)" (PDF). House of Representatives of the Philippines. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  5. 1 2 Chua, Xiao (23 October 2013). "XIAO TIME, 23 October 2013: PAGPATAY KAY CONG. FLORO CRISOLOGO SA LOOB NG KATEDRAL NG VIGAN" . Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Cimatu, Frank (26 June 2022). "Blood and money, not gold and honey, birthed Solid North". Rappler. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  7. Kreuzer, Peter. ""If You Can't Beat Them, Kill Them": Fatal Violence Against Politicians in the Philippines" (PDF). Peace Research Institute Frankfurt. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
  8. "Tobacco enriches, corrupts northern Philippines". Arab News. 23 June 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  9. "CLOSE MARCOS AIDE SLAIN IN PHILIPPINES". New York Times. 23 June 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  10. "Abra mayor's kin tag Crisologo; cops eye NPA in slay". The Philippine Star. 31 October 2002. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  11. Pawilen, Reidan (31 July 2020). "THE SOLID NORTH MYTH: AN INVESTIGATION ON THE STATUS OF DISSENT AND HUMAN RIGHTS DURING THE MARCOS REGIME IN REGIONS 1 AND 2, 1969-1986". UP Los Baños Journal. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  12. Savellano, Deogracias Victor. "Prominent Ilocos Surians". Ilocos Sur: An Illustrated History. Sanicua Publication. pp. 220–221.
  13. "Crisologo Museum". Guide to the Philippines. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  14. Bautista, Mario (26 November 2003). "The story behind the P80-M Chavit bioflick". The Philippine Star.