List of vice presidents of the Philippines by place of primary affiliation

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Home provinces of the presidents (blue) & vice presidents (red). Provinces that are home of both presidents and vice presidents are in purple. Home provinces of Philippine Presidents.PNG
Home provinces of the presidents (blue) & vice presidents (red). Provinces that are home of both presidents and vice presidents are in purple.

This is a list of vice presidents of the Philippines by place of primary affiliation. Some vice presidents have been born in one province, but are commonly associated with another.

Contents

Provinces of primary affiliation

Provinces of primary affiliation by vice president

No.Vice presidentProvince
1 Sergio Osmeña Cebu
2 Elpidio Quirino Ilocos Sur
3 and 7 Fernando Lopez Iloilo
4 Carlos P. Garcia Bohol
5 Diosdado Macapagal Pampanga
6 Emmanuel Pelaez Misamis Oriental
8 Salvador Laurel Batangas
9 Joseph Estrada Metro Manila [1]
10 Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Pampanga
11 Teofisto Guingona Jr. Misamis Oriental [2]
12 Noli de Castro Oriental Mindoro
13 Jejomar Binay Metro Manila [1]
14 Leni Robredo Camarines Sur
15 Sara Duterte Davao del Sur

Vice presidents by province of primary affiliation

StateVice president per provinceVice president#th Vice president
Metro Manila [1] 2 Joseph Estrada 9
Jejomar Binay 13
Misamis Oriental 2 Emmanuel Pelaez 6
Teofisto Guingona Jr. 11 [2]
Pampanga 2 Diosdado Macapagal 5
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo 10
Batangas 1 Salvador Laurel 8
Bohol 1 Carlos P. Garcia 4
Camarines Sur 1 Leni Robredo 14
Cebu 1 Sergio Osmeña 1
Davao del Sur 1 Sara Duterte 15
Ilocos Sur 1 Elpidio Quirino 2
Iloilo 1 Fernando Lopez 3, 7
Oriental Mindoro 1 Noli de Castro 12

Places of birth

Philippines location map (square).svg
Birthplaces of vice presidents of the Philippines. Vice presidents born in modern-day Metro Manila are shown separately.
Metro Manila location map.svg
Birthplaces of vice presidents of the Philippines in modern-day Metro Manila

Vice presidents by province of birth

ProvinceVice presidents per provinceVice presidentYear inauguratedBirthplace
Metro Manila [3] 5 Teofisto Guingona Jr. 2001 San Juan, Rizal [4]
Salvador Laurel 1986 Manila
Joseph Estrada 1992 Manila
Jejomar Binay 2010 Manila
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo 1998 San Juan, Rizal [4]
Bohol 1 Carlos P. Garcia 1953 Talibon
Camarines Sur 1 Leni Robredo 2016 Naga City
Cebu 1 Sergio Osmeña 1935 Cebu City
Davao Del Sur 1 Sara Duterte 2022 Davao City
Ilocos Sur 1 Elpidio Quirino 1946 Vigan City
Iloilo 1 Fernando Lopez 1949, 1965 Iloilo City
Misamis Oriental 1 Emmanuel Pelaez 1961 Medina, Misamis [5]
Oriental Mindoro 1 Noli de Castro 2004 Pola, Mindoro [6]
Pampanga 1 Diosdado Macapagal 1957 Lubao

Vice presidents who did not primarily reside in their respective birth provinces

As of 2016, 3 out of 13 (accounting for Fernando Lopez' two non-consecutive terms) individuals (23%) were inaugurated after officially residing in a different place than their birth.

Vice presidentBirth provinceHome province
Salvador Laurel Metro Manila [3] Batangas
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Rizal [4] Pampanga
Teofisto Guingona Jr. Rizal [4] Misamis Oriental [2]

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 Metropolitan Manila (though not a province) is highlighted as the province of primary affiliation of Estrada and Binay.
  2. 1 2 3 Villanueva, Marichu; Danao, Efren. "Guingona named VP". The Philippine Star . Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  3. 1 2 At the time of the births of Laurel, Estrada, Arroyo, Guingona, and Binay, Metro Manila as a geopolitical entity did not exist yet.
  4. 1 2 3 4 At the time of Guingona and Arroyo's births, the town of San Juan was part of the province of Rizal. In 1975, Presidential Decree № 824 established the National Capital Region with four cities and thirteen municipalities. San Juan was converted into a city in 2008.
  5. At the time of Pelaez' birth, the town of Medina was part of the province of Misamis. In 1929, Legislative Act 3537 created the provinces of Misamis Occidental and Misamis Oriental. Medina became part of Misamis Oriental.
  6. At the time of de Castro's birth, the town of Pola was part of the province of Mindoro. In 1950, Republic Act 505 created the provinces of Occidental Mindoro and Oriental Mindoro. Pola became part of Oriental Mindoro.

See also

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