Antique's at-large congressional district

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Antique's at-large congressional district
Constituency
for the House of Representatives of the Philippines
Ph locator antique.svg
Location of Antique within the Philippines
ProvinceAntique
RegionWestern Visayas
Population582,012 (2015)[1]
Electorate322,861 (2016)[2]
Area2,729.17 km2 (1,053.74 sq mi)
Current constituency
Created1907 (single-member district)
RepresentativeLoren Legarda
Political party  NPC
Congressional blocMajority

Antique's at-large congressional district, also known as Antique's lone district, is the sole congressional district of the Philippines in the province of Antique. Antique has been represented in the country's various national legislatures since 1898.[3] Since 1907, Antique has been entitled to one member in the House of Representatives of the Philippines, elected provincewide at-large, except for a brief period between 1943 and 1944 when a second seat was allocated in the National Assembly of the Second Philippine Republic.[4] It was also earlier represented by three members in the First Philippine Republic legislature known as the Malolos Congress from 1898 to 1901.[3]

The district is currently represented by Loren Legarda of the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC).[5]

Representation history[]

# Term of office National
Assembly
Seat A Seat B Seat C
Start End Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the Malolos Congress[]

District created June 18, 1898.[6]
September 15, 1898 March 23, 1901 1st Vicente López Independent Elected in 1898. Aristón Gella Independent Appointed. Eusebio Natividad Independent Appointed.
# Term of office Legislature Single seat Seats eliminated
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the Philippine Assembly[]

District re-created January 9, 1907.[7][8]
1 October 16, 1907 October 16, 1909 1st Pedro V. Jiménez Progresista Elected in 1907.
2 October 16, 1909 October 16, 1916 2nd Ángel Salazar Progresista Elected in 1909.
3rd Re-elected in 1912.
# Term of office Legislature Single seat
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the House of Representatives of the Philippine Islands[]

3 October 16, 1916 June 6, 1922 4th Ramón Maza Nacionalista Elected in 1916.
5th Re-elected in 1919.
(2) June 6, 1922 June 2, 1925 6th Ángel Salazar Nacionalista
Colectivista
Elected in 1922.
4 June 2, 1925 June 5, 1934 7th Segundo C. Moscoso Nacionalista
Consolidado
Elected in 1925.
8th Re-elected in 1928.
9th Re-elected in 1931.
5 June 5, 1934 September 16, 1935 10th Calixto Zaldívar Nacionalista
Demócrata Pro-Independencia
Elected in 1934.
# Term of office National
Assembly
Single seat
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the National Assembly (Commonwealth of the Philippines)[]

(5) September 16, 1935 December 30, 1941 1st Calixto Zaldívar Nacionalista
Demócrata Pro-Independencia
Elected in 1935.
2nd Nacionalista Re-elected in 1938.
# Term of office National
Assembly
Seat A Seat B Seats restored
Start End Member Party Electoral history Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the National Assembly (Second Philippine Republic)[]

District re-created September 7, 1943.[9]
September 25, 1943 February 2, 1944 1st Alberto A. Villavert KALIBAPI Elected in 1943. Tobias Fornier KALIBAPI Appointed as an ex officio member.
# Term of office Common
wealth
Congress
Single seat Seats eliminated
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of the Philippines[]

District re-created May 24, 1945.
6 June 9, 1945 May 25, 1946 1st Emigdio V. Nietes Popular Front Elected in 1941.
# Term of office Congress Single seat
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the House of Representatives of the Philippines[]

(6) May 25, 1946 December 30, 1949 1st Emigdio V. Nietes Popular Front Elected in 1946.
7 December 30, 1949 October 31, 1964 2nd Tobias Fornier Nacionalista Elected in 1949.
3rd Re-elected in 1953.
4th Re-elected in 1957.
5th Re-elected in 1961.
Died.
8 December 30, 1965 December 30, 1969 6th José A. Fornier Nacionalista Elected in 1965.
9 December 30, 1969 September 23, 1972 7th Enrique A. Zaldívar Liberal Elected in 1969.
Removed from office after imposition of martial law.
District dissolved into the sixteen-seat Region VI's at-large district for the Interim Batasang Pambansa.
# Term of office Batasang
Pambansa
Single seat
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the Regular Batasang Pambansa[]

District re-created February 1, 1984.[10]
July 23, 1984 March 25, 1986 2nd Arturo F. Pacificador KBL Elected in 1984.
Election annulled by the Supreme Court.
Evelio Javier Nacionalista Posthumously declared winner of 1984 elections September 22, 1986.[11]
# Term of office Congress Single seat
Start End Member Party Electoral history

Antique's at-large district for the House of Representatives of the Philippines[]

District re-created February 2, 1987.
10 June 30, 1987 June 30, 1998 8th Exequiel Javier Independent Elected in 1987.
9th Lakas–CMD Re-elected in 1992.
10th Re-elected in 1995.
11 June 30, 1998 June 30, 2001 11th Jovito C. Plameras Jr. Lakas–CMD Elected in 1998.
(10) June 30, 2001 June 30, 2010 12th Exequiel Javier Lakas–CMD Elected in 2001.
13th Re-elected in 2004.
14th Re-elected in 2007.
12 June 30, 2010 June 30, 2019 15th Paolo S. Javier Liberal Elected in 2010.
16th Re-elected in 2013.
17th PDP–Laban Re-elected in 2016.
13 June 30, 2019 Incumbent 18th Loren Legarda NPC Elected in 2019.

Election results[]

2016[]

2016 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Paolo Everardo Javier 120,096
UNA Raymundo Roquero 86,727
NPC Robert Delfin 11,060
Independent Junior Combong 3,791
LM Narzal Mallares 3,748
Independent Rodelio Pidoy 1,700
KBL Antero Villaflor 1,093
Invalid or blank votes 46,624
Total votes 274,839

2013[]

2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Paolo Everardo Javier 94,566 48.05
UNA Raymundo Roquero 70,586 36.00
LM Antero Florante Villaflor 2,014 1.02
Margin of victory 23,980 12.18%
Invalid or blank votes 29,642 15.06
Total votes 196,808 100.00
Liberal hold

2010[]

2010 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
Lakas 93,081 44.97
NPC Salvacion Z. Perez 66,282 32.03
KBL 30,471 14.72
PDSP Robert Delfin 12,848 6.21
Aksyon Narzal Mallares 3,443 1.66
LM Antero Florante Jr. 838 0.40
Valid ballots 206,953 88.72
Invalid or blank votes 27,628 12.95
Total votes 234,591 100.00
Lakas hold

References[]

  1. ^ "TABLE 1. Population of legislative districts by Region, Province, and selected Highly Urbanized/Component City : 2015". Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 4 May 2020.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Philippines 2016 Voters Profile". Commission on Elections (Philippines). Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b "The Malolos Congress: A Centennial publication on the inauguration of the Philippine Republic (January 23, 1899 - January 3, 1999)". National Historical Commission of the Philippines. 1999. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  4. ^ "Roster of Philippine legislators". House of Representatives of the Philippines. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  5. ^ "House Members". House of Representatives of the Philippines. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  6. ^ "Decree of June 18, 1898, establishing the Dictatorial Government" (PDF). Official Gazette (Philippines). Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  7. ^ "Act No. 1582, (1907-01-09)". Lawyerly. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  8. ^ Division of Insular Affairs (1908). Eighth Annual Report of the Philippine Commission to the Secretary of War. Elihu Root Collection of United States Documents Relating to the Philippine Islands. Vol. 253. Elihu Root, Secretary of War. Washington, D.C.: United States War Department. p. 49. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  9. ^ "The 1943 Constitution". Official Gazette (Philippines). Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Proclamation No. 2332, s. 1984". Official Gazette (Philippines). Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  11. ^ "G.R. Nos. L-68379-81". Lawphil. Retrieved 4 May 2020.

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