- Location
- Op een dag, Nederland.
- Pronouns
- she/her & ne/nem
Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of the Philippines (1911-present)
Andrés Bonifacio (National Reform majority, then Wartime Cabinet) 1911-1919
Antonio Luna (National Reform majority) 1919-1922
Rafael Palma (Conservative majority) 1922-1923*
Sergio Osmeña (Conservative majority) 1923-1931
Manuel Quezon (Liberal majority) 1931-1943
- vacant due to Chinese occupation: Manuel Quezon served as Prime Minister in exile 1943-1944 -
- vacant due to Chinese occupation: Eugenio Pérez served as Prime Minister in exile 1944-1945 -
Eugenio Pérez (Liberal majority) 1945-1951
Sir Vicente Madrigal (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1951-1957
Carlos P. Garcia (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1957-1963
Diosdado Macapagal (Liberal minority with support from Socialists and Democrats) 1963-1967
Lorenzo Tañada (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1967-1975
Ramon Mitra Jr. (Liberal majority) 1975-1982
Emmanuel Santos (Progressive Nationalist minority, then Progressive Nationalist-Christian Democratic coalition) 1982-1991
Salvador Laurel (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Democratic-Popular Force coalition) 1991-1993
Panfilo Lacson (Liberal-Christian Democratic-Action coalition, then Liberal-Action-Popular Force coalition) 1993-2001
Manuel Villar (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic-Social Reform coalition) 2001-2006
Alfredo Lim (Liberal-Christian Muslim Democratic-Popular Force coalition) 2006-2011
Loren Legarda (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic coalition, then Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic-Green coalition) 2011-2017
Aquilino Pimentel III (Social Reform-Popular Force-Action coalition) 2017-present
Parties
Social Reform: Basically the PDP-Laban, only not awful. And founded by Miriam Defensor Santiago [who oversaw the merging of several left-wing parties], who led the party to eclipse the Liberals in 2011 before resigning in 2014 due to her cancer returning.
Progressive Nationalist: The conservative party in the Philippines, it is a distinctly "Red Tory" beast and one very laced with Filipino nationalism. Currently in opposition with Pia Cayetano and lambasting that "socialists" have taken over the Philippines.
Liberal: Once they were the main "left" party in the Philippines, once they implemented wide-sweeping social justice reforms under Quezon and Macapagal. Once. Not any longer, as the budget-cutting Lacson and the "law and order" Lim showed. It took a while for Filipinos to admit that the present Liberals weren't the party of their glory days any longer, but once they did, the punishment was swift and they fell to third in the 2011 election, seemingly never to return. But there do exist some popular regional governors, like Jesse Robredo...
Christian Muslim Democratic: The CMD might be your typical social conservative religious democratic party, but they do find ways to work with both sides, back in the day when that means the PNP and Liberals. Social Reform on the other hand, isn't that eager to work with them, given how a lot of Social Reformists are suspicious of political religion. Who knows what effect that'll have.
Popular Force: Founded as a populist force for "the ignored Filipino masses" by Joseph Estrada, it naturally developed into a party strongly hostile to neoliberal economics. Under its current leader Rodrigo Duterte, it has gone more hardline on its policies.
Action: A centrist-y leaning left party advocating direct democratic reforms, they are easily paid off with referendums on their pet policies of the day as long as those aren't too controversial. Went in negotiations with PNP in 2011 [that fell apart], so people are increasingly seeing them as taking over from the CMD as the position of political kingmaker by working with both sides.
Green: A localist and environmentalist party they went in coalition with Loren Legarda back in 2014 and haven't recovered yet from it, languishing at their low 7 seats, full of MPs who remember when they were numbered thirty with nostalgic sighs.
Andrés Bonifacio (National Reform majority, then Wartime Cabinet) 1911-1919
Antonio Luna (National Reform majority) 1919-1922
Rafael Palma (Conservative majority) 1922-1923*
Sergio Osmeña (Conservative majority) 1923-1931
Manuel Quezon (Liberal majority) 1931-1943
- vacant due to Chinese occupation: Manuel Quezon served as Prime Minister in exile 1943-1944 -
- vacant due to Chinese occupation: Eugenio Pérez served as Prime Minister in exile 1944-1945 -
Eugenio Pérez (Liberal majority) 1945-1951
Sir Vicente Madrigal (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1951-1957
Carlos P. Garcia (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1957-1963
Diosdado Macapagal (Liberal minority with support from Socialists and Democrats) 1963-1967
Lorenzo Tañada (Progressive Nationalist majority) 1967-1975
Ramon Mitra Jr. (Liberal majority) 1975-1982
Emmanuel Santos (Progressive Nationalist minority, then Progressive Nationalist-Christian Democratic coalition) 1982-1991
Salvador Laurel (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Democratic-Popular Force coalition) 1991-1993
Panfilo Lacson (Liberal-Christian Democratic-Action coalition, then Liberal-Action-Popular Force coalition) 1993-2001
Manuel Villar (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic-Social Reform coalition) 2001-2006
Alfredo Lim (Liberal-Christian Muslim Democratic-Popular Force coalition) 2006-2011
Loren Legarda (Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic coalition, then Progressive Nationalist-Christian Muslim Democratic-Green coalition) 2011-2017
Aquilino Pimentel III (Social Reform-Popular Force-Action coalition) 2017-present
Parties
Social Reform: Basically the PDP-Laban, only not awful. And founded by Miriam Defensor Santiago [who oversaw the merging of several left-wing parties], who led the party to eclipse the Liberals in 2011 before resigning in 2014 due to her cancer returning.
Progressive Nationalist: The conservative party in the Philippines, it is a distinctly "Red Tory" beast and one very laced with Filipino nationalism. Currently in opposition with Pia Cayetano and lambasting that "socialists" have taken over the Philippines.
Liberal: Once they were the main "left" party in the Philippines, once they implemented wide-sweeping social justice reforms under Quezon and Macapagal. Once. Not any longer, as the budget-cutting Lacson and the "law and order" Lim showed. It took a while for Filipinos to admit that the present Liberals weren't the party of their glory days any longer, but once they did, the punishment was swift and they fell to third in the 2011 election, seemingly never to return. But there do exist some popular regional governors, like Jesse Robredo...
Christian Muslim Democratic: The CMD might be your typical social conservative religious democratic party, but they do find ways to work with both sides, back in the day when that means the PNP and Liberals. Social Reform on the other hand, isn't that eager to work with them, given how a lot of Social Reformists are suspicious of political religion. Who knows what effect that'll have.
Popular Force: Founded as a populist force for "the ignored Filipino masses" by Joseph Estrada, it naturally developed into a party strongly hostile to neoliberal economics. Under its current leader Rodrigo Duterte, it has gone more hardline on its policies.
Action: A centrist-y leaning left party advocating direct democratic reforms, they are easily paid off with referendums on their pet policies of the day as long as those aren't too controversial. Went in negotiations with PNP in 2011 [that fell apart], so people are increasingly seeing them as taking over from the CMD as the position of political kingmaker by working with both sides.
Green: A localist and environmentalist party they went in coalition with Loren Legarda back in 2014 and haven't recovered yet from it, languishing at their low 7 seats, full of MPs who remember when they were numbered thirty with nostalgic sighs.
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