2016 Philippine local elections

Wikipedia

2016 Philippine local elections

 2013 May 9, 2016 2019 

All local elected offices above the barangay level
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party Liberal NPC NUP
Governors 39 9 9
Vice governors 39 10 7
Board members 334 107 69
Mayors 759 201 121
Vice mayors 705 182 127
Councilors 5,451 1,583 896

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Party Nacionalista UNA PDP–Laban
Governors 9 3 0
Vice governors 6 5 2
Board members 64 47 6
Mayors 145 134 40
Vice mayors 139 142 33
Councilors 1,047 1,223 191

The province's shade refers to the party of the winning governor.

The larger box refers to the party of the winning vice-governor.

The smaller boxes refers to the seats won by each party in the Sangguniang Panlalawigan. Note that this doesn't include the 3 ex officio seats.

President of the Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines before election

Oriental Mindoro Governor
Alfonso Umali
Liberal

Elected President of the Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines

Albay Governor
Francis Bichara
Nacionalista

Local elections in the Philippines were held on May 9, 2016. This was conducted together with the 2016 general election for national positions. All elected positions above the barangay (village) level were disputed.[1]

Electoral system

Every local government unit, be it a province, city, municipality or a barangay elects a chief executive (a governor, city mayor, municipal mayor and barangay chairman, respectively), and a local legislature (the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, Sangguniang Panlungsod, Sangguniang Bayan and Sangguniang Barangay, respectively), president upon by the chief executive's deputy (vice-governor, city vice-mayor, municipal vice-mayor, respectively; no equivalent for the barangay). In addition, the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) elects a governor, vice-governor and members of the ARMM Regional Legislative Assembly.

Elections where one seat is being disputed, such as the regional governor and vice governor in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, provincial governors and vice governors in each of the 81 provinces, and mayors and vice mayors in each of the 145 cities and 1,489 municipalities are elected via the plurality system.

Elections where more than one seat is disputed, such as for the membership in local legislatures, are done via plurality-at-large voting. For Sangguniang Panlalawigan seats, the Commission on Elections divides all provinces into at least 2 districts, while for Sangguniang Panlalawigan seats, the appropriation depends on the city charter (some are divided into districts, while others elect all councilors at-large), and for Sangguniang Bayan seats, all municipalities have eight councilors elected at-large, except for Pateros, which elects twelve, six in each district.

Participating parties

  • Parties that ran candidates in more than one province:
PartyEnglish nameName in the vernacularLeader
AkbayanCitizens' Action PartyAkbayanRonald Llamas
AksyonDemocratic ActionAksyon DemokratikoSonia Roco
CDPCentrist Democratic Party of the PhilippinesRufus Rodriguez
KBLNew Society MovementKilusang Bagong LipunanBongbong Marcos
LDPStruggle of Democratic FilipinosLaban ng Demokratikong PilipinoEdgardo Angara
LakasPeople Power-Christian Muslim DemocratsGloria Macapagal Arroyo
LiberalLiberal PartyBenigno Aquino III
NacionalistaNationalist PartyManuel Villar
NPCNationalist People's CoalitionFaustino Dy
NUPNational Unity PartyPablo P. Garcia
PDP–LabanPhilippine Democratic Party-People's PowerPartido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng BayanAquilino Pimentel III
PMPForce of the Filipino MassesPwersa ng Masang PilipinoJoseph Estrada
UNAUnited Nationalist AllianceJejomar Binay
IndependentIndependent
Local partiesVarious
Ex officio members

Regional elections

Results summary
GovernorVice governorRegional legislative assembly
Liberal Liberal
24 seats; no party controls








Provincial elections

The new province of Davao Occidental first voted for its provincial officials during this election.

Local parties are denoted by purple, independents by light gray, and ex officio members of the legislatures are in dark gray.

  • Summary of results, parties ranked by governorships won.
Results summary
PartyGovernorVice governorSangguniang Panlalawigan
Total%Total%Seats%Controlled
Liberal3948.1%3948.1%33432.8%16
NPC911.1%1012.3%10710.5%2
NUP911.1%77.6%696.8%2
Nacionalista911.1%67.4%646.3%5
UNA33.7%56.2%474.6%0
Aksyon11.2%11.2%40.4%0
PDP–Laban00.0%22.5%60.6%0
Lakas00.0%22.5%40.4%0
KBL00.0%00.0%30.3%0
Akbayan00.0%00.0%10.1%0
Local parties67.4%22.5%676.6%5
Independent56.2%66.4%656.4%0
Ex officio members24323.8%
Totals81100%81100%1,019100%
Per province summary
ProvinceGovernorVice governorSangguniang Panlalawigan
Abra NUP NUP
11 seats; Liberal control









Agusan del Norte Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls









Agusan del Sur NUP NUP
13 seats; NUP control









Aklan Liberal Nacionalista
13 seats; Liberal control








Albay Nacionalista Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Antique NUP NUP
13 seats; no party controls








Apayao Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls








Aurora NPC LDP
11 seats; no party controls








Basilan Liberal NPC
11 seats; no party controls









Bataan NUP NUP
13 seats; NUP control









Batanes Nacionalista Liberal
9 seats; no party controls








Batangas Independent NPC
15 seats; Liberal control








Benguet Independent Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Biliran Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls








Bohol Liberal PDP–Laban
13 seats; Liberal control








Bukidnon Bukidnon Paglaum Liberal
14 seats; Bukidnon Paglaum control









Bulacan Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Cagayan Liberal UNA
13 seats; no party controls







Camarines Norte Liberal NPC
13 seats; no party controls









Camarines Sur Nacionalista Liberal
13 seats; Nacionalista control








Camiguin Liberal Liberal
9 seats; Liberal control









Capiz Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Cavite UNA Lakas
17 seats; no party controls







Cebu Liberal Liberal
17 seats; no party controls






Compostela Valley Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Cotabato Liberal Independent
13 seats; no party controls








Davao del Norte Liberal Independent
13 seats; no party controls








Davao del Sur Nacionalista NPC
13 seats; no party controls








Davao Occidental NPC Liberal
11 seats; NPC control









Davao Oriental Liberal NPC
13 seats; Liberal control








Dinagat Islands UNA UNA
11 seats; no party controls








Eastern Samar Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Guimaras Liberal Liberal
11 seats; Liberal control









Ifugao Independent Independent
11 seats; no party controls









Ilocos Norte Nacionalista Nacionalista
13 seats; Nacionalista control









Ilocos Sur Nacionalista Nacionalista
13 seats; Nacionalista control








Iloilo Liberal NUP
13 seats; Liberal control








Isabela NPC UNA
13 seats; no party controls








Kalinga Liberal Lakas
11 seats; no party controls







La Union Independent Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Laguna Nacionalista Nacionalista
13 seats; no party controls








Lanao del Norte Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Lanao del Sur Liberal Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Leyte Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Maguindanao Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Marinduque Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls








Masbate Liberal Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Misamis Occidental Liberal Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Misamis Oriental Padayon UNA
13 seats; no party controls








Mountain Province Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls









Negros Occidental UNegA Liberal
15 seats; no party controls








Negros Oriental NUP Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Northern Samar Liberal Liberal
13 seats; no party controls









Nueva Ecija Liberal Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Nueva Vizcaya Nacionalista Nacionalista
13 seats; no party controls








Occidental Mindoro Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control








Oriental Mindoro Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Palawan PPP PPP
13 seats; PPP control









Pampanga KAMBILAN KAMBILAN
13 seats; KAMBILAN control








Pangasinan Aksyon Aksyon
15 seats; no party controls








Quezon NUP Liberal
13 seats; no party controls








Quirino Liberal Liberal
11 seats; Liberal control









Rizal NPC Liberal
13 seats; NPC control









Romblon Liberal Liberal
11 seats; no party controls









Samar NPC Nacionalista
13 seats; no party controls







Sarangani PCM PCM
13 seats; PCM control









Siquijor Liberal Liberal
9 seats; Liberal control









Sorsogon Liberal Independent
13 seats; no party controls








South Cotabato NPC Liberal
13 seats; no party controls









Southern Leyte Liberal Liberal
11 seats; Liberal control









Sultan Kudarat PTM PDP–Laban
13 seats; PTM control









Sulu Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control









Surigao del Norte Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control








Surigao del Sur Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control








Tarlac NPC NPC
13 seats; no party control








Tawi-Tawi NUP NUP
11 seats; no party controls








Zambales Sulong Zambales Sulong Zambales
13 seats; Sulong Zambales control









Zamboanga del Norte Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Liberal control








Zamboanga del Sur NPC Liberal
13 seats; no party controls









Zamboanga Sibugay Liberal Liberal
13 seats; Nacionalista control








City and municipal elections

  • Summary of results, parties ranked by mayorships won.
Results summary[2]
PartyMayorVice mayorLocal legislature seats won
Total%Total%Total%
Liberal75946.5%70543.1%5,45132.4%
NPC20112.3%18211.1%1,5839.4%
Nacionalista1458.9%1398.5%1,0476.3%
UNA1348.2%1428.7%1,2237.3%
NUP1217.4%1277.8%8965.3%
PDP–Laban402.4%332.0%1911.1%
Aksyon130.8%191.1%1130.7%
KBL90.3%40.2%460.3%
Lakas80.5%90.6%640.4%
LDP50.0%80.5%570.3%
Other parties1126.9%1106.7%9925.9%
Independent1076.5%1589.7%1,87711.1%
Ex officio members3,26819.4%
Totals1,634100%1,634100%16,808100%
  • Results for the ten largest cities:
Per city summary
CityMayorVice mayorSangguniang PanlungsodDetails
Quezon City Liberal Liberal
38 seats; Liberal control







Details
Manila PMP PMP
38 seats; Asenso Manileño control






Details
Davao City Hugpong Hugpong
26 seats; Hugpong control








Details
Caloocan Nacionalista PMP
14 seats; no party controls









Details
Cebu City Liberal UNA
18 seats; UNA control









Details
Zamboanga City Liberal Liberal
18 seats; no party controls








Details
Taguig Nacionalista Nacionalista
18 seats; Nacionalista control









Details
Antipolo, Rizal NPC NPC
18 seats; no party controls








Details
Pasig Nacionalista Liberal
14 seats; no party controls








Details
Cagayan de Oro Liberal Liberal
18 seats; no party controls








Details
  • Results for the ten largest municipalities:
Per municipality summary
MunicipalityMayorVice mayorSangguniang Bayan
Rodriguez, Rizal Liberal NPC
10 seats; no party controls








Cainta, Rizal NPC NPC
10 seats; NPC control









Taytay, Rizal Liberal NPC
10 seats; no party controls








Binangonan, Rizal NPC NPC
10 seats; NPC control









Santa Maria, Bulacan NPC NPC
10 seats; NPC control









San Mateo, Rizal Liberal NPC
10 seats; no party controls








Silang, Cavite UNA UNA
10 seats; no party controls








Tanza, Cavite UNA Liberal
10 seats; no party controls









Marilao, Bulacan Independent Independent
10 seats; no party controls









Santo Tomas, Batangas Nacionalista Nacionalista
10 seats; no party controls









Barangay elections

Barangay elections were supposedly to be held in October 2016 to end the election cycle, but were postponed by Congress to October 2017. The officials elected in 2013 will continue to serve up to 2017.[3] By March 2017, Congress then postponed the election anew, this time to May 2018.[4]

The barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) chairmen in a city or municipality will elect among themselves a representative each to sit in the town's Sangguniang Bayan (municipal council) or city's Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council), as the case may be. The municipal and city representatives of the barangay and SK chairmen, and the city and municipal councilors in every province then elect among themselves a representative each to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial board). The provincial and city (which are independent from a province) representatives of the SK chairmen will then elect themselves a president that shall sit as a member of the National Youth Commission. The same is true for the barangay chairmen, who shall be the president of the Liga ng mga Barangay (Association of Villages), and the councilors, who will be the president of the Philippine Councilors League.

References

  1. "Local elections 2016: Know your candidates and localities on Rappler".
  2. Team, COMELEC Web Development. "Official COMELEC Website :: Commission on Elections". COMELEC. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  3. "Duterte signs law postponing barangay, SK elections". Rappler. 2016-10-18. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  4. "Duterte resets barangay, SK elections to 2018". GMA News. 2017-10-04. Retrieved 19 October 2017.