National Assembly | |
---|---|
Type | |
Type | |
Houses | 1 |
History | |
Founded | September 25, 1943 |
Disbanded | February 2, 1944 |
Preceded by | National Assembly (Philippine Commonwealth) |
Succeeded by | Congress of the Commonwealth of the Philippines |
Leadership | |
Speaker | |
Floor Leader | Francisco Zulueta, KALIBAPI |
Structure | |
Seats | 108 |
Political groups | Government
|
Philippines portal |
The National Assembly was the legislature of the Second Philippine Republic from September 25, 1943, to February 2, 1944.
Half of the membership of the assembly consisted of provincial governors or city mayors acting in an ex officio capacity, while the other half were indirectly elected through local conventions of KALIBAPI members during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines.[1]
Sessions
- First Special Session: October 18 – 23, 1943
- First Regular Session: November 25 – December 22, 1943
- Second Special Session: January 10 – February 2, 1944
Legislation
The National Assembly of the Second Philippine Republic passed a total of 66 laws: Act No. 1 to 66.[2]
Major legislation
- Act No. 1 – Creation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Leadership
President
- President of the Second Philippine Republic:
National Assembly
- Speaker:
- Floor Leader:
Members
The assembly consisted of 108 members from 46 provinces and 8 chartered cities. The numbers and territorial coverages of these areas differed from the pre-war status in several ways:
- The provinces of Batanes, Marinduque and Romblon had been abolished and their municipalities annexed to Cagayan, Tayabas and Capiz respectively by virtue of Executive Order No. 84 issued by Philippine Executive Commission Chairman Jorge Vargas on August 31, 1942.
- Jurisdiction over several areas in Tayabas were transferred to Nueva Ecija (the municipalities of Baler and Casiguran; corresponding to the entire present-day territory of Aurora) and Laguna (Infanta, including the present-day municipalities of General Nakar and Real) by virtue of Executive Order No. 84 issued by Executive Commission Chairman Jorge Vargas on August 31, 1942.
- Jurisdiction over the Polillo Islands in Tayabas was transferred to Laguna by virtue of Executive Order No. 103 issued by Executive Commission Chairman Jorge Vargas on November 1, 1942.
- The chartered cities of Dansalan (now Marawi), Tagaytay and Zamboanga were also not represented separately in the assembly; their territories were administered by the governments of their mother provinces Lanao, Cavite and Zamboanga, respectively.
- The representation of Manila also included the chartered city of Quezon City, along with the Rizal municipalities of Caloocan, Makati, Mandaluyong, Parañaque, Pasay and San Juan, which were constituted as the City of Greater Manila by Manuel Quezon's Executive Act No. 400 on January 1, 1942, as an emergency wartime measure.
Province/City | Elected member | Party | Ex-officio member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abra | Quintin Paredes Jr. | KALIBAPI | Juan C. Brillantes | KALIBAPI | ||
Agusan | Elisa Ochoa | KALIBAPI | Ramon Z. Aguirre | KALIBAPI | ||
Albay | Pio Duran | KALIBAPI | Julian L. Locsin Jr. | KALIBAPI | ||
Antique | Alberto A. Villavert | KALIBAPI | Tobias Fornier | KALIBAPI | ||
Bacolod | Francisco Zulueta | KALIBAPI | Alfredo C. Yulo | KALIBAPI | ||
Baguio | Florendo Aquino | KALIBAPI | Nicasio S. Valderrosa | KALIBAPI | ||
Bataan | Joaquin J. Linao | KALIBAPI | Simeon D. Salonga | KALIBAPI | ||
Batangas | Jose Laurel Jr. | KALIBAPI | Maximo M. Malvar | KALIBAPI | ||
Bohol | Vicente P. Bullecer | KALIBAPI | Agapito Hontanosas | KALIBAPI | ||
Bukidnon | Pedro Carrillo | KALIBAPI | Antonio Rubin | KALIBAPI | ||
Bulacan | Jacinto Molina | KALIBAPI | Emilio Rustia | KALIBAPI | ||
Cagayan | Melecio Arranz | KALIBAPI | Nicanor Carag | KALIBAPI | ||
Camarines Norte | Trinidad P. Zenarosa | KALIBAPI | Carlos Ascutia | KALIBAPI | ||
Camarines Sur | Jose Fuentebella | KALIBAPI | Andres T. Hernandez | KALIBAPI | ||
Capiz | Eduardo Abalo | KALIBAPI | Alfredo V. Jacinto | KALIBAPI | ||
Cavite | Emiliano Tria Tirona | KALIBAPI | Luis Y. Ferrer | KALIBAPI | ||
Cavite City | Demetrio B. Encarnacion | KALIBAPI | Ricardo Poblete | KALIBAPI | ||
Cebu | Jose S. Leyson | KALIBAPI | Jose Delgado | KALIBAPI | ||
Cebu City | Paulino Gullas | KALIBAPI | Juan C. Zamora | KALIBAPI | ||
Cotabato | Menandang Piang | KALIBAPI | Alfonso A. Pablo | KALIBAPI | ||
Davao | Juan A. Sarenas | KALIBAPI | Romualdo C. Quimpo | KALIBAPI | ||
Davao City | Celestino Chavez | KALIBAPI | Alfonso G. Oboza | KALIBAPI | ||
Ilocos Norte | Conrado Rubio | KALIBAPI | Emilio L. Medina | KALIBAPI | ||
Ilocos Sur | Fidel Villanueva | KALIBAPI | Alejandro Quirolgico | KALIBAPI | ||
Iloilo | Cirilo Mapa, Jr. | KALIBAPI | Fermin G. Caram Sr. | KALIBAPI | ||
Iloilo City | Fortunato R. Ybiernas | KALIBAPI | Vicente R. Ybiernas | KALIBAPI | ||
Isabela | Gregorio P. Formoso | KALIBAPI | Lino J. Castillejos | KALIBAPI | ||
La Union | Rufino N. Macagba | KALIBAPI | Bonifacio Tadiar | KALIBAPI | ||
Laguna | Marcelo P. Zorilla | KALIBAPI | Jesus Bautista | KALIBAPI | ||
Lanao | Datu Bato Ali | KALIBAPI | Ciriaco B. Raval | KALIBAPI | ||
Leyte | Jose Maria Veloso | KALIBAPI | Bernardo Torres | KALIBAPI | ||
Manila | Alfonso E. Mendoza | KALIBAPI | Leon Guinto | KALIBAPI | ||
Masbate | Emilio B. Espinosa | KALIBAPI | Pio V. Corpus | KALIBAPI | ||
Mindoro | Raul T. Leuterio | KALIBAPI | Felipe S. Abeleda | KALIBAPI | ||
Misamis Occidental | Rufino Jaca Abadies | KALIBAPI | P.M. Stuart del Rosario | KALIBAPI | ||
Misamis Oriental | Isidro Vamenta | KALIBAPI | Jose Artadi | KALIBAPI | ||
Mountain Province | Florencio Bagwan | KALIBAPI | Hilary P. Clapp | KALIBAPI | ||
Negros Occidental | Gil Montilla | KALIBAPI | Vicente F. Castillo | KALIBAPI | ||
Negros Oriental | Julian L. Teves | KALIBAPI | Guillermo Z. Villanueva | KALIBAPI | ||
Nueva Ecija | Hermogenes Concepcion | KALIBAPI | Jose Robles Jr. | KALIBAPI | ||
Nueva Vizcaya | Guillermo E. Boñgolan | KALIBAPI | Demetrio Quirino | KALIBAPI | ||
Palawan | Iñigo R. Peña | KALIBAPI | Patricio Fernandez | KALIBAPI | ||
Pampanga | Felix B. Bautista | KALIBAPI | Eligio G. Lagman | KALIBAPI | ||
Pangasinan | Bernabe Aquino | KALIBAPI | Santiago U. Estrada | KALIBAPI | ||
Rizal | Nicanor A. Roxas | KALIBAPI | Tomas M. Molina | KALIBAPI | ||
Samar | Serafin S. Marabut | KALIBAPI | Cayetano Lucero | KALIBAPI | ||
San Pablo | Sofronio Abrera | KALIBAPI | Tomas Dizon | KALIBAPI | ||
Sorsogon | Manuel Estipona | KALIBAPI | Rafael Ramos | KALIBAPI | ||
Sulu | Gulamu Rasul | KALIBAPI | Ombra Amilbangsa | KALIBAPI | ||
Surigao | Jose D. Cortez | KALIBAPI | Fernando C. Silvosa | KALIBAPI | ||
Tarlac | Benigno Aquino Sr. | KALIBAPI | Sergio L. Aquino | KALIBAPI | ||
Tayabas | Tomas Morato | KALIBAPI | Natalio A. Enriquez | KALIBAPI | ||
Zambales | Valentin Afable | KALIBAPI | Francisco Dantes | KALIBAPI | ||
Zamboanga | Juan S. Alano | KALIBAPI | Agustin L. Alvarez | KALIBAPI |
See also
References
- ↑ Ramirez, Efren V. (1969). Philippine Government (For College Students). E. Q. Cornejo. p. 94.
- ↑ Upon the disestablishment of the Second Philippine Republic, all acts passed by its National Assembly were deemed invalid and not binding.
- ↑ National Library of the Philippines – Catalog Labeled Display: National Assembly Yearbook. Accessed on May 8, 2007.
- ↑ Official program of the inauguration of the Republic of the Philippines and the induction into office of His Excellency Jose P. Laurel. Bureau of Printing. 1943.
Further reading
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