Liberal Party (Philippines)

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Liberal Party
Partido Liberal
AbbreviationLP
PresidentEdcel Lagman
ChairpersonFrancis Pangilinan
Secretary-GeneralTeddy Baguilat
SpokespersonLeila de Lima
FoundersManuel Roxas
Elpidio Quirino
José Avelino
FoundedJanuary 19, 1946; 78 years ago (1946-01-19)
Split fromNacionalista
HeadquartersAGS Building, EDSA, Guadalupe Viejo, Makati City, Metro Manila
Think tankCenter for Liberalism and Democracy[1]
Youth wingLiberal Youth
Ideology
Political position
National affiliationTRoPa (2022)
Former
Regional affiliationCouncil of Asian Liberals and Democrats
International affiliationLiberal International
Colors  Yellow,   red,   blue
  Buff (customary)
SloganBago. Bukas. Liberal. (since 2020)[8]
Seats in the Senate
0 / 24
Seats in the House of Representatives
6 / 316
Provincial governorships
0 / 82
Provincial vice governorships
3 / 82
Provincial board members
26 / 1,023
Website
liberal.ph

The Liberal Party of the Philippines (Filipino: Partido Liberal ng Pilipinas) abbreviated as the LP, is a liberal political party in the Philippines.[9]

Founded on January 19, 1946 by Senate President Manuel Roxas, Senate President Pro-Tempore Elpidio Quirino, and former 9th Senatorial District Senator José Avelino from the breakaway liberal wing of the old Nacionalista Party (NP), the Liberal Party remains the second-oldest active political party in the Philippines after the NP, and the oldest continually-active party. The LP served as the governing party of four Philippine presidents: Manuel Roxas, Elpidio Quirino, Diosdado Macapagal, and Benigno Aquino III. As a vocal opposition party to the dictatorship of their former member Ferdinand Marcos Sr., it reemerged as a major political party after the People Power Revolution and the establishment of the Fifth Republic. It subsequently served as a senior member of President Corazon Aquino's UNIDO coalition. Upon Corazon Aquino's death in 2009, the party regained popularity, winning the 2010 Philippine presidential election under Benigno Aquino III and returning it to government to serve from 2010 to 2016. This was the only instance the party had won the presidency since the end of the Marcos dictatorship, however, as it lost control of the office to Rodrigo Duterte of PDP–Laban in the 2016 presidential election and became the leading opposition party once again. Its vice presidential candidate Leni Robredo won in the same election, however, narrowly beating the second candidate by a small margin.[10]

The Liberal Party was the political party of the immediate past Vice President of the Philippines. In the 2019 midterm elections, the party remained the primary opposition party of the Philippines, holding three seats in the Senate. The LP was the largest party outside of Rodrigo Duterte's supermajority, holding 18 seats in the House of Representatives after 2019. In local government, the party held two provincial governorships and five vice governorships. The general election of 2022, however, was a setback for the party, which lost both the Presidency and Vice-Presidency, as well as all of its seats in the Senate, and saw its representation in the House of Representatives reduced.

The Liberal Party remains an influential organization in contemporary Philippine politics. With center-left positions on social issues and centrist positions on economic issues, it is commonly associated with the post-revolution, liberal-democratic status quo of the Philippines in contrast to authoritarianism, conservatism, and socialism. Aside from presidents, the party has been led by liberal thinkers and progressive politicians including Benigno Aquino Jr., Jovito Salonga, Raul Daza, Florencio B. Abad Jr., Franklin Drilon, and Mar Roxas. Two of its members, Corazon Aquino and Leila de Lima, have received the prestigious Prize For Freedom, one of the highest international awards for liberal and democratic politicians since 1985 given by Liberal International. The Liberal Party is a member of the Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats and Liberal International.

The Liberal Party logo from 2021 to present.

History

[edit]
The Liberal Party logo from 1953 to 1965.
The Liberal Party logo from 1965 to 2010 and again from 2016 to 2021.
The Liberal Party logo during the term of President Noynoy Aquino from 2010 to 2016.

Third Republic

[edit]

The Liberal Party was founded on January 19, 1946 by Manuel Roxas and Elpidio Quirino.[11] It was formed by Roxas from what was once the "Liberal Wing" of the Nacionalista Party.[12]

Two more Presidents of the Philippines elected into office came from the LP: Elpidio Quirino and Diosdado Macapagal.[13][14] Two other presidents came from the ranks of the LP, as former members of the party who later joined the Nacionalistas: Ramon Magsaysay and Ferdinand Marcos.[15]

Martial law era

[edit]

During the days leading to his declaration of martial law, Marcos would find his old party as a potent roadblock to his quest for one-man rule. Led by Ninoy Aquino, Gerry Roxas and Jovito Salonga, the LP would hound President Marcos on issues like human rights and the curtailment of freedoms. Even after Marcos' declaration of martial law silenced the LP, the party continued to oppose the regime, and many of its leaders and members would be prosecuted and even killed during this time.[2][16]

Post-EDSA

[edit]

After democracy was restored after the People Power Revolution, the LP was instrumental in ending more than half a century of US military presence in the Philippines with its campaign in the 1991 senate to reject a new RP-US Bases Treaty. This ironically cost the party dearly, losing for it the elections of 1992. In 2000, it was in opposition to the Joseph Estrada administration, actively supporting the Resign-Impeach-Oust initiatives that led to People Power II.[2][16]

Drilon-Roxas wing vs Atienza wing

[edit]

On March 2 1998, members of the LP installed Manila Mayor Lito Atienza as the party president, which triggered an LP leadership struggle and party schism. The Supreme Court later proclaimed Drilon the true president of the party, leaving the Atienza wing expelled.[16][2]

Benigno Aquino III administration

[edit]

The Liberal Party regained influence when it nominated as its next presidential candidate then-Senator Benigno Aquino III,[16] the son of former President Corazon Aquino, for the 2010 Philippine presidential election after the latter's death that subsequently showed a groundswell of support for his candidacy.[17] Even though the party had earlier nominated Sen. Manuel "Mar" Roxas II to be its presidential candidate for the 2010 Philippine general election, Roxas gave way to Aquino and instead ran for vice president. The party was able to field new members breaking away from the then-ruling party Lakas–Kampi–CMD, becoming the largest minority party in Congress.[2][16][18] Aquino would later win by plurality, and the LP would become the majority party in Congress.[19]

2016–present: Leni Robredo era

[edit]

In the 2016 presidential elections, the Liberal Party nominated Mar Roxas, former Department of Transportation and Communications (DoTC) and Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) secretary, and Leni Robredo, a representative from Naga City and widow of Jesse Robredo, the DILG secretary who preceded Roxas, as the party's presidential and vice presidential candidates. Robredo won, while Roxas lost. Most of the party's members either switched allegiance to PDP–Laban,[20][21][22] joined a supermajority alliance but retained their LP membership (with some defecting later), joined the "recognized minority", or created an opposition bloc called "Magnificent 7".

As early as February 2017, the leaders of the Liberal Party chose to focus on rebuilding the party by inviting sectoral representation of non-politicians in its membership numbers.[23] Since then the party had been inducting new members who were non-politicians, some of whom applied online through the party's website, Liberal.ph.[24][25][26] Before the scheduled 2019 general elections, the LP formed Otso Diretso, an electoral coalition of eight candidates for the senate race; led by the party, the coalition field also comprised members of the Magdalo Party-List, Akbayan Citizens Action Party, and Aksyon Demokratiko.[27][28][29] None of the eight senatorial candidates under Otso Diretso won a seat, however; it was the first time in the history of the current bicameral composition of the Philippine Congress under the 1987 Constitution that the opposition failed to win a seat in one of the chambers, and the second time that a Liberal Party-led coalition suffered a great loss since 1955.

For the 2022 Philippine presidential election, the Liberal Party nominated Leni Robredo and Francis Pangilinan for the presidential and vice presidential posts, respectively.[30][31] The party led the Team Robredo-Pangilinan coalition, which included incumbent senator De Lima, other members of the Liberal Party, and several guest candidates from other parties such as Akbayan, as well as independents. Robredo ran as an independent candidate whilst remaining affiliated with Liberal Party. Both candidates lost the election to Bongbong Marcos and Sara Duterte, respectively, finishing second. No candidate from the Liberal Party won a seat in the senatorial elections, for the first time since the 1995 elections.

In 2024, members of the Liberal Party formed a sectoral wing called Mamamayang Liberal (ML) for the 2025 House of Representatives elections for party-list seats. De Lima, who was released from detainment in November 2023, was selected as ML's first nominee.[32] Former senator and vice presidential candidate Kiko Pangilinan will be the Liberal Party's sole candidate for the senatorial elections.

Ideology

[edit]

While the Liberal Party defines its ideology as social liberalism,[33] the party has often been described as a "centrist" or "liberal" party. Historically, the Liberal Party has been evaluated as a "conservative" party,[34][35] with an ideology similar to or indistinguishable from the Nacionalista Party's ideology,[36][37] until it became the opposition party under the Marcos Sr. Presidency , wherein it became more liberal.[38] Being a founding member of the Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats and a full member of Liberal International, the Liberal Party advocates the values of "freedom, justice and solidarity (bayanihan)," as described in the party's values charter.[39][40] Although this may be deemed theoretically true since the party's founding in 1946, it became more tangible through the party's position of continuing dissent during the Marcos presidency.

Since 2017, the party has opened party membership to the general public and to key sectors of society, aiming to harness a large volunteering base. According to the party, this aims to ostensibly build on "the promise of becoming a true people’s party".

Current political positions

[edit]

The party has declared policies geared toward inclusiveness and people empowerment.[41][9] It also advocates and supports secure jobs, food, shelter, universal health care, public education access, and other social services, and is against extrajudicial killings, any challenge to the rule of law, and curtailments of human rights strictures. The party also aims to form an open government with participatory democracy, positions that have been supported by the party's recent leaders.[42][43]

Economic policy

[edit]

Social

[edit]
[edit]

Senator Leila de Lima, who led an investigation into alleged extrajudicial deaths in the early months of Duterte's war on drugs, was issued an arrest warrant in 2017 based on charges linked to the New Bilibid Prison drug trafficking scandal, which the party claimed was based on trumped-up charges, labelling the arrest "patently illegal".[67] While on the whole, de Lima's investigation was seen by some pundits as an adversarial investigation that was a strategic mistake, others in the party simply saw it as a call to a review of the party's principles and how members have adhered to them.[68][67][66][69][70]

Senator De Lima has been fully acquitted of all criminal charges on June 24, 2024,[71] marking the end of her legal battle and detention that lasted over six years. De Lima, a prominent critic of former President Rodrigo Duterte, described the charges as politically motivated to silence her investigations into Duterte's controversial drug war and alleged human rights abuses.[72]

In 2019, the party, along with other groups, was accused of planning a coup against the Duterte government. The party denounced the allegation and called it a state-sponsored threat of legal abuse, demanding the government provide evidence to back the claims.[73]

Current party officials

[edit]
  • President: Albay–1st Representative Edcel Lagman (2022–present)
  • Vice President: Former Quezon–4th Representative Erin Tañada (2022–present)
  • Chairperson: Former Senator Francis Pangilinan (2022–present)
  • Vice Chairperson: Former Quezon City Representative Kit Belmonte (2022–present)
  • Secretary-General: Former Ifugao Representative Teddy Baguilat (2022–present)
  • Treasurer: Oriental Mindoro Representative Alfonso Umali Jr. (2022–present)
  • Spokesperson: Former Senator Leila de Lima (2023–present)

Party presidents

[edit]
# Name Start of term End of term
1 Manuel Roxas[16] January 19, 1946 April 15, 1948
2 José Avelino April 19, 1948 May 8, 1949
3 Elpidio Quirino April 17, 1949 December 30, 1950
4 Eugenio Pérez December 30, 1950 December 30, 1957
5 Diosdado Macapagal December 30, 1957 January 21,1961
6 Ferdinand E. Marcos[74][75] January 21, 1961[76][77] April 1964[76]
7 Cornelio T. Villareal April 1964 May 10, 1969
8 Gerardo Roxas May 10, 1969 April 19, 1982
9 Jovito Salonga April 20, 1982 June 1, 1993
10 Wigberto Tañada June 2, 1993 October 17, 1994
11 Raul A. Daza October 18, 1994 September 19, 1999
12 Florencio Abad September 20, 1999 August 9, 2004
13 Franklin Drilon August 10, 2004 November 5, 2007
14 Mar Roxas November 6, 2007 September 30, 2012
15 Joseph Emilio Abaya October 1, 2012 August 7, 2016
16 Francis Pangilinan August 8, 2016 September 30, 2022
17 Edcel Lagman September 30, 2022 Incumbent

Electoral performance

[edit]

Presidential elections

[edit]
Year Candidate Votes % Result Outcome
1946 Manuel Roxas 1,333,006 53.93 Won Manuel Roxas won
1949 Elpidio Quirino[a] 1,803,808 50.93 Won Elpidio Quirino won
José Avelino[a] 419,890 11.85 Lost
1953 Elpidio Quirino 1,313,991 31.08 Lost Ramon Magsaysay (Nacionalista) won
1957 José Yulo 1,386,829 27.62 Lost Carlos P. Garcia (Nacionalista) won
Antonio Quirino[b] 60,328 1.20 Lost
1961 Diosdado Macapagal 3,554,840 55.00 Won Diosdado Macapagal won
1965 Diosdado Macapagal 3,187,752 42.88 Lost Ferdinand Marcos (Nacionalista) won
1969 Sergio Osmeña Jr. 3,143,122 38.51 Lost Ferdinand Marcos (Nacionalista) won
1981 Not participating Ferdinand Marcos (KBL) won
1986 None; main wing endorsed Corazon Aquino (UNIDO), while Kalaw had no running mate. Disputed Corazon Aquino assumed presidency
1992 Jovito Salonga 2,302,123 10.16 Lost Fidel V. Ramos (Lakas–NUCD) won
1998 Alfredo Lim 2,344,362 8.71 Lost Joseph Estrada (LAMMP) won
2004 None; endorsed Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Lakas–CMD) Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Lakas–CMD) won
2010 Benigno Aquino III 15,208,678 42.08 Won Benigno Aquino III won
2016 Mar Roxas 9,978,175 23.45 Lost Rodrigo Duterte (PDP–Laban) won
2022 Leni Robredo[c] 15,035,773 27.94 Lost Bongbong Marcos (PFP) won

Vice presidential elections

[edit]
Year Candidate Votes % Result Outcome
1946 Elpidio Quirino 1,161,725 52.36 Won Elpidio Quirino won
1949 Fernando Lopez[a] 1,341,284 52.19 Won Fernando López won
Vicente J. Francisco[a] 44,510 1.73 Lost
1953 José Yulo 1,483,802 37.10 Lost Carlos P. Garcia (Nacionalista) won
1957 Diosdado Macapagal 2,189,197 46.55 Won Diosdado Macapagal won
1961 Emmanuel Pelaez 2,394,400 37.57 Won Emmanuel Pelaez won
1965 Gerardo Roxas 3,504,826 48.12 Lost Fernando López (Nacionalista) won
1969 Genaro Magsaysay 2,968,526 37.54 Lost Fernando López (Nacionalista) won
1981 Vice presidency abolished
1986 None; main wing endorsed Salvador Laurel (UNIDO) Disputed Salvador Laurel (UNIDO) assumed vice presidency
Eva Estrada Kalaw 662,185 3.31
1992 None; Salonga's running mate was Aquilino Pimentel Jr. (PDP–Laban) 2,023,289 9.91 Lost Joseph Estrada (NPC) won
1998 Serge Osmeña 2,351,462 9.20 Lost Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Lakas–NUCD–UMDP) won
2004 None; endorsed Noli de Castro (Independent) Noli de Castro (Independent) won
2010 Mar Roxas 13,918,490 39.58 Lost Jejomar Binay (PDP–Laban) won
2016 Leni Robredo 14,418,817 35.11 Won Leni Robredo won
2022 Francis Pangilinan 9,329,207 17.82 Lost Sara Duterte (Lakas–CMD) won

Legislative elections

[edit]

Notable members

[edit]

Philippine presidents

[edit]
  • Manuel Roxas (5th President of the Philippines; one of the co-founders)
  • Elpidio Quirino (6th President of the Philippines) – also the 2nd Vice President of the Philippines
  • Ramon Magsaysay (7th President of the Philippines) – Magsaysay won in 1953 as the Candidate of the Nacionalista, although he was former Liberal member and in fact he served as President Quirino's Secretary of Department of National Defense.
  • Diosdado Macapagal (9th President of the Philippines)
  • Ferdinand Marcos Sr. (10th President of the Philippines) – Marcos won in 1965 as the candidate of the Liberal Party's rival Nacionalista Party, the party to which Marcos joined after failing to get the LP nomination.
  • Joseph Estrada (13th President of the Philippines) – A member of the Liberal Party when he was a senator from 1988 to 1991.
  • Benigno Aquino III (15th President of the Philippines)
  • Rodrigo Duterte (16th President of the Philippines) – A former party chair in Davao City from 2009, Duterte left the party in 2015. He won the presidency in 2016 under the PDP-Laban ticket.[79][80]

Philippine vice presidents

[edit]
  • Fernando Lopez (3rd and 7th vice president of the Philippines) – Lopez was a Liberal when he was the 3rd Vice President, while a Nacionalista member as the 7th Vice President

Others

[edit]

Coalition

[edit]

References

[edit]
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Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberal_Party_(Philippines)
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