Pangasinan's 5th congressional district

Pangasinan's 5th congressional district is one of the six congressional districts of the Philippines in the province of Pangasinan. It has been represented in the House of Representatives of the Philippines since 1916 and earlier in the Philippine Assembly from 1907 to 1916.[3] The district consists of the city of Urdaneta and adjacent municipalities of Alcala, Bautista, Binalonan, Laoac, Pozorrubio, Santo Tomas, Sison and Villasis. It is currently represented in the 18th Congress by Ramon V. Guico III of the Lakas–CMD (Lakas).[4]

Pangasinan's 5th congressional district
Constituency
for the House of Representatives of the Philippines
Boundary of Pangasinan's 5th congressional district in Pangasinan
Location of Pangasinan within the Philippines
ProvincePangasinan
RegionIlocos Region
Population489,129 (2015)[1]
Electorate283,403 (2016)[2]
Major settlements
Area585.67 km2 (226.13 sq mi)
Current constituency
Created1907
RepresentativeRamon V. Guico III
Political party     Lakas
Congressional blocMajority

Representation history

# Member Term of office Legislature Party Electoral history Constituent
LGUs
StartEnd

Pangasinan's 5th district for the Philippine Assembly

District created April 1, 1907.[5]
1 Matías González October 16, 1907 October 16, 1909 1st Independent Elected in 1907. 1907–1916
Asingan, Balungao, Natividad, Rosales, San Manuel, San Nicolas, San Quintin, Santa Maria, Tayug, Umingan
2 Domingo Patajo October 16, 1909 October 16, 1912 2nd Independent Elected in 1909.
3 Hugo Sansano October 16, 1912 October 16, 1916 3rd Nacionalista Elected in 1912.

Pangasinan's 5th district for the House of Representatives of the Philippine Islands

4 Bernabé de Guzmán October 16, 1916 June 3, 1919 4th Nacionalista
Liga Popular
Elected in 1916. 1916–1935
Asingan, Balungao, Natividad, Rosales, San Manuel, San Nicolas, San Quintin, Santa Maria, Tayug, Umingan
5 Ricardo González June 3, 1919 June 2, 1925 5th Nacionalista Elected in 1919.
6th Nacionalista
Unipersonalista
Re-elected in 1922.
6 Evaristo P. Sánchez June 2, 1925 June 5, 1928 7th Nacionalista
Consolidado
Elected in 1925.
7 Juan G. Millán June 5, 1928 June 5, 1934 8th Demócrata Elected in 1928.
9th Re-elected in 1931.
8 Narciso Ramos June 5, 1934 September 16, 1935 10th Nacionalista
Democrático
Elected in 1934.
# Member Term of office National
Assembly
Party Electoral history Constituent
LGUs
StartEnd

Pangasinan's 5th district for the National Assembly (Commonwealth of the Philippines)

(8) Narciso Ramos September 16, 1935 December 30, 1941 1st Nacionalista
Democrático
Re-elected in 1935. 1935–1941
Asingan, Balungao, Natividad, Rosales, San Manuel, San Nicolas, San Quintin, Santa Maria, Tayug, Umingan
2nd Nacionalista Re-elected in 1938.
District dissolved into the two-seat Pangasinan's at-large district for the National Assembly (Second Philippine Republic).
# Member Term of office Common
wealth
Congress
Party Electoral history Constituent
LGUs
StartEnd

Pangasinan's 5th district for the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of the Philippines

District re-created May 24, 1945.
(8) Narciso Ramos June 11, 1945 May 25, 1946 1st Nacionalista Re-elected in 1941. 1945–1946
Asingan, Balungao, Natividad, Rosales, San Manuel, San Nicolas, San Quintin, Santa Maria, Tayug, Umingan
# Member Term of office Congress Party Electoral history Constituent
LGUs
StartEnd

Pangasinan's 5th district for the House of Representatives of the Philippines

(8) Narciso Ramos May 25, 1946 July 15, 1946 1st Liberal Re-elected in 1946.
Resigned on appointment as minister-counsellor to the United Nations.
1946–1972
Asingan, Balungao, Natividad, Rosales, San Manuel, San Nicolas, San Quintin, Santa Maria, Tayug, Umingan
9 Cipriano S. Allas March 17, 1947 December 30, 1953 Liberal Elected to finish Ramos's term.
2nd Re-elected in 1949.
10 Justino Z. Benito December 30, 1953 December 30, 1957 3rd Liberal Elected in 1953.
11 Luciano Millán December 30, 1957 December 30, 1965 4th Nacionalista Elected in 1957.
5th Re-elected in 1961.
12 Jesús M. Reyes December 30, 1965 December 30, 1969 6th Liberal Elected in 1965.
13 Robert B. Estrella December 30, 1969 September 23, 1972 7th Nacionalista Elected in 1969.
Removed from office after imposition of martial law.
District dissolved into the twelve-seat Region I's at-large district for the Interim Batasang Pambansa, followed by the six-seat Pangasinan's at-large district for the Regular Batasang Pambansa.
District re-created February 2, 1987.
14 Conrado B. Estrella Jr. June 30, 1987 June 30, 1992 8th KBL Elected in 1987. 1987–present
Alcala, Bautista, Binalonan, Laoac, Pozorrubio, Santo Tomas, Sison, Urdaneta, Villasis
15 Amadeo R. Perez Jr. June 30, 1992 June 30, 2001 9th Lakas–CMD Elected in 1992.
10th Re-elected in 1995.
11th Re-elected in 1998.
16 Mark Cojuangco June 30, 2001 June 30, 2010 12th NPC Elected in 2001.
13th Re-elected in 2004.
14th Re-elected in 2007.
17 Ma. Carmen S. Cojuangco June 30, 2010 June 30, 2016 15th NPC Elected in 2010.
16th Re-elected in 2013.
18 Amado Espino Jr. June 30, 2016 June 30, 2019 17th PDP–Laban Elected in 2016.
19 Ramon V. Guico III June 30, 2019 Incumbent 18th Lakas–CMD Elected in 2019.

Election results

2016

2016 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
Aksyon Amado Espino, Jr. 133,381
NPC Carmen Cojuangco 92,943
Margin of victory
Invalid or blank votes 15,769
Total votes 242,093
Aksyon gain from NPC

2013

2013 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
NPC Carmen Cojuangco 164,504 75.67
Independent Demetria Demetrio 15,466 7.11
Margin of victory 149,038 68.56
Invalid or blank votes 37,412 17.22
Total votes 217,382 100.00
NPC hold

2010

2010 Philippine House of Representatives elections
Party Candidate Votes %
NPC Kimi Cojuangco 140,686 69.28
Independent Demetrio Demetria 58,938 29.02
Independent Martin Fao-ilan 3,443 1.70
Valid ballots 203,067 93.10
Invalid or blank votes 15,041 6.90
Total votes 218,108 100.00
NPC hold
gollark: Biters are fine as long as you're somewhat proactive about them, probably.
gollark: The NAT's operation is transparent to stuff outside the system, and you also obviously couldn't trust anything the other end said about being multiple devices.
gollark: What?
gollark: CDs are only 1.4Mbps.
gollark: Have you not seen the secret tunnel network™?

See also

References

  1. "TABLE 1. Population of legislative districts by Region, Province, and selected Highly Urbanized/Component City : 2015". Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  2. "Philippines 2016 Voters Profile". Commission on Elections (Philippines). Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  3. "Roster of Philippine legislators". House of Representatives of the Philippines. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  4. "House Members". House of Representatives of the Philippines. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  5. 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. 253. Elihu Root, Secretary of War. Washington, D.C.: United States War Department. p. 49. Retrieved April 30, 2020.

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