User:Lee4112/sandbox

#PortraitName
(birth–death)
Term of officeTime in officePolitical partyVice presidentPeriod
1Emilio Aguinaldo

(1869–1964)

23 January 189923 March 1901[1]2 years, 59 daysNonpartisanVacant (23 January 1899 – 23 March 1901)First Republic
1897 – 57.03%
Term began with the formal establishment of the Malolos Republic. The Malolos Republic, an independent revolutionary state that is actually the first constitutional republic in Asia, remained unrecognized by any country until the Philippines acknowledged the government as its predecessor, which it also calls the First Philippine Republic. Aguinaldo was consequently counted as the country's first president. Aguinaldo had previously held the presidency of other short-lived national governments that preceded the Malolos Republic.
American Governor-Generals, appointed by the President of the United States, governed the Philippines as an Insular Area.
2Manuel L. Quezon

(1878–1944)

15 November 19351 August 19448 years, 260 daysNacionalistaSergio OsmeñaCommonwealth
1935 – 67.99%
1941 – 81.78%
Sought an election for a full term, but was unsuccessful.
3Jose P. Laurel

(1891–1959)

14 October 194317 August 19451 year, 307 daysKALIBAPIVacantSecond Republic
1943
Term began with the establishment of Japan's puppet Second Republic after it occupied the Philippines during World War II. The Commonwealth continued its existence as a government in exile in Australia and the United States. The Philippines had two concurrent presidents by this time: a de jure (the Commonwealth president) and a de facto (Laurel). Because of his status, he was not considered a legitimate president until the 1960s.
4Sergio Osmeña

(1878–1961)

1 August 194428 May 19461 year, 300 daysNacionalistaVacantCommonwealth
The Liberal Party was not yet a party in itself at the time, but only a wing of the Nacionalista Party. It split and became a separate party by 1947.
5Manuel Roxas

(1892–1948)

28 May 194615 April 19481 year, 323 daysLiberalElpidio QuirinoThird Republic
1946 – 53.94%
Died, in office, of a heart attack in Clark Air Base, Pampanga.
6Elpidio Quirino

(1890–1956)

15 April 194830 December 19535 years, 259 daysLiberal[4]VacantThird Republic
1949 – 50.93%Fernando Lopez
The Liberal Party was split into two opposing wings for the 1949 election: the Avelino wing, led by presidential aspirant José Avelino, and the Quirino wing.
7Ramon Magsaysay

(1907–1957)

30 December 195317 March 19573 years, 77 daysNacionalistaCarlos P. GarciaThird Republic
1953 – 68.90%
Died, in office, in a plane crash in Mount Manunggal, Cebu.
8Carlos P. Garcia

(1896–1971)

18 March 195730 December 19614 years, 287 daysNacionalistaVacantThird Republic
Diosdado Macapagal
1957 – 41.28%
9Diosdado MacapagalDiosdado Macapagal

(1910–1997)

30 December 196130 December 19654 years, 0 daysLiberalEmmanuel PelaezThird Republic
1961 – 55.00%
10Ferdinand Marcos

(1917–1989)

30 December 196525 February 1986[5]20 years, 57 daysNacionalista

KBL

Fernando LopezMartial law

Fourth Republic

Vacant
1965 – 51.94%
1969 – 61.47%
1981 – 88.02%
Imposed martial law, as a self-coup, on 23 September 1972, through Proclamation No. 1081, shortly before the end of his second and final term in 1973. General Order No.1, which detailed the transfer of all powers to the president, was also issued, enabling Marcos to rule by decree. Served concurrently as prime minister from 12 June 1978, to 30 June 1981. Deposed in the People Power Revolution.
11Corazon Aquino

(1933–2009)

25 February 198630 June 1992UNIDO[6]Salvador LaurelFifth Republic
1986 – 46.10%
Assumed presidency by claiming victory in the disputed 1986 snap election.
12Fidel V. Ramos

(born 1928)

30 June 199230 June 1998LakasJoseph EstradaFifth Republic
1992 – 23.58%
13Joseph Estrada

(born 1937)

30 June 199820 January 2001[7]LAMMPGloria Macapagal ArroyoFifth Republic
1998 – 39.86%
Deposed after the Supreme Court declared Estrada as resigned, and, as a result, the office of the president vacant, after the Second EDSA Revolution.[1]
14Gloria Macapagal Arroyo

(born 1947)

20 January 200130 June 2010Lakas[8]VacantFifth Republic
Teofisto Guingona Jr.
Noli de Castro
2004 – 39.99%
15Benigno Aquino III

(born 1960)

30 June 201030 June 2016LiberalJejomar BinayFifth Republic
2010 – 42.08%
16Rodrigo Duterte

(born 1945)

30 June 2016IncumbentPDP–LabanLeni RobredoFifth Republic
2016 – 39.00%

References

edit
  1. ^ Calica, Aurea (January 21, 2001). "SC: People's welfare is the supreme law". The Philippine Star. Retrieved June 18, 2016.