List of presidents of the Philippines by tickets
This is a list of Philippine Presidents by tickets. The list contains the candidates for the offices of President of the Philippines and also for the Vice President of the Philippines that their parties has nominated since 1935.
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of the Philippines |
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This list only includes the major parties and coalitions during the elections and their closest rivals during the elections. For full results and candidates, see the List of Philippine Presidential elections.
From the Commonwealth period to the last election prior the declaration of martial law, the major parties always split their ticket: one candidate was from Luzon and another either from the Visayas or Mindanao (the so-called "North-South" ticket). In the post-martial law period, this has been less pronounced as most candidates have been from Luzon;[1] in 2010, only the Liberal Party had a "North-South" ticket with their top opponents all have candidates based in Metro Manila.
List
This table includes presidential candidates who've either won 10% of the vote, or placed second, or whose vice presidential running mate won.
This doesn't include elections where only the presidency is on the ballot, nor candidates who had no running mates.
In 1935, there was no "administration ticket" as it was the first election, but the Nacionalista Party had control of the Philippine Legislature at this time, and was considered as the ruling party.
In 1992, there was no clear "administration ticket". Incumbent president Corazon Aquino endorsed the Lakas ticket of Fidel V. Ramos, but Congress was controlled by the LDP of Ramon Mitra, whom she originally endorsed. Both Lakas and LDP tickets are considered administration, while all other tickets were labeled as opposition tickets.
Opposition tickets are ordered by number of votes for president.
Maps
- Only those include above are listed. The larger pog refers to the presidential candidate.
Commonwealth elections
- Green: Nacionalista Party
- Blue: Nationalist Socialist Party
- Red: Democratic Party
- Pink: Popular Front
- Yellow: Liberal Party
1935 | 1941 | 1946 |
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Third Republic elections
- Green: Nacionalista Party
- Yellow: Liberal Party
- Purple: Progressive Party
1949 | 1953 | 1957 |
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1961 | 1965 | 1969 |
Fourth Republic elections
- Red: KBL
- Bright yellow: UNIDO
1986 |
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Fifth Republic elections
If ticket contains members from different parties, the presidential nominee's color is used.
- Cyan: Lakas
- Orange: LAMMP/KNP/PMP
- Blue: LDP
- Light green: NPC
- Bright yellow: PDP-Laban
- Red: KBL
- Pink: Aksyon
- Bright pink: KBL
- Turquoise: PROMDI
- Green: Nacionalista
- Yellow: Liberal
1992 | 1998 | 2004 |
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2010 | 2016 | 2022 |
References
- Quezon, Manuel III (2008-04-10). "Senate the victim of a design flaw". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2011-06-09.