2001 Philippine general election

Legislative elections and local elections were held in the Philippines on May 14, 2001, independent candidate Noli de Castro, a former television anchor of TV Patrol of ABS-CBN was announced as the topnotcher in the Senate race. This was the first synchronized national and local elections held after the ouster of former president Joseph Estrada in January due to a military-backed civilian uprising (popularly known as EDSA II) with pro-Estrada counter-protests that followed right before Election Day. On February 20, 2007, the Supreme Court of the Philippines ruled that former senator Gregorio Honasan lost in the 2001 Philippine elections and lost to Sen. Ralph Recto but declared constitutional the special election for the remaining three-year term of Teofisto Guingona.

2001 Philippine general election

May 14, 2001 (2001-05-14)
Registered36,271,782
Turnout29,474,309
2001 Philippine Senate election

May 14, 2001

12 (of the 24) seats to the Senate of the Philippines and one mid-term vacancy
13 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Franklin Drilon Edgardo Angara
Party Independent LDP
Alliance PPC Puwersa ng Masa
Leader's seat Nationwide at-large Nationwide at-large
Seats won 8 4
Popular vote 123,491,617 95,072,114
Percentage 50.8% 39.1%

Senate President before election

Aquilino Pimentel Jr.
PDP–Laban

Elected Senate President

Franklin Drilon
Independent

2001 Philippine House of Representatives elections

May 14, 2001

All 256 seats in the House of Representatives (including underhangs)
129 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Jose de Venecia Jr. Emilio Espinosa
Party Lakas NPC
Alliance PPC PPC
Leader's seat Pangasinan–4th Masbate–2nd
Last election 111 seats, 49.0% 9 seats, 4.1%
Seats won 73 40
Seat change 38 31

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Carlos M. Padilla Florencio Abad
Party LDP Liberal
Alliance Puwersa ng Masa PPC
Leader's seat Nueva Vizcaya–Lone Batanes–Lone
Last election 55 seats, 26.7% as part of LAMMP 15 seats, 1.9%
Seats won 21 19
Seat change 34 4

Speaker before election

Feliciano Belmonte Jr.
Lakas

Elected Speaker

Jose de Venecia Jr.
Lakas

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.