DID YOU know that of the 13 former vice presidents from 1935 to 2016, only six had been more fortunate enough to also assume the top elective seat at Malacañang either through constitutional succession or direct vote by the people?
Yes, they were: Philippine Commonwealth Vice
President Sergio S. Osmena Sr. (November 15, 1935-August 1, 1944); Elpidio R. Quirino
(May 28, 1846-April 17, 1948); Carlos P. Garcia (December 30, 1953-March 17,
1957); Diosdado P. Macapagal (December 30, 1957-December 30, 1961); Joseph E.
Estrada (June 30, 1992-June 30, 1998); and Gloria M. Arroyo (June 30, 1998-January
20, 2001).
According to the book “Philippine History and
Government” by the father-and- daughter team Dr. Gregorio F. Zaide and Dr.
Sonia M. Zaide, Philippine Commonwealth President Manuel L. Quezon and Vice
President Osmena were elected in the presidential polls held on September 17,
1935, the first under the 1935 Constitution.
Osmena assumed the presidency after the death of
Quezon on August 1, 1944 while the Commonwealth Government chief was still in
exile in the United States. Osmena ran for the presidency in the April 23, 1946
polls, but lost to President Manuel A. Roxas.
Quirino was elevated to the presidency after Roxas
died of a heart attack while delivering a speech at the former Clark Air Force
Base in Pampanga on April 15, 1948. He became the second former vice president
to stay at Malacañang to finish the remaining term of Roxas.
After completing Roxas' four-year term, Quirino ran
in the 1949 elections and won in his own right as president until December 30,
1953. His vice president was Fernando H. Lopez, of Iloilo.
In the 1953 national polls, former Defense
Secretary Ramon F. Magsaysay defeated the re-electionist Quirino. Magsaysay's
vice president was Carlos P. Garcia, of Bohol.
On March 17, 1957, Magsaysay died when the
presidential plane crashed on a mountain in Cebu while on a return flight to
Manila. Garcia thus became the third vice president to occupy Malacañang by
constitutional succession after Osmena and Quirino.
Garcia finished the term of Magsaysay and ran for
the same post and won in the 1957 elections, with Macapagal as vice president.
They were both in office from December 30, 1957 to December 30, 1961.
Garcia lost to Macapagal in the 1961 national
polls. The latter's vice president then was Emmanuel N. Pelaez.
In the succeeding general elections of 1965,
Macapagal lost his re-election bid to former Senate President Ferdinand E.
Marcos, whose vice president was Fernando H. Lopez. Marcos became the first
president to be re-elected in the November 1969 polls, again with Lopez as vice
president.
In the election in May 1998, the country's ninth
vice president, Joseph E. Estrada (1992-1998), won as president, succeeding
President Fidel V. Ramos.
Estrada was the fifth former vice president to sit
at Malacañang. For being the seating chief executive at the end of the previous
millennium in 2000, he could very well be considered as the country's first
millennial president.
However, on January 20, 2001, he was replaced by
the country's first woman vice president, Gloria Arroyo, daughter of former
President Macapagal, as a result of the so-called “People Power II” similar to
the event that ousted the 20-year Marcos administration from Malacañang in
February 1986.
Aside from being the sixth vice president to sit at
the Palace, President Arroyo also became the second woman chief executive of
the Philippines after President Corazon C. Aquino (1986-1992).
In the coming May 9, 2022 polls, outgoing Vice
President Leonor G. Robredo is running for president. However, she has to
prevail over nine other aspirants for the same post to be able to claim the
title for the Malacanang seat.
The other presidential candidates are former Senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr., Manila Mayor Francisco Domagoso, Senators Panfilo Lacson and Manny Pacquiao, former Defense Secretary Norberto Gonzales, former presidential spokesman Ernesto Abella, Leody de Guzman, of the Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino, Faisal Mangondato of the Katipunan ng Kamalayang Kayumanggi, and Jose Montemayor of Democratic Party of the Philippines. (Severino Samonte)
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