1969 Philippine presidential election
Appearance
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Turnout | 79.6% 3.2% | |||||||||||||||||||
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Presidential election results per province. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Philippines portal |
The Philippine presidential and vice presidential elections of 1969 were held on November 11, 1969. Incumbent President Ferdinand Marcos won a second full term as President of the Philippines. Marcos was the last president in the entire electoral history of the Philippines who ran for and won a second term. His running mate, incumbent Vice President Fernando Lopez, was also elected to a third full term as Vice President of the Philippines. An unprecedented twelve candidates ran for president, but ten of those were nuisance candidates.
Results
For president
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ferdinand Marcos | Nacionalista Party | 5,017,343 | 62.24 | |
Sergio Osmeña Jr. | Liberal Party | 3,043,122 | 37.75 | |
Pascual Racuyal | Independent | 778 | 0.01 | |
Segundo Baldovi | Partido ng Bansa | 177 | 0.00 | |
Pantaleon Panelo | Independent | 123 | 0.00 | |
German Villanueva | Independent | 82 | 0.00 | |
Gaudencio Bueno | New Leaf Party | 44 | 0.00 | |
Angel Comagon | Independent | 35 | 0.00 | |
Cesar Bulacan | Independent | 31 | 0.00 | |
Espiridion Buencamino | NP | 23 | 0.00 | |
Nic Garces | Philippine Pro-Socialist Party | 23 | 0.00 | |
Benito Jose | Independent | 23 | 0.00 | |
Total | 8,061,804 | 100.00 | ||
Valid votes | 8,061,804 | 98.28 | ||
Invalid/blank votes | 140,989 | 1.72 | ||
Total votes | 8,202,793 | 100.00 | ||
Registered voters/turnout | 10,300,898 | 79.63 | ||
Source: Nohlen, Grotz, Hartmann, Hasall and Santos[1] |
Breakdown of votes
Province | F.Marcos | S.Osmeña, Jr. |
---|---|---|
Abra | 41,606 | 1,925 |
Agusan del Norte • Butuan City |
24,015 23,773 |
16,722 18,729 |
Agusan del Sur | 31,938 | 16,520 |
Aklan | 38,492 | 28,609 |
Albay • Legazpi City |
84,071 16,874 |
46,145 7,082 |
Antique | 30,042 | 31,865 |
Bataan | 41,163 | 18,713 |
Batanes | 3,526 | 1,029 |
Batangas • Batangas City • Lipa City |
129,335 17,151 9,985 |
58,676 8,154 12,592 |
Benguet • Baguio |
19,752 14,930 |
11,698 4,690 |
Bohol • Tagbilaran City |
106,944 5,839 |
53,353 3,783 |
Bukidnon | 28,431 | 24,130 |
Bulacan | 136,701 | 95,369 |
Cagayan | 110,533 | 9,220 |
Camarines Norte | 30,708 | 27,556 |
Camarines Sur • Iriga City • Naga City |
92,137 7,021 8,372 |
66,714 5,834 6,889 |
Camiguin | 9,916 | 6,033 |
Capiz • Roxas City |
44,152 8,316 |
26,642 9,387 |
Catanduanes | 38,681 | 4,820 |
Cavite • Cavite City • Tagaytay City • Trece Martires City |
65,686 8,492 1,165 304 |
49,663 6,735 1,937 1,338 |
Cebu • Cebu City • Danao City • Lapu-Lapu City • Mandaue City • Toledo |
156,091 33,392 15,416 7,123 5,751 9,874 |
117,283 48,984 877 9,501 6,804 8,171 |
Cotabato • Cotabato City |
100,336 7,801 |
65,900 2,914 |
Davao del Norte | 52,088 | 25,419 |
Davao del Sur • Davao City |
35,054 44,999 |
21,311 25,594 |
Davao Oriental | 29,749 | 12,838 |
Eastern Samar | 36,457 | 19,231 |
Ifugao | 6,927 | 5,521 |
Ilocos Norte • Laoag City |
80,631 18,110 |
1,215 520 |
Ilocos Sur | 95,379 | 8,860 |
Iloilo • Iloilo City |
123,461 29,096 |
119,393 27,015 |
Isabela | 91,299 | 24,932 |
Kalinga-Apayao | 21,257 | 5,663 |
Laguna • San Pablo City |
102,766 16,142 |
57,730 12,402 |
La Union | 89,165 | 9,157 |
Lanao del Norte • Iligan City |
53,053 9,486 |
10,364 13,827 |
Lanao del Sur • Marawi City |
45,696 7,408 |
35,199 5,438 |
Leyte • Ormoc City • Tacloban City |
134,680 11,250 11,696 |
72,055 4,794 5,730 |
Manila, City of | 182,956 | 153,541 |
Marinduque | 22,934 | 13,303 |
Masbate | 45,662 | 39,994 |
Misamis Occidental • Ozamis City • Tangub City |
41,323 11,032 3,001 |
19,407 8,700 3,024 |
Misamis Oriental • Cagayan de Oro City • Gingoog City |
33,242 14,711 6,769 |
25,518 12,438 6,172 |
Mountain Province | 9,981 | 4,518 |
Negros Occidental • Bacolod • Bago • Cadiz City • La Carlota City • San Carlos City • Silay City |
114,154 25,998 8,483 12,687 7,515 7,831 14,144 |
84,178 23,797 9,290 1,378 3,983 8,661 6,583 |
Negros Oriental • Bais • Canlaon City • Dumaguete City |
62,944 3,271 1,948 7,224 |
47,667 3,420 1,327 6,769 |
Northern Samar | 29,544 | 28,337 |
Nueva Ecija • Cabanatuan City • Palayan City • San Jose City |
113,667 13,558 1,686 8,903 |
54,776 8,129 493 2,253 |
Nueva Vizcaya | 34,763 | 10,818 |
Occidental Mindoro | 23,085 | 12,053 |
Oriental Mindoro | 44,060 | 27,879 |
Palawan | 23,602 | 20,705 |
Pampanga • Angeles |
34,801 7,212 |
85,292 10,889 |
Pangasinan • Dagupan City • San Carlos City |
207,458 12,836 10,776 |
113,724 9,649 9,192 |
Quezon • Lucena City |
114,768 10,043 |
88,306 8,028 |
Rizal • Caloocan City • Pasay City • Quezon City |
192,410 26,417 24,714 67,216 |
142,726 19,338 19,838 46,905 |
Romblon | 20,197 | 19,832 |
Samar • Calbayog City |
38,979 11,012 |
27,210 6,933 |
Sorsogon | 67,275 | 34,917 |
South Cotabato • General Santos City |
36,110 7,758 |
25,738 7,472 |
Southern Leyte | 37,629 | 22,379 |
Sulu | 78,722 | 39,608 |
Surigao del Norte | 56,683 | 8,857 |
Surigao del Sur | 33,912 | 25,625 |
Tarlac | 76,078 | 43,487 |
Zambales • Olongapo City |
41,622 10,550 |
18,440 8,734 |
Zamboanga del Norte • Dapitan City |
53,909 7,234 |
21,511 2,550 |
Zamboanga del Sur • Basilan City • Pagadian City • Zamboanga City |
57,244 7,536 6,399 17,481 |
36,107 7,704 4,576 11,250 |
Total: | 5,017,343 | 3,043,122 |
For vice-president
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fernando Lopez | Nacionalista Party | 5,001,737 | 62.75 | |
Genaro Magsaysay | Liberal Party | 2,968,526 | 37.24 | |
Victoriano Mallari | Partido ng Bansa | 229 | 0.00 | |
Modesto T. Jalandoni | Philippine Pro-Socialist Party | 161 | 0.00 | |
Total | 7,970,653 | 100.00 | ||
Valid votes | 7,970,653 | 97.17 | ||
Invalid/blank votes | 232,140 | 2.83 | ||
Total votes | 8,202,793 | 100.00 | ||
Registered voters/turnout | 10,300,898 | 79.63 | ||
Source: Nohlen, Grotz, Hartmann, Hasall and Santos[2] |
See also
- Commission on Elections
- Politics of the Philippines
- Philippine elections
- President of the Philippines
- 7th Congress of the Philippines
- Ferdinand Marcos presidential campaign, 1969
External links
- The Philippine Presidency Project
- Official website of the Commission on Elections
- Ferdinand Marcos on the Presidential Museum and Library
- ^ Dieter Nohlen; Florian Grotz; Christof Hartmann; Graham Hassall; Soliman M. Santos.
Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook: Volume II: South East Asia, East Asia, and the South Pacific. - ^ Dieter Nohlen; Florian Grotz; Christof Hartmann; Graham Hassall; Soliman M. Santos.
Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook: Volume II: South East Asia, East Asia, and the South Pacific.