Philippine general election, 1967
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| ‹ 1965 |
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| Philippine general election, 1967 One-third of the Senate with Special Election and all Local positions |
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| November 14, 1967 | ||||
| Majority Party | Minority Party | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Nacionalista | Liberal | ||
| Last election | 5 seats | 4 | ||
| Seats won | 5 | 3 | ||
| Seat change | - | -1 | ||
| Philippines | ||||||||
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Senatorial elections and local elections were held on November 14, 1967. The 1967 elections were known as the 1967 Philippine midterm election as the election date falls half-way through President Ferdinand Marcos first four-year term. The administration won five seats in the Philippine Senate while three seats were given to the Liberal Party.
Contents |
[edit] Results
[edit] Philippine Senate
| Rank | Candidate | Party | Votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Benigno Aquino, Jr. [1] | Liberal | 4,116,549 |
| 2 | Jose J. Roy | Nacionalista | 3,940,529 |
| 3 | Magnolia W. Antonino[2] | Independent (NP Guest Candidate) |
3,466,676 |
| 4 | Salvador Laurel | Nacionalista | 3,459,870 |
| 5 | Leonardo Perez | Nacionalista | 3,440,011 |
| 6 | Emmanuel Pelaez | Nacionalista | 3,437,135 |
| 7 | Lorenzo Teves | Nacionalista | 3,393,952 |
| 8 | Helena Z. Benitez | Nacionalista | 3,305,585 |
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|
Emilio Espinosa, Jr. |
|
3,148,904 |
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Fernando R. Veloso |
|
2,935,418 |
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Maria Kalaw Katigbak |
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2,434,856 |
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Francisco A. Rodrigo |
|
2,153,849 |
|
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Felixberto Serrano |
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2,133,150 |
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Camilo Osías |
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1,991,663 |
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Hilarion Henares Jr. |
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1,959,639 |
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Roseller Lim |
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1,790,741 |
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Jose Briones |
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1,678,178 |
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Asaad Usman |
(Liberal Guest Candidate) |
33,642 |
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Antonio Mendoza |
|
11,679 |
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Victorina Cruz |
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7,584 |
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Marcelina Angeles |
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3,104 |
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Paquito Alipio |
|
2,776 |
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Segundo Baldon |
|
2,516 |
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Victoriano Villaflor |
|
2,306 |
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Amado Ordinario |
|
2,011 |
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Jose Villavisa |
|
1,722 |
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Sergio Olidan |
|
1,538 |
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Francisco Quines |
|
269 |
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Cayetano Bartolini |
|
160 |
- 1. ^ Benigno Aquino, Jr. filed for an election protest to he COMELEC. Then they announced Aquino was no. 1 and Jose J. Roy was no. 2.
Source: COMELEC
- 2. ^ Magnolia W. Antonino officially used Mrs. Gaudencio Antonino in the election after she was chosen as a substitute to Gaudencio Antonino who died a day before the election date.
[edit] See also
- Commission on Elections
- Politics of the Philippines
- Philippine elections
- 6th Congress of the Philippines
[edit] External links
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