Legislative districts of Leyte

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use Philippine English Template:Sidebar with collapsible lists The legislative districts of Leyte are the representations of the province of Leyte, the independent component city of Ormoc, and highly urbanized city of Tacloban in the various national legislatures of the Philippines. The province, together with the independent cities are currently represented in the lower house of the Congress of the Philippines through their first, second, third, fourth, and fifth congressional districts.

Southern Leyte and Biliran last formed part of the province's representation in 1961 and 1995, respectively.

History

Leyte was originally divided into four congressional districts from 1907 until 1931, when it was redistricted to five congressional districts by virtue of Act No. 3788.[1]

When seats for the upper house of the Philippine Legislature were elected from territory-based districts between 1916 and 1935, the province formed part of the ninth senatorial district which elected two out of the 24-member senate.

In the disruption caused by the Second World War, two delegates represented the province in the National Assembly of the Japanese-sponsored Second Philippine Republic: one was the provincial governor (an ex officio member), while the other was elected through a provincial assembly of KALIBAPI members during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. Upon the restoration of the Philippine Commonwealth in 1945, the province retained its five pre-war representative districts.

Even after receiving their own city charters, Ormoc and Tacloban remained part of the representation of the Province of Leyte by virtue of Section 90 of Republic Act No. 179 (June 21, 1947),[2] and Section 91 of Republic Act No. 760 (June 20, 1952),[3] respectively.

Republic Act No. 2227, enacted on May 22, 1959, created the province of Southern Leyte from the southern municipalities of Leyte that constituted its third congressional district.[4] Per Section 5 of R.A. 2227, the incumbent representatives of all five districts of Leyte continued to serve for the remainder of 4th Congress. Starting in the 1961 elections, Leyte's remaining four districts were renumbered; the first, second, fourth and fifth districts were re-designated as the third, fourth, first and second districts, respectively.

Leyte was represented in the Interim Batasang Pambansa as part of Region VIII from 1978 to 1984. The province returned five representatives, elected at-large, to the Regular Batasang Pambansa in 1984.

Under the new Constitution which was proclaimed on February 11, 1987, the province was re-apportioned into five districts,[5] each of which elected its member to the restored House of Representatives starting that same year.

A plebiscite held on May 11, 1992, approved the establishment of Biliran (a sub-province of Leyte since 1959[6]) as a regular province, by virtue of Section 462 of Republic Act No. 7160 (Local Government Code of 1991).[7] Biliran continued to be represented as part of the third district of Leyte until it elected its own representative in the 1995 elections.

Current districts

Legislative districts and representatives of Leyte
District Current Representative Party Constituent LGUs Population (2020)[8] Area[9] Map
Image Name
1st style="background:Template:Party color;" | File:Ferdinand Martin Gomez Romualdez.jpg Ferdinand Martin G. Romualdez
(since 2019)
Lakas Script error: No such module "collapsible list". 534,120 988.74 km² File:Ph fil congress leyte 1d.png
2nd style="background:Template:Party color;" | File:Rep. Lolita Javier (19th Congress).jpg Lolita T. Javier
(since 2019)
Nacionalista Script error: No such module "collapsible list". 417,651 1,476.72 km² File:Ph fil congress leyte 2d.png
3rd style="background:Template:Party color;" | File:Rep. Anna Victoria Tuazon (19th Congress).jpg Anna Victoria V. Tuazon
(since 2022)
NUP Script error: No such module "collapsible list". 179,492 651.64 km² File:Ph fil congress leyte 3d.png
4th style="background:Template:Party color;" | File:Rep. Richard Gomez (19th Congress).jpg Richard I. Gomez
(since 2022)
PFP Script error: No such module "collapsible list". 492,035 1,450.84 km² File:Ph fil congress leyte 4d.png
5th style="background:Template:Party color;" | File:HoR Official Portrait (18th Congress) - Carl Cari.jpg Carl Nicolas C. Cari
(since 2019)
Lakas Script error: No such module "collapsible list". 405,430 1,947.11 km² File:Ph fil congress leyte 5d.png
Notes

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At-Large (defunct)

1943–1944

Period Representatives[10]
National Assembly
1943–1944
Jose Maria Veloso[11]
Bernardo Torres (ex officio)[11]

1984–1986

Period Representatives[10]
Regular Batasang Pambansa
1984–1986
Damian V. Aldaba
Artemio E. Mate
Emiliano J. Melgazo
Benjamin T. Romualdez
Alberto S. Veloso

See also

References

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