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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Significance  





2 Background  





3 Reestablishment of Commonwealth Government  





4 The First Commonwealth Congress Convened  





5 Accomplishments and Controversies  





6 Postwar Factionalism in Congress  





7 Other Vital Legislation  





8 Sessions  





9 Leadership  



9.1  Senate  





9.2  House of Representatives  







10 Members  



10.1  Senate  





10.2  House of Representatives  







11 See also  





12 Notes  





13 References  





14 External links  





15 Further reading  














1st Congress of the Commonwealth of the Philippines







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


1st Congress of the Commonwealth of the Philippines
2nd 1st Congress
Overview
TermJune 9 – December 20, 1945
PresidentSergio Osmeña
Senate
Members24
PresidentManuel Roxas
President pro temporeElpidio Quirino
Majority leaderMelecio Arranz
House of Representatives
Members98
SpeakerJose Zulueta
Speaker pro temporeProspero Sanidad
Majority leaderEugenio Perez

The 1st Congress of the Commonwealth of the Philippines (Filipino: Unang Kongreso ng Komenwelt ng Pilipinas), also known as the Postwar Congress,[1] and the Liberation Congress,[2] refers to the meeting of the bicameral legislature composed of the Senate and House of Representatives, from 1945 to 1946. The meeting only convened after the reestablishment of the Commonwealth of the Philippines in 1945 when President Sergio Osmeña called it to hold five special sessions. Osmeña had replaced Manuel L. Quezon as president after the former died in exile in the United States in 1944.

Significance[edit]

Not much has been written about the First Commonwealth Congress, despite its historical and political significance. This owes mainly to the briefness of its existence (i.e., less than a year). However, the First Commonwealth Congress was significant in at least three key respects:

First, it brought an end the president's exercise of legislative powers under the wartime emergency act passed by the defunct National Assembly in 1941.[3] The opening of Congress in 1945 allowed democratically elected representatives to pass legislation, especially to deal with the Philippines' postwar problems. It also provided an institutional check against executive power, including the presidential power to appoint top officials of the (postwar) government and appropriate funds for its operations.

Second, the First Commonwealth Congress gave birth to the two-party system in the Philippines, as the pro-Osmeña and pro-Roxas blocs or factions there eventually became the Nacionalista and Liberal Parties that alternated in power from 1945 until martial law was imposed in 1972. This Congress thus served as a well spring of political leaders under a two-party system of the soon-to-be independent Republic of the Philippines. Three Philippine presidents, Manuel Roxas, Elpidio Quirino and Carlos P. Garcia were members of this Congress, as were postwar political party leaders like Senate President Eulogio Rodriguez, Speaker Eugenio Pérez, Senator Jose E. Romero and Senator Melecio Arranz. The patron-client orientation of the two-party system evolved in part from the resource constraints faced by members of the Congress right after the war.

Third, it was this Congress laid down much of the groundwork for the country's postwar reconstruction and rehabilitation, including its participation in the postwar global economic order dominated by the United States.

Background[edit]

Through the most part of the term of the Second National Assembly (1938–1941), the First Congress' immediate predecessor, international conflicts that led to World War II began to take shape. As early as 1940, the National Assembly already declared a state of national emergency[4] to address the escalating emergency conditions of the times. It gave Philippine President Manuel L. Quezon extensive emergency powers to meet the worsening conditions. All preparations culminated when Japan attacked the Philippines a few hours after bombing Pearl Harbor on December 8, 1941. The National Assembly lost no time in enacting substantive legislations, diverting all remaining funds for national defense purposes, and declaring a state of total emergency.[5] It furthered the broad emergency powers already granted to the President, such as the transfer of the seat of government and the extension of the effectivity of lapsing laws.

In its last act as a legislative body, the National Assembly certified the results of the November 1941 elections where Quezon and Osmeña were re-elected as president and vice president, respectively, along with the legislators who were to compose the First Commonwealth Congress. The Congress replaced the unicameral National Assembly as the legislative branch of government. It was due to meet for the first time in January 1942 had the war not intervene.

Due to the transfer of the Philippine Government to Washington, D.C. in 1942, and the three-year occupation (1942–1945) of the Philippines by Japanese forces, the First Congress could not be convened. In its place, the Japanese formed a puppet National Assembly that passed laws dictated by the Japanese Imperial Government in Tokyo.

The Japanese-sponsored Philippine Republic, under José P. Laurel as president, ended in late February 1945 when the Philippines was liberated by the returning American forces in the Pacific.

Reestablishment of Commonwealth Government[edit]

Upon the reestablishment of the Philippine Commonwealth in Manila in 1945, General Douglas MacArthur exerted political pressure on President Sergio Osmeña to convene Congress in formal session. Osmeña was reluctant to do so not only because of the huge expense associated with the functioning of Congress, but more so because he feared that its two houses would be controlled by legislators who had collaborated with the Japanese when the Philippine Government was in exile in Washington, D.C.

On May 24, 1945, Osmeña offered Roxas the position of Resident Commissioner to the U.S. Roxas by then was known to be actively seeking the right opportunity to launch his presidential ambition with the backing of General Douglas MacArthur, Quezon's former military adviser and considered as the "Liberator of the Philippines." Two days later, Roxas declined Osmeña's offer and instead asked his supporters to announce his candidacy for president at a time when there was no designated date to hold a national election. The First Commonwealth Congress thus provided the vehicle for Roxas' primacy in Philippine postwar politics and government. It also paved the way for the permanent division of the old Nacionalista Party into two warring factions. Its so-called Liberal Wing or faction (later Liberal Party) nominated Roxas for the presidency in 1946.

The First Commonwealth Congress Convened[edit]

In late May 1945, President Osmeña was persuaded to call the First Commonwealth Congress to special session in order to tackle the most pressing issues of postwar rehabilitation and regain constitutional normalcy. Regular sessions could not be held by then, as the Constitution provided that these should take place for 100 days beginning on the fourth Monday of January of each year.

With the old Legislative Building in ruins, the First Commonwealth Congress met in a former Japanese schoolhouse located at 949 Lepanto Street, Manila, two blocks from the headquarters of Gota de Leche. Most senators and congressmen could not hold office there due to limited space and facilities, which were allotted to the officers of the two chambers and the congressional staff. The Senate and the House of Representatives shared the same session hall (the school's former auditorium), with the Senate meeting in the morning and the House using the hall in the evening. The Senate eventually took temporary quarters in the badly damaged Manila City Hall in 1947. The House remained at Lepanto Street until it moved, with the Senate, to the newly rebuilt Congress building in 1950.

At the first special session of Congress on June 9, 1945, Senators Manuel Roxas and Elpidio Quirino were elected as Senate President and Senate President Pro-Tempore, respectively. The House of Representatives elected for its Speaker Iloilo Rep. Jose C. Zulueta and for Speaker Pro-Tempore, Pangasinan Rep. Prospero Sanidad. Only 16 out of 24 senators and 75 of 98 congressmen, who were elected in 1941, attended the five special sessions called by the President. In the Senate alone, Senator Daniel Maramba had died of natural causes immediately before the outbreak of World War II. Senator Jose Ozamiz was executed by the Japanese. Senators Antonio de las Alas, Vicente Madrigal, Quintin Paredes, Claro M. Recto, Proceso E. Sebastian, Emiliano T. Tirona and José Yulo were arrested by the US Army's Counter-Intelligence Corps (CIC) because they had worked in various capacities under the Japanese-sponsored Philippine Government. Alas, Madrigal, Paredes, Recto, Sebastian, Tirona and Yulo had been part of Laurel's Cabinet. The Senate held a lottery to determine who among its members would serve up to April 1946 and November 1947, since senators serve staggered terms under the Constitution.[6][7]

The First Commonwealth Congress initially convened with 14 senators and 66 congressmen. Two more senators reported and nine congressmen joined their colleagues in later sessions. Among the members of the First Commonwealth Congress was Representative Elisa Ochoa from Agusan, the first woman ever elected to the Philippine national legislature.

The two chambers of Congress assembled in joint session in the afternoon of June 9, 1945, to hear President Osmeña deliver his state of the nation address. Osmeña expectedly dealt with several proposed legislation to rebuild the financial infrastructure of the Philippines and restore government institutions. He also tried to address issues concerning the terms of office of officials elected in 1941 just before the Japanese invasion. Because of the severe damage caused to property by the war, the legislators who were hurriedly called to Manila in June 1945, including Roxas and Quirino, had no appropriate attire for the congressional sessions other than their army khaki uniforms. President Osmeña ordered two pairs of sharkskin suits to be purchased by the government (from the Manlapat tailoring shop across the temporary Congress building) for each of the legislators around the time of the opening of Congress.

A few foreign dignitaries also addressed the joint session in the next six months. This included U.S. High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt and General MacArthur who received a commendation from the Congress and a second resolution making him an honorary citizen of the Philippines. In his memorable address before its joint session on July 9, 1945, MacArthur said:

"Since the beginning of the time men have crusaded for freedom and for equality. It was this passion for liberty which inspired the architects of my own government to proclaim so immutably and so beautifully that 'all men are created equal' and 'that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.' On such rights rest our basic concept of human freedom, in defense of which we have fought and still continue to fight on the battlefields of the world. These rights are the very antithesis to the totalitarian doctrine which seeks to regiment the people and control the human will as the price for presumed efficiency in government."[8]

Accomplishments and Controversies[edit]

The First Commonwealth Congress passed a total of 55 laws in five special sessions: Commonwealth Act Nos. 672 to 727.

Heeding Osmeña's urgent call during the opening session of Congress, the first legislative measure it enacted was Commonwealth Act No. 672 which restored the Philippine National Bank and organized its financial capital. The viability of the Philippine National Bank was critical to the resuscitation of the Philippine Commonwealth after the war.

One major financial legislation passed by Congress stirred controversy in the U.S. and was eventually vetoed by President Harry Truman despite its approval by President Osmeña. Commonwealth House Bill No. 647 (Senate Bill No. 51), titled "An Act Governing the Payment of Monetary Obligations Incurred or Contracted Prior to and During the Japanese Invasion of the Philippines and for Other Purposes", was passed by both houses of Congress on the last day of its last session, December 20, 1945. It was signed into law by President Osmeña on January 18, 1946. The law provided for the validation of payments made in Japanese "mickey mouse" money during the period of enemy occupation. However, U.S. High Commissioner McNutt objected to it and asked Truman to exercise his final veto on this currency measure. President Truman's accompanying veto letter explained his disapproval, to wit:

"The Commonwealth Act which I am now disapproving would give legal approval to transactions and payments made under the brutal Japanese regime, without regard for the actual value of the Japanese-backed currency in which such payments were made. It would give official sanction to acts by Japanese officials in forcing the liquidation of businesses and accounts of loyal Filipinos, Americans, and allies who were imprisoned by the Japanese. It would have a most harmful effect on the Philippine financial structure which it is our hope and desire to see strengthened in preparation for independence. It would work to the benefit of persons who did business with and under the Japanese to the prejudice of those who were loyal both to the Philippine Commonwealth and to the United States Government."[9]

The First Commonwealth Congress also tackled the most contentious and divisive issue of Filipino collaboration with the Japanese. Osmeña had proposed a bill to set up a special court for this purpose. Roxas initially objected to it, fearing the loss of critical support from his political allies who were accused of, or imprisoned for, collaboration. After extensive congressional debates, Commonwealth Act No. 682 was passed in August 1945 creating the People's Court and the Office of Special Prosecutors to investigate and decide on collaboration charges on an individual basis.[10] In September 1945, the CIC presented the Filipinos who were accused of having collaborated with, or given aid to, the Japanese so that they may be tried before the People's Court. Included were prominent senators and congressmen who had been active in the puppet government under Laurel. These legislators were unable to attend the five special sessions of the First Commonwealth Congress.

The collaboration issue continued to haunt Congress. Another currency-related legislation passed by the First Commonwealth Congress was held up for a few weeks at the White House before President Truman signed it into law in November 1945. As Truman noted in his letter to President Osmeña, his approval of the original House Bill No. 176, which provides for a reduction of the required gold coverage of Philippine currency, has been delayed "due to the fact that there have been persistent charges that a sizable fraction of the Members of the Philippine Congress had been guilty of collaboration with the enemy, and I have not wanted my approval of the act to be distorted into approval of collaboration."[11]

The so-called Backpay Law of 1945 turned out to be the most controversial measure passed by the postwar Congress. Joint Resolution No. 5 authorized the Philippine Treasury, which was already financially crippled, to pay back salaries and wages to members of Congress and their staff to cover the three years of Japanese occupation. In effect, the Backpay Law compensated the legislators for service that they never rendered during the war years. The passage of this measure was met with public indignation. It led to a political backlash and many members of Congress lost their seats during the national elections held in April 1946.

Several key measures were passed concerning postwar relations between the Philippines and the United States and the Philippine government's participation in the postwar global politico-economic system led by the United States. Joint Resolution No. 4, signed into law by President Osmeña on July 28, 1945, authorized the President of the Philippines to negotiate with the President of the United States the establishment in the Philippines of military bases "to insure the territorial integrity of the Philippines, the mutual protection of the Philippines and the United States, and the maintenance of peace in the Pacific."[12] Another joint resolution was passed by Congress for the establishment of free trade between the United States following the recommendations of the Bell Trade Mission, which President Osmeña himself supported and endorsed. This became the foundation of the controversial Bell Trade Act of 1946.

In October 1945, President Osmeña also signed House Bill No. 608. This legislation authorized the participation of the Philippine Commonwealth Government in the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank system following the Bretton-Woods Conference in July 1944.[13]

Finally, it was during this historic Congress that the Philippine Senate first exercised its constitutional authority to ratify treaties and other international agreements with its unanimous ratification on August 30, 1945, of the Charter of the newly formed United Nations. President Osmeña appeared before the Senate three days earlier to deliver the Charter and ask for its ratification.[14]

Postwar Factionalism in Congress[edit]

The political rivalry between Osmeña and Roxas, and their respective supporters, began in late May 1945 or even before the Congress opened its first session. After Congress convened, it became apparent that the Roxas bloc (later known as the Liberal Wing of the Nacionalista Party) would in due time separate from the ruling Nacionalista Party led by Osmeña. Hence, Osmeña's allies, particularly in the House of Representatives and the Cabinet, exerted every effort to prevent Roxas from using the Congress as his base of political support during the Liberation period. For example, the Congressional Record of June 11–13, 1945 reports the deliberations in the House of Representatives over Osmeña's Interior Secretary, Tomas Confesor, assertion in the local press that Congress was illegally convened for many reasons, including the expired term of one-third of the senators elected in 1941. Later, Cebu congressman Pedro Lopez and Senator Carlos P. Garcia took to the floor of their respective chambers to denounce the so-called wartime collaborators in Congress led by Roxas, leading to fiery debates over the collaboration issue and the legality of having sitting members of Congress who were accused of collaboration or under investigation therefor. Subsequently, congressmen like Nueva Vizcaya's Leon Cabarroguis sought to petition the United States to immediately disband Congress and call for elections or to convert Congress into an advisory panel to the President (Osmeña) to bypass these legal challenges to its existence and operation after the war.

The Osmeña-Roxas rivalry intensified in the Commission on Appointments — a congressional body consisting of 12 senators and 12 congressmen — which was responsible for confirming presidential nominations. The Commission was chaired by Roxas himself as senate president. In that powerful position, Roxas managed to sit on (bypass) the nominations of some of Osmeña's most important political advisers and supporters. The Commission also confirmed Osmeña's nominations for chief justice and associate justices of the Supreme Court, except for one, Justice Jose A. Espiritu, whose credentials were questioned before the Commission. Espiritu became the shortest-serving member of the Supreme Court. He returned as dean of the U.P. College of Law in September 1945, after serving in an ad interim capacity as associate justice for only two months.

The heat of presidential politics further divided loyalties in the postwar Congress, as its members failed to decide on the date of elections for president, vice-president, 16 senators and 98 congressmen as well as certain electoral provisions (e.g., whether to allow soldiers to vote). President Osmeña thus requested the U.S. Congress to intervene and set the date of the first post-war elections. The U.S. Congress, in a joint resolution issued in November 1945, called for national elections to take place no later than April 30, 1946, and for the Second Congress to convene not later than May 28, 1946. On December 20, 1945, the First Commonwealth Congress met for the last time to discuss the April 1946 presidential elections—the first since 1941.

The 1946 elections catapulted the newly formed Liberal Party to power for the first time. Senate President Roxas and Senate President Pro Tempore Quirino, of the Liberal Party, were respectively elected as first President and Vice-President of the Republic of the Philippines, which gained independence from the U.S. on July 4, 1946. Erstwhile Senate Floor Leader Melecio Arranz became President Pro Tempore of the Senate, while House of Representatives Majority Leader Eugenio Pérez became its Speaker when the new Congress convened in May 1946. Speaker Zulueta, on the other hand, joined the Roxas Cabinet as Secretary of the Interior and later ran and won as senator. Many other members of the First Commonwealth Congress held top positions in the newborn republic.

Other Vital Legislation[edit]

Sessions[edit]

Leadership[edit]

Senate[edit]

House of Representatives[edit]

Members[edit]

Senate[edit]

All the senators of this Congress were elected on November 11, 1941, but, following the outbreak of World War II, were only able to take office on July 9, 1945. A lottery was held to determine the 16 senators whose terms will expire on May 25, 1946, and the eight senators whose terms will expire on December 30, 1947.

Senator Party Term ending
Antonio de las Alas[a] Nacionalista 1946
Alauya Alonto Nacionalista 1947
Melecio Arranz Nacionalista 1946
Nicolas Buendia Nacionalista 1946
Mariano Jesus Cuenco Nacionalista 1946
Esteban de la Rama Nacionalista 1947
Ramon J. Fernandez Nacionalista 1946
Carlos P. Garcia Nacionalista 1946
Pedro Hernaez Nacionalista 1947
Domingo Imperial Nacionalista 1946
Vicente Madrigal[a] Nacionalista 1947
Daniel Maramba[b] Nacionalista 1946
Rafael Martinez Nacionalista 1946
Jose Ozamiz[c] Nacionalista 1946
Quintin Paredes[a] Nacionalista 1946
Elpidio Quirino Nacionalista 1946
Vicente Rama Nacionalista 1947
Claro M. Recto[a] Nacionalista 1946
Eulogio Rodriguez Nacionalista 1947
Manuel Roxas Nacionalista 1946
Proceso Sebastian[a] Nacionalista 1947
Emiliano Tria Tirona[a] Nacionalista 1947
Ramon Torres Nacionalista 1946
Jose Yulo[a] Nacionalista 1946

House of Representatives[edit]

Province/City District Representative Party
Abra Lone Jesus Paredes Nacionalista
Agusan Lone Elisa Ochoa Nacionalista
Albay 1st Isabelo V. Binamira Nacionalista
2nd Jose S. Valenciano Nacionalista
3rd Marcial O. Rañola Nacionalista
4th Francisco A. Perfecto Nacionalista
Antique Lone Emigdio Nietes Nacionalista
Bataan Lone Antonio G. Llamas[d] Popular Front
Batanes Lone Vicente Agan[e] Nacionalista
Batangas 1st Miguel Tolentino Nacionalista
2nd Eusebio Orense[f] Nacionalista
3rd Jose Laurel Jr.[g] Nacionalista
Bohol 1st Genaro Visarra Nacionalista
2nd Olegario B. Clarin Nacionalista
3rd Margarito E. Revilles Nacionalista
Bukidnon Lone Manuel Fortich[h] Nacionalista
Bulacan 1st Leon Valencia[e] Nacionalista
2nd Antonio Villarama Nacionalista
Cagayan 1st Nicanor Carag Nacionalista
2nd Miguel P. Pio Nacionalista
Camarines Norte Lone Wenceslao Vinzons Young Philippines
Camarines Sur 1st Jaime M. Reyes Nacionalista
2nd Jose Fuentebella Nacionalista
Capiz 1st Ramon A. Arnaldo Nacionalista
2nd Cornelio Villareal Nacionalista
3rd Juan M. Reyes[i] Nacionalista
Cavite Lone Justiniano Montano Nacionalista
Cebu 1st Celestino Rodriguez Nacionalista
2nd Pedro Lopez Nacionalista
3rd Maximino Noel Nacionalista
4th Agustin Kintanar Nacionalista
5th Miguel Cuenco Nacionalista
6th Nicolas Rafols Nacionalista
7th Jose V. Rodriguez Nacionalista
Cotabato Lone Ugalingan Piang Nacionalista
Davao Lone Juan Sarenas Nacionalista
Ilocos Norte 1st Vicente T. Lazo Nacionalista
2nd Rubio Conrado Nacionalista
Ilocos Sur 1st Jesus Serrano Nacionalista
2nd Prospero Sanidad Nacionalista
Iloilo 1st Jose Zulueta Nacionalista
2nd Oscar Ledesma Nacionalista
3rd Tiburcio Lutero Nacionalista
4th Ceferino de los Santos Nacionalista
5th Juan Borra Nacionalista
Isabela Lone Lino J. Castillejos Nacionalista
La Union 1st Francisco Ortega Nacionalista
2nd Enrique Rimando Nacionalista
Laguna 1st Conrado M. Potenciano Nacionalista
2nd Crisanto M. Guysayko[j] Nacionalista
Lanao Lone Salvador T. Lluch Nacionalista
Leyte 1st Mateo Canonoy Nacionalista
2nd Dominador M. Tan Nacionalista
3rd Tomas Oppus Nacionalista
4th Filomeno Montejo Nacionalista
5th Jose Maria Veloso Nacionalista
Manila 1st Engracio Clemeña Popular Front
2nd Alfonso E. Mendoza Democrata
Marinduque Lone Cecilio A. Maneja Nacionalista
Masbate Lone Emilio B. Espinosa Nacionalista
Mindoro Lone Raul T. Leuterio Nacionalista
Misamis Occidental Lone Eugenio Stuart del Rosario Nacionalista
Misamis Oriental Lone Jose Artadi Nacionalista
Mountain Province 1st George K. Tait Nacionalista
2nd Ramon P. Mitra Nacionalista
3rd Gregorio Morrero Nacionalista
Negros Occidental 1st Enrique Magalona Nacionalista
2nd Aguedo Gonzaga Nacionalista
3rd Raymundo Vargas Nacionalista
Negros Oriental 1st Julian L. Teves Nacionalista
2nd Jose E. Romero Nacionalista
Nueva Ecija 1st Manuel V. Gallego Nacionalista
2nd Gabriel Belmonte Nacionalista
Nueva Vizcaya Lone Leon Cabarroguis Nacionalista
Palawan Lone Sofronio Española Nacionalista
Pampanga 1st Eligio G. Lagman Nacionalista
2nd Jose P. Fausto Nacionalista
Pangasinan 1st Jose P. Bengson Nacionalista
2nd Eugenio Perez Nacionalista
3rd Pascual Beltran Nacionalista
4th Cipriano Primicias Sr. Nacionalista
5th Narciso Ramos Nacionalista
Rizal 1st Francisco Sevilla Nacionalista
2nd Emilio de la Paz Nacionalista
Romblon Lone Leonardo Festin Nacionalista
Samar 1st Decoroso Rosales Nacionalista
2nd Pedro R. Arteche[e] Nacionalista
3rd Felix Opimo Nacionalista
Sorsogon 1st Norberto Roque Nacionalista
2nd Teodoro de Vera Nacionalista
Sulu Lone Ombra Amilbangsa Nacionalista
Surigao Lone Ricardo Navarro Nacionalista
Tarlac 1st Jose Cojuangco Nacionalista
2nd Benigno Aquino Sr.[g] Nacionalista
Tayabas 1st Pedro Insua Nacionalista
2nd Francisco Lavides Nacionalista
Zambales Lone Valentin Afable Nacionalista
Zamboanga Lone Matias Ranillo Sr. Nacionalista

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Arrested by the Counter Intelligence Corps due to collaborating with Japan during World War II.
  • ^ Died on December 28, 1941.
  • ^ Executed on February 11, 1944 by Japanese forces.
  • ^ Killed in March 1945.
  • ^ a b c Died before taking office.
  • ^ Died on February 23, 1942.
  • ^ a b Arrested by due to collaborating with Japan during World War II.
  • ^ Died on January 15, 1943.
  • ^ Died on December 17, 1941 in the sinking of the SS Corregidor.
  • ^ Died on May 26, 1945.
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ "Life Vol. 57, No. 3". Life. Life Inc. July 17, 1964. p. 94. ISSN 0024-3019. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  • ^ Agpalo, Remigio E.; Daroy, Petronilo Bn, eds. (1997). The Philippine Senate. Manila: Dick Baldovino Enterprises. ISBN 978-971-91612-0-2. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  • ^ Araneta vs. Dinglasan, G.R. No. L-2044, August 26, 1949.
  • ^ The Philippine Free Press Online – Emergency Powers Archived January 18, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed on April 16, 2007.
  • ^ The Sunday Times – PP1017 is not at all similar to PP1081 Archived November 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed on April 16, 2007
  • ^ "Proceso Sebastian".
  • ^ Lumontad vs. Cuenco, 41 Off. Gaz., 894.
  • ^ Douglas MacArthur, Address before the Joint Session of the Congress of the Philippines, Manila, July 9, 1945
  • ^ Statement by the President Upon Disapproving a Bill of the Philippine Congress, February 7, 1946, [1].
  • ^ Commonwealth Act No. 682.
  • ^ Letter of President Harry S. Truman to President Osmena of the Philippines Upon Approving a Bill of the Philippine Congress. November 14, 1945, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=12293.
  • ^ gov.ph
  • ^ gov.ph
  • ^ gov.ph
  • External links[edit]

    Further reading[edit]


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