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词条 2016 Philippine general election
释义

  1. Preparation

     Commission on Elections membership  Voter registration  Counting machines  Results transmission  Bans  Gun Ban 

  2. Calendar

  3. Debates

  4. Results

     For president  For vice president  Congress  Senate  House of Representatives  District elections  Party-list election  Local 

  5. See also

  6. References

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}{{for|specific elections|Philippine presidential election, 2016|Philippine Senate election, 2016|Philippine House of Representatives elections, 2016|Philippine gubernatorial elections, 2016}}
2016 Philippine general election
Presidency
Winner: Rodrigo Duterte (Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan, 39.01% of the vote)
Vice Presidency
Winner: Leni Robredo (Liberal Party, 35.11% of the vote)
Senate (24 seats; 12 up)
boxwidth=300divisionname = 24 senatorstotal = 24partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 6partycolor2 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party2 = 4partycolor3 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party3 = 3partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 3partycolor5 = {{Akbayan Citizens' Action Party/meta/color}}party5 = 1partycolor6 = {{Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino/meta/color}}party6 = 1partycolor7 = {{Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan/meta/color}}party7 = 1partycolor8 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party8 = 5
}}
House of Representatives (297 seats; all up)
boxwidth=300divisionname = 297 representativestotal = 297partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 115partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 42partycolor3 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party3 = 24partycolor4 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party4 = 23partycolor5 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party5 = 11partycolor6 = grayparty6 = 19partycolor7 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party7 = 4partycolor8 = darkgrayparty8 = 58
}}
Provincial (81 provinces; all up)
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 81 governorstotal = 81partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 39partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 9partycolor3 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party3 = 9partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 9partycolor5 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party5 = 3partycolor6 = {{Aksyon Demokratiko/meta/color}}party6 = 1partycolor7 = grayparty7 = 6partycolor8 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party8 = 5
}}
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 81 vice governorstotal = 81partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 39partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 10partycolor3 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party3 = 7partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 6partycolor5 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party5 = 5partycolor6 = {{Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan/meta/color}}party6 = 2partycolor7 = {{Lakas-CMD/meta/color}}party7 = 2partycolor8 = grayparty8 = 4partycolor9 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party9 = 6
}}
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 1019 board memberstotal = 1019partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 334partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 107partycolor3 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party3 = 69partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 64partycolor5 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party5 = 47partycolor6 = grayparty6 = 85partycolor7 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party7 = 65partycolor8 = darkgrayparty8 = 243
}}
City and municipal (1,634 cities and municipalities; all up)
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 1,634 mayorstotal = 1634partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 759partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 201partycolor3 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party3 = 145partycolor4 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party4 = 134partycolor5 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party5 = 121partycolor6 = {{Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan/meta/color}}party6 = 40partycolor7 = grayparty7 = 147partycolor8 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party8 = 107
}}
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 1,634 vice mayorstotal = 1634partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 705partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 182partycolor3 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party3 = 142partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 139partycolor5 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party5 = 127partycolor6 = {{Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan/meta/color}}party6 = 33partycolor7 = grayparty7 = 150partycolor8 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party8 = 158
}}
{{Composition_bar/advanced|boxwidth=300divisionname = 16,808 councilorstotal = 16808partycolor1 = {{Liberal Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party1 = 5451partycolor2 = {{Nationalist People's Coalition/meta/color}}party2 = 1583partycolor3 = {{United Nationalist Alliance/meta/color}}party3 = 1223partycolor4 = {{Nacionalista Party/meta/color}}party4 = 1047partycolor5 = {{National Unity Party (Philippines)/meta/color}}party5 = 896partycolor6 = grayparty6 = 1463partycolor7 = {{Independent/meta/color}}party7 = 1877partycolor8 = darkgrayparty8 = 3268
}}
Voter turnout
81.95|width=300}}
{{Politics of the Philippines}}

A general election in the Philippines took place on May 9, 2016, for executive and legislative branches for all levels of government – national, provincial, and local, except for the barangay officials.

At the top of the ballot was the election for successors to Philippine President Benigno Aquino III and Vice President Jejomar Binay. There were also elections for:[1]

  • 12 seats to the Senate;
  • All 297 seats to the House of Representatives;
  • All governors, vice governors, and 772 seats to provincial boards for 81 provinces;
  • All mayors and vice mayors for 145 cities and for 1,489 municipalities;
  • All members of the city councils and 11,924 seats on municipal councils; and
  • Governor, vice governor and all 24 seats in the regional assembly of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

The regional election for the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) were scheduled for May 9, but that would have changed if the Bangsamoro political entity had replaced the ARMM. The ARMM elections pushed through, as scheduled.

Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections were scheduled for October 2016, but were postponed to 2017. Congress postponed anew to barangay elections to May 2018.

Elections are organized, run, and adjudicated by the Commission on Elections better known as COMELEC with appeals under certain conditions allowed to the Regional Trial Courts, the Congress of the Philippines, or the Supreme Court of the Philippines sitting as the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal, the Senate Electoral Tribunal, or the Presidential Electoral Tribunal.

Preparation

Commission on Elections membership

On May 4, 2015, President Benigno Aquino III appointed Presidential Commission on Good Government chairman Andres D. Bautista as chairman, and former Commission on Audit member Rowena Ganzon and Bangsamoro Business Club's board chairman Sherif Abas as commissioners. Bautista replaced Sixto Brillantes, while Guanzon and Abas replaced Lucenito Tagle and Elias Yusoph, who all retired in February 2015. All appointees will serve until February 2022.[2]

A few days after the announcement, it was revealed that Abas is a nephew of Mohagher Iqbal, the chief negotiator of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. Bautista said that Abas confirmed to him that he is Iqbal's nephew. Iqbal neither confirmed nor denied their relationship, calling it is a non-issue, and that there's nothing wrong if his nephew is appointed to a sensitive position.[3]

Bautista was confirmed by the Commission on Appointments on September 21; meanwhile, Abas' confirmation was deferred because Senator Alan Peter Cayetano, who was not present when Bautista was confirmed, still had questions to ask Abas.[4]

Voter registration

{{main|Voter registration in the Philippines}}

The commission started voter registration for the elections on May 6, 2014, to October 31, 2015. Under the law, the 9.6 million registered voters who do not have biometrics attached their registration will not be allowed to vote.[5] Voter registration was suspended from October 12 to 16 to give way to the filing of candidacies. From October 17 to 31, the commission would extend its hours up to 9:00 p.m. to accommodate last minute registrants.[6]

Voter registration was suspended in Puerto Princesa from April 20 to May 17, 2015, because of the 2015 mayoral recall election. The Voters' Registration Act prohibits voter registration during recall elections.[7]

In June 2015, the commission denied reports that some voters' biometrics were lost, saying that they were only "degraded," and that "two thousand" voters would have to have their biometrics taken again.[8] A month later, the commission opened booths in Metro Manila and Luzon to further registration. By that time, there were still 4.3 million voters with incomplete biometrics.[9] The commission, seeing the successful turnout for registration at the malls, mulled holding the elections itself inside such malls.[10] The commission's en banc had already approved "in principle" the mall voting process.[11] Near the end of the month, the commission said that the number of voters without biometrics has decreased to 3.8 million.[12]

By mid-August, the commission announced that they had purged 1.3 million records from the voters' list, including the deceased and voters who did not vote in the two immediate preceding elections, the 2013 general and 2013 barangay, and that voters without biometrics had fallen to 3.5 million.[13] By August 30, the number of registered voters without biometrics data had fallen to 3.1 million; this was after a Social Weather Stations poll came out that as much as 9.7 million people still had not updated their biometrics yet and could be disenfranchised.[14]

The Commission on Elections concluded the 17-month registration on October 31, and offered no extension, except for voters in Cagayan Valley which was devastated by Typhoon Lando, who were given until the next day to finish theirs. This was despite a petition to the Supreme Court by the Kabataan party-list to extend registration until January 8, 2016.[15] Acting on the said petition, the Supreme Court issued a restraining order on the No Bio, No Boto mandatory voters biometrics campaign on December 1.[16] It was later lifted after 16 days.

Counting machines

{{main|Vote counting in the Philippines}}{{summarize|from|Vote counting in the Philippines|section=y|brevity=y|date=November 2018}}

The Philippines began using technology to streamline vote counting in 2010 when it automated its general elections. During the 2013 Mid Term elections it used the same technology, processing approximately 760 million votes cast by some 50 million voters. The 2016 general elections represented the largest electronic vote counting exercise in history as 92,509 vote counting machines were used to digitize voter-marked ballots and transmit the results to the Municipal Board of Canvassers.

The counting machines were leased from London-based Smartmatic after the Supreme Court of the Philippines invalidated the 300 million-peso contract between the Commission and the Smartmatic-TIM consortium for diagnostics and repair of 80,000 Precinct Count Optical Scan (PCOS) machines in April 2015. The court said that the commission "failed to justify its resort to direct contracting."[17]

Two months later, the Commission conducted a mock election where a "hybrid" system of manual counting and electronic transmission of results was tested out. Gus Lagman, former elections commissioner and a proponent of the hybrid system, pointed out the system's reliability, as opposed to full automation where the results can be manipulated, and to save money as well.[18] Meanwhile, the Commission overturned its self-imposed disqualification of Smartmatic from bidding on counting machines, but said that the company could only proceed with its bidding once they decided on what counting system to use.[19]

Senator Francis Escudero disapproved of the use of the hybrid system, saying "it brings back memories of the Hello Garci controversy".[20] A few days later, the Commission informed the House of Representatives Committee on Suffrage and Electoral Reforms that they had decided not to use the hybrid system. They also limited their options into two: refurbishing 80,000 counting machines and leasing 23,000 more, or lease all machines.[21]

On a House of Representatives committee hearing held on late July, Elections chairman Andres Bautista told lawmakers that the Commission had decided to award Smartmatic-TIM a 1.7 billion peso contract to lease 23,000 OMR counting machines.[22] Days later, the Commission declared the bidding for the refurbishing 80,000 machines as a failure, after two of the three bidders backed out, while the third was disqualified. The companies that withdrew noted the Commission's tight schedule, citing that the project would be unfeasible at that timeline.[23]

On August 13, the Commission agreed to lease 94,000 new OMR machines for 7.9 billion pesos, while the old machines used for 2010 and 2013 elections would be used for the 2019 elections.[24]

By September, the Commission sought the transfer the site manufacturing the voting machines from China to Taiwan after it received intelligence reports from the military in July that China might sabotage the elections. Smartmatic, the manufacturer of the machines, acquiesced to the request. China, meanwhile, denied any plans of sabotaging the election, calling it "sheer fabrication."[25] Smartmatic also won the contract worth P500 million for the electronic results transmission services of the voting machines.[26]

The Commission partnered with De La Salle University to conduct the source code review starting in October. It was said to be more comprehensive than the 2010 and 2013 reviews, which were done a month and four days before the election, respectively.[27]

The warehouse of the voting machines and the paper bins was moved to the warehouse of a bus company JAM Liner in Sta. Rosa, Laguna. The Commission paid 69 million pesos for renting the warehouse.[28] On March 4, the Commission unanimously voted to disallow the issuance of voting receipt to voters, although onscreen verification was allowed, which would take an additional 15 seconds per voter.[29]

The Commission eventually aborted mall voting and allowed the use of replacement ballots.[30]

Results transmission

Election authorities, with the help of election services provider Smartmatic, created a Virtual private network (VPN) for the secure and reliable transmission of electoral data. To guarantee nationwide coverage, Smartmatic coordinated the main telecom companies in the Philippines.

This VPN was used to transmit the votes of over 44 million citizens from 36.805 polling centres. On election night, 4 hours after the polls closed, 80% vote counting machines had transmitted the election data, setting a new record for the Philippines.[31]

Speed was one of the main reasons why Philippine authorities decided to automate elections. As an archipelago comprising over 7,000 islands, several of which lack a proper communications infrastructure, the transmission of results posed a challenge.

Bans

Gun Ban

The election gun ban was implemented starting from January 9, 2016, the official start of the 90-day election period. Francisco Pobe, regional director of COMELEC-13, also pointed out that the candidate should not bring bodyguards without gun ban exemption.[32] Go Act, a pro-gun group formed by gun owners filed a petition before the Supreme Court to fully stop the implementation of the election gun ban.[33]

Calendar

On August 18, 2015, the commission released the calendar of activities for the May 9, 2016 national and local elections:[34]

ActivityStartEndLength of time
Voter registrationMay 6, 2014October 31, 201515.5 months
Holding of political conventionsSeptember 12, 2015September 30, 201525 days
Filing of candidacies and nominees of party-list groupsOctober 12, 2015October 16, 20155 days
Election periodJanuary 10, 2016June 15, 20166 months
Campaign period for president, vice president, senators and party-listsFebruary 9, 2016May 7, 20163 months
Campaign period for district representatives and local officialsMarch 26, 20161.5 months
Campaign ban for Holy WeekMarch 24, 2016March 25, 20162 days
Casting of ballots of overseas absentee votersApril 9, 2016May 9, 20161 month
Casting of ballots of local absentee votersApril 27, 2016April 29, 20163 days
Campaign banMay 8, 2016May 9, 20162 days
Election Day6:00 a.m. of May 9, 20165:00 p.m. of May 9, 201611 hours
Term of office winning candidates for local officials and representativesJune 30, 2016June 30, 20193 years
Term of office winning candidates for president, vice president and senatorsJune 30, 20226 years
First session day of the 17th Congress and State of the Nation AddressJuly 25, 2016{{N/A}}

Following a request by the Centrist Democratic Party of the Philippines, the commission extended the period for holding political conventions to October 8, 2015.[35] The commission did not extend the deadline of filing of candidacies, though.[36]

The commission originally envisioned to release an "almost" final list of candidates on December 15, but postponed it to December 23.[37] The commission did release a "final list" of vice presidential candidates on December 23, but Chairman Andres D. Bautista that disqualification cases on other positions led them to postpone the release to January 20, when the commission is expected to resolve all disqualification cases.[38]

On January 21, the commission released an "initial" list of candidates for all positions. The list is subject to trimming as the disqualification cases on presidential, vice presidential and senatorial cases are to be resolved with finality.[39]

Debates

The Commission on Elections held three debates for presidential candidates--in Mindanao last February 2016, in Visayas last March 2016, and in Luzon last April 2016. A vice-presidential debate was also held in Metro Manila last April 10, 2016.[40]

The commission identified the media entities who had covered the debates: GMA Network (E16: Eleksyon 2016) and Philippine Daily Inquirer (February 21), TV5 (Bilang Pilipino: Boto sa Pagbabago 2016 - English: As a Filipino: Vote for Change 2016) and Philippine Star (March 20), CNN Philippines (The Filipino Votes), Business Mirror, and Rappler (April 10), and ABS-CBN (Halalan 2016: Ipanalo ang Pamilyang Pilipino - English: Election 2016: Winning the Filipino Family) and Manila Bulletin (April 24).[41]

The commission also encouraged non-governmental organizations to hold debates for Senate and local positions.

Results

Rodrigo Duterte of PDP-Laban and Leni Robredo of the Liberal Party won the presidential and vice presidential elections, respectively. The Liberals also won a plurality of seats in both houses of Congress, but several of the Liberal Party members of the House of Representatives jumped ship to Duterte's PDP-Laban, allowing his party to create a supermajority coalition that put Pantaleon Alvarez into the Speakership. The Senate leadership was ultimately won by PDP-Laban's Koko Pimentel, with the Liberals ultimately comprising the minority bloc there. The election of Alvarez and Pimentel meant that PDP-Laban currently holds three of the four elected highest political offices, for the first time since 1986 when the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan held the offices of the presidency, vice presidency, parliamentary speaker and prime minister.

For president

{{main|Philippine presidential election, 2016}}

The winner of the presidential election succeeded President Benigno Aquino III, who was term limited. A separate election was held to determine the Vice Presidency; Jejomar Binay could have defended the vice presidency, but ran for president instead. Both elections were under the plurality voting system.

{{Philippine presidential election, 2016}}

For vice president

{{Philippine vice presidential election, 2016}}

Congress

Senate

{{main|Philippine Senate election, 2016}}

12 seats of the Senate of the Philippines were up for election. The Philippines uses plurality-at-large voting to determine the winning candidates. With the country as one at-large "district", the twelve candidates with the highest number of votes joined the winners of the 2013 election in the Senate.

{{2016 Philippine Senate election}}

House of Representatives

{{main|Philippine House of Representatives elections, 2016}}

All seats of the House of Representatives were up for election. There are two types of representatives: the district representatives, 80% of the members, were elected in the different legislative districts via the plurality system; each district elected one representative. The party-list representatives were elected via closed lists, with the parties having at least 2% of the vote winning at least one seat, and no party winning more than three seats. If the winning candidates don't surpass 20% of the members, other parties that got less than 2% of the national vote will get one seat each until all party-lists have been filled up.

District elections
{{Philippine House election, 2016}}
Party-list election
{{main|Philippine House of Representatives election (party-list), 2016}}{{Philippine House party-list election, 2016}}

Local

{{main|Philippine local elections, 2016|Philippine gubernatorial elections, 2016}}

Local elections were held in all provinces, cities and municipalities. Executive posts were elected by the plurality system, while elections for the membership of the local legislatures were by plurality-at-large voting.

Each local legislature has three ex officio members. The federation presidents each of Liga ng mga Barangay (barangay chairmen), Sangguniang Kabataan (youth council chairmen), and for Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial boards), the chapter presidents of the Sangguniang Bayan (municipal council) and Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council) (city and municipal councilors). The ex officio presiding officer of each local legislature is the chief executive's deputy, but that person only votes to break ties.

The federation presidents of the Liga ng mga Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan were elected from the membership who won in the 2016 elections until December 2017, when they were replaced by appointees of the president, who voted among themselves who shall represent them. A barangay election, originally scheduled for October 2016, is postponed until 2018, to replace these appointees starting in December 2018.

{{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} || 39 || 48.1% || {{increase}} 3 || 39 || 48.1% || {{increase}} 3 || 334 || 32.8% || {{increase}} 34 || 759 || 46.5% || {{increase}} 94 || 705 || 43.1% || {{increase}} 78 || 5,451 || 32.4% || {{increase}} 535{{party name with colour|Nationalist People's Coalition}} || 9 || 11.1% || {{decrease}} 5 || 10 || 12.3% || {{decrease}} 2 || 107 || 10.5% || {{decrease}} 5 || 201 || 12.3% || {{decrease}} 45 || 182 || 11.1% || {{decrease}} 57 || 1,583 || 9.4% || {{decrease}} 183{{party name with colour|National Unity Party (Philippines)}} || 9 || 11.1% || {{increase}} 1 || 7 || 7.6% || {{increase}} 3 || 69 || 6.8% || {{decrease}} 5 || 121 || 7.4% || {{decrease}} 7 || 127 || 7.8% || {{decrease}} 15 || 896 || 5.3% || {{decrease}} 74{{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} || 9 || 11.1% || {{increase}} 2 || 6 || 7.4% || {{decrease}} 5 || 64 || 6.3% || {{decrease}} 38 || 145 || 8.9% || {{decrease}} 14 || 139 || 8.5% || {{decrease}} 27 || 1,047 || 6.3% || {{decrease}} 325{{party name with colour|United Nationalist Alliance}} || 3 || 3.7% || {{decrease}} 1 || 5 || 6.2% || {{steady}} || 47 || 4.6% || {{increase}} 3 || 134 || 8.2% || {{increase}} 5 || 142 || 8.7% || {{increase}} 12 || 1,223 || 7.3% || {{increase}} 213{{party name with colour|Aksyon Demokratiko}} || 1 || 1.2% || {{increase}} 1 || 1 || 1.2% || {{increase}} 1 || 4 || 0.4% || {{increase}} 3 || 13 || 0.8% || {{increase}} 5 || 19 || 1.1% || {{increase}} 14 || 113 || 0.7% || {{increase}} 85{{party name with colour|Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan}} || 0 || 0.0% || {{decrease}} 1 || 2 || 2.5% || {{increase}} 2 || 6 || 0.6% || {{increase}} 2 || 40 || 2.4% || {{increase}} 19 || 33 || 2.0% || {{increase}} 16 || 191 || 1.1% || {{increase}} 59{{party name with colour|Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats}} || 0 || 0.0% || {{steady}} || 2 || 2.5% || {{steady}} || 4 || 0.4% || {{decrease}} 14 || 8 || 0.5% || {{decrease}} 33 || 9 || 0.6% || {{decrease}} 33 || 64 || 0.4% || {{decrease}} 259{{party name with colour|Independent (politician)}} || 5 || 6.2% || {{decrease}} 1 || 6 || 6.4% || {{decrease}} 1 || 65 || 6.4% || {{increase}} 8 || 107 || 6.5% || {{increase}} 17 || 158 || 9.7% || {{decrease}} 3 || 1,877 || 11.1% || {{decrease}} 76
Results summary
PartyGovernorVice governorBoard membersMayorVice-mayorCouncilors
Total % +/− Total % +/− Seats % +/− Total % +/− Total % +/− Seats % +/−
Other parties 6 7.4% {{increase}} 3 2 2.5% {{increase}} 1 71 7.0% {{decrease}} 17 197 12.1% {{increase}} 67 122 7.5% {{increase}} 12 1,095 6.5% {{increase}} 136
Ex officio memberscolspan=6 {{N/A}} 243 23.8% {{increase}} 3 colspan=6 {{N/A}} 3,268 19.4% {{increase}} 14
Totals 81 100% {{increase 1 81 100% {{increase 1 1,019 100% {{increase 13 1,634 100% {{increase 7 1,634 100% {{increase 7 16,808 100% {{increase 95

See also

  • Presidential transition of Rodrigo Duterte
  • Philippine barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan election, 2018, originally scheduled to be held in 2016, but was postponed twice to 2018.

References

1. ^{{cite news|last1=Uy|first1=Jocelyn R.|title=Election season starts: Bets can have fun but …|url=http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/730021/election-season-starts-bets-can-have-fun-but|accessdate=October 12, 2015|agency=Philippine Daily Inquirer|date=October 12, 2015}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.interaksyon.com/article/109917/palace-appoints-new-comelec-chief-2-commissioners |title=PCGG's Bautista is new Comelec chief; Palace also names 2 commissioners |date=May 4, 2015 |first=Lira |last=Dalangin-Fernandez |work=Interaksyon.com |accessdate=July 10, 2015}}
3. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/focus/05/08/15/new-comelec-commissioner-iqbals-nephew |title=New Comelec commissioner is Iqbal's nephew |date=May 8, 2015 |first=Kathryn |last=dela Cruz |work=ABS-CBNnews.com |accessdate=July 10, 2015}}
4. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec, DILG chiefs get CA nod|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/09/23/1502955/comelec-dilg-chiefs-get-ca-nod|website = The Philippine Star|accessdate = October 8, 2015|last = Sy|date = September 23, 2015|first = Marvin}}
5. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.rappler.com/nation/55261-comelec-voters-registration-begins |title=Voters' registration for 2016 polls begins May 6 |first=Michael |last=Bueza |work=Rappler.com |date=April 12, 2014 |accessdate=May 11, 2014}}
6. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec suspends voters registration for COC filing {{!}} ANC|url = http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/10/07/15/comelec-suspends-voters-registration-coc-filing|website = ANC {{!}} ABS-CBN News Channel|accessdate = October 8, 2015|language = |date = October 7, 2015}}
7. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.mb.com.ph/voters-registration-suspended-due-to-puerto-princesa-recall-polls/ |title= Voters' registration suspended due to Puerto Princesa recall polls |date=April 8, 2015 |first=Leslie Ann |last=Aquino|work=The Manila Bulletin |accessdate=May 9, 2015}}
8. ^{{Cite news|url = http://www.rappler.com/nation/97618-comelec-no-lost-biometrics-data|title = No 'lost' biometrics data – Comelec|last = Bueza|first = Michael|date = June 27, 2015|work = Rappler.com|access-date = July 8, 2015|via = }}
9. ^{{Cite news|url = http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/98072-schedule-voter-registration-malls|title = Malls open voters' registration booths|last = Bueza|first = Michael|date = July 1, 2015|work = Rappler.com|access-date = July 8, 2015|via = }}
10. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec mulls holding elections in malls|url = http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/514706/news/nation/comelec-mulls-holding-elections-in-malls|work=GMA News Online |date=July 2, 2015 |accessdate = July 24, 2015}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/543012/news/nation/bautista-comelec-en-banc-approves-mall-voting-in-principle|title=Bautista: Comelec en banc approves mall voting 'in principle'|publisher=GMA News|date=November 4, 2015|accessdate=November 5, 2015}}
12. ^{{Cite web|title = Voters without biometrics down to 3.8 M|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/07/25/1480728/voters-without-biometrics-down-3.8-m|work=The Philippine Star |date=July 25, 2015 |accessdate = July 25, 2015}}
13. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec purges 1.3M Filipinos from voters' list|url = http://www.rappler.com/nation/politics/elections/2016/103108-comelec-delist-voters-list-registration|website = Rappler|accessdate = August 19, 2015|date = August 19, 2015|last = Esmaquel|first = Paterno II}}
14. ^{{Cite web|title = Only 3.1M voters still without biometrics–Comelec|url = http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/722351/only-3-1m-voters-still-without-biometrics-comelec|website = Philippine Daily Inquirer|accessdate = October 8, 2015|date = September 16, 2015|first = Tina G.|last = Santos}}
15. ^{{Cite web|title = 17-month voters' registration ends|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/11/01/1517083/17-month-voters-registration-ends|website = The Philippine Star|accessdate = October 31, 2015|date = November 1, 2015|last = Crisostomo|first = Shiela}}
16. ^ 
17. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/473554/news/nation/sc-voids-comelec-deal-for-pcos-repair-diagnostics |title=SC voids Comelec deal for PCOS repair, diagnostics |first=Mark |last=Marueñas |work=GMA News |date=April 21, 2015 |accessdate=April 25, 2015}}
18. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec holds mock elections, tests hybrid system|url = http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2015/06/27/Commission-on-Elections-Comelec-holds-mock-elections-tests-hybrid-system.html|accessdate = July 7, 2015|date = June 27, 2015|website = |last = Remitio|first = Rex|publisher = CNN Philippines}}
19. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec reverses ruling disqualifying Smartmatic|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/07/01/1471983/comelec-reverses-ruling-disqualifying-smartmatic|accessdate = July 7, 2015|date = July 1, 2015|publisher = The Philippine Star}}
20. ^{{Cite web|title = Chiz asks Comelec: Drop hybrid poll, go for full automation|url = http://www.interaksyon.com/article/113745/chiz-asks-comelec-drop-hybrid-poll-go-for-full-automation|accessdate = July 7, 2015|date = July 5, 2015|last = Reyes|first = Ernie|website = }}
21. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec junks hybrid poll option for full automation |url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/07/10/1475254/comelec-junks-hybrid-poll-option-full-automation|accessdate = July 10, 2015|date = July 10, 2015|last = Diaz |first = Jess |website = The Philippine Star}}
22. ^{{Cite news|url = http://www.philstar.com:8080/headlines/2015/07/30/1482504/comelec-smartmatic-bags-p1.7-b-pcos-deal|title = Comelec: Smartmatic bags P1.7-B PCOS deal|last = Diaz|first = Jess|date = July 30, 2015|work = The Philippine Star|access-date = July 30, 2015|via = }}
23. ^{{Cite web|title = Bidding failure declared anew for PCOS upgrade|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/08/02/1483601/bidding-failure-declared-anew-pcos-upgrade|accessdate = August 2, 2015|date = August 2, 2015|publisher = The Philippine Star|last = Crisostomo|first = Shiela}}
24. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec to lease 94,000 new machines for 2016 elections|url = http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2015/08/13/Comelec-decision-lease-94K-new-machines.html|accessdate = August 19, 2015|date = August 14, 2015|website = CNN Philippines|last = Gotinga|first = JC}}
25. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec: Intel shows China may sabotage 2016 polls|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/09/17/1500723/comelec-intel-shows-china-may-sabotage-2016-polls|website = The Philippine Star|accessdate = October 8, 2015|last = Romero|first = Paolo|date = September 17, 2015}}
26. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec: Intel shows China may sabotage 2016 polls|url = http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/545926/news/nation/smartmatic-bags-p500-m-electronic-results-transmission-deal|website = GMA News|accessdate = November 27, 2015|date = November 26, 2015}}
27. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec woos public’s trust in holding source code review months ahead of polls|url = http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/729146/comelec-woos-publics-trust-in-holding-source-code-review-months-ahead-of-polls|website = inquirer.net|accessdate = October 8, 2015|date = October 8, 2015|last = Hegina|first = Aries Joseph}}
28. ^{{cite news|url=http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2016/01/29/vote-counting-machines-warehouse-laguna.html|title=LOOK: Laguna warehouse of vote counting machines|publisher=CNN Philippines|last=Gotinga|first=JC|date=January 29, 2016|accessdate=February 1, 2016}}
29. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/557857/news/nation/comelec-formalizes-unanimous-stand-versus-ballot-receipts |title=Comelec formalizes unanimous stand versus ballot receipts |first=Rose-An Jessica |last=Dioquino |work=GMA News Online |date=March 4, 2016 |accessdate=March 5, 2016}}
30. ^{{cite news|last1=Jaymalin|first1=Mayen|title=Comelec aborts mall voting plan|url=http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/04/28/1577632/comelec-aborts-mall-voting-plan|accessdate=May 7, 2016|work=The Philippine Star|date=April 28, 2016}}
31. ^{{cite news|last1=Geducos|first1=Argyll|title=PH 2016 polls sets record for fastest transmission of electronic vote count|url=http://www.mb.com.ph/ph-2016-polls-sets-record-for-fastest-transmission-of-electronic-vote-count/|accessdate=May 11, 2016|work=Manila Bulletin|date=May 11, 2016}}
32. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.mb.com.ph/comelec-total-gun-ban-to-start-on-january-9-2016/|title=Comelec total gun ban to start on January 9, 2016|publisher=
Manila Bulletin|last=Crismundo|first=Mike|date=January 3, 2016|accessdate=March 22, 2016}}
33. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/01/12/1541714/pro-gun-group-asks-sc-stop-gun-ban|title=Pro-gun group asks SC to stop gun ban|publisher=
The Philippine Star|last=Punay|first=Edu|date=January 12, 2016|accessdate=March 22, 2016}}
34. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec sets election calendar towards May 2016 polls|url = http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/714539/comelec-sets-election-calendar-towards-may-2016-polls|website = newsinfo.inquirer.net|accessdate = August 21, 2015|last = INQUIRER.net}}
35. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec extends period for political conventions|url = http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/538962/news/comelec-extends-period-for-political-conventions|website = GMA News Online|publisher = |accessdate = October 8, 2015|date = September 30, 2015}}
36. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec unlikely to extend deadline for filing of Certificate of Candidacy|url = http://www.interaksyon.com/article/118932/comelec-unlikely-to-extend-deadline-for-filing-of-certificate-of-candidacy|website = InterAksyon.com|accessdate = October 14, 2015|language = en|publisher = |date = October 14, 2015|first = Ferdinand G.|last = Patinio}}
37. ^{{cite news|title=Comelec: Initial list of candidates to be released Wednesday almost final |url=http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/548557/news/nation/comelec-initial-list-of-candidates-to-be-released-wednesday-almost-final|accessdate=January 21, 2016|work=GMA News Online|date=December 20, 2015}}
38. ^{{cite news|last1=Mangosing|first1=Frances|title=Comelec bares final list of VP candidates|url=http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/749727/comelec-bares-final-list-of-vp-candidates|accessdate=January 21, 2016|work=INQUIRER.net|date=January 21, 2016}}
39. ^{{cite news|last1=Ager|first1=Maila|title=LOOK: Poe, Duterte on Comelec's initial list of presidential bets|url=http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/757518/look-poe-duterte-on-comelecs-initial-list-of-presidential-bets |date=January 21, 2016}}
40. ^{{Cite web|title = Comelec plans to hold debates for 2016 bets|url = http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2015/09/22/1502628/comelec-plans-hold-debates-2016-bets|website = The Philippine Star|accessdate = October 8, 2015|last = Crisostomo|first = Shiela|date = September 22, 2015}}
41. ^{{cite news|title=Comelec identifie media entities to host pres’l, vice pres’l debates|url=http://www.mindanaodailymirror.com/comelec-identifies-media-entities-to-host-presl-vice-presl-debates-5966/|publisher=Mindanao Daily Mirror|work=Philippine News Agency|date=October 20, 2015|accessdate=October 20, 2015}}
{{2016 Philippine elections}}{{Philippine general elections}}

3 : 2016 Philippine general election|2016 elections in the Philippines|General elections in the Philippines

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