The Nationalist Citizens' Party (NCP; Lapiang Makabansa) was a Philippine nationalist party established by Claro M. Recto and Lorenzo Tañada in 1957. Recto became its presidential candidate for the 1957 presidential election, where he was defeated, getting 9% of the vote. Tañada was eventually elected to the Senate under the party in 1959. The NCP functioned as a third party in a political climate dominated by the Nacionalista Party and the Liberal Party.
Nationalist Citizens' Party | |
---|---|
Founder | Claro M. Recto Lorenzo Tañada |
Founded | 1957 |
Dissolved | 1972 |
Split from | |
Preceded by | Citizens' Party |
Ideology | Filipino nationalism Protectionism Filipino First policy |
Political position | Centre-right |
History
editWith President Ramon Magsaysay's death in 1957, several members of his Nacionalista Party (NP) became dissatisfied with Carlos P. Garcia (Magsaysay's vice president who succeeded him). These members bolted out of the NP and established the Progressive Party, while Recto and Tañada established the Nationalist Citizens' Party, with Recto resigning from the NP and merging with Tañada's Citizens' Party.[1][2]
The NCP, with an anti-foreign platform, participated in the 1957 elections and were defeated: Recto and Tañada came in at fourth place in the presidential and vice presidential elections, respectively (they are elected separately) with 7% of the vote, behind Garcia (NP) and Diosdado Macapagal (Liberal Party). The nationalist undertaking was described as "an elitist undertaking, popular in the press... but largely ignored by the Filipino masses." While the NCP was never "considered [as] a broad democratic party," and was labeled as "businessman's nationalism," they were able to influence Garcia's administration by adopting a "Filipino First policy" which favors Philippine-made products over foreign-made ones.[3]
The cooperation between the NP and the NCP produced an appointment of Garcia of Recto to his cabinet, and an NP-NCP alliance for the 1959 Senate election, where Tañada won a Senate seat. However, Recto died in 1960, and nationalism and Garcia's Filipino First policy was branded by the Liberals as corrupt; Garcia and the NP lost the 1961 presidential and vice presidential elections to Macapagal and Emmanuel Pelaez.[4]
Tañada would later be reelected to the Senate under the NCP banner in 1965 for the last time.
Electoral performance
editPresidential and vice presidential elections
editYear | Presidential election | Vice presidential election | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | Vote share | Result | Candidate | Votes | Vote share | Result | |
1957 | Claro M. Recto | 429,226 | Carlos Garcia (Nacionalista) |
Lorenzo Tañada | 344,685 | Diosdado Macapagal (Liberal) |
Legislative elections
editCongress of the Philippines | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Senate | House of Representatives | |||||
Year | Seats won | Ticket | Result | Year | Seats won | Result |
1957 | 0 / 8
|
Single party ticket | Nacionalista won 5/8 | 1957 | 1 / 102
|
Nacionalista won |
1959 | 1 / 8
|
Single party ticket | Nacionalista won 5/8 | 1959 | No Election held | |
1961 | Did not participated | Liberal won 4/8 | 1961 | 0 / 104
|
Nacionalista won | |
1963 | Did not participated | Both Nacionalista and Liberal won 4/8 |
1963 | No Election held | ||
1965 | 1 / 8
|
Single party ticket | Nacionalista and won 5/8 | 1965 | Did not participated |
References
edit- ^ Pomeroy, William (1992). The Philippines: Colonialism, Collaboration, and Resistance!. International Publishers Co., Inc. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-7178-0692-8.
- ^ Simbulan, Dante (2005). The modern principalia: the historical evolution of the Philippine ruling class. University of the Philippines Press. pp. 163–164. ISBN 971-542-496-1.
- ^ Chapman, William (1988). Inside the Philippine Revolution. I.B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. p. 47. ISBN 1-85043-114-0.
- ^ Pomeroy, William (1992). The Philippines: Colonialism, Collaboration, and Resistance!. International Publishers Co., Inc. pp. 219–223. ISBN 978-0-7178-0692-8.