Marinduque Provincial Board

Marinduque Provincial Board

Sangguniang Panlalawigan ng Marinduque
Type
Type
Term limits
3 terms (9 years)
Leadership
Presiding Officer
Romulo Bacorro, Jr., Independent
since June 30, 2025
Structure
Seats13 board members
1 ex officio presiding officer
Political groups
  PFP (6)
  Lakas (1)
  Independent (3)
  Nonpartisan (2)
  Vacancy (1)
Length of term
3 years
AuthorityLocal Government Code of the Philippines
Elections
Last election
May 12, 2025
Next election
May 8, 2028
Meeting place
Marinduque Provincial Capitol, Boac

The Marinduque Provincial Board is the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial legislature) of the Philippine province of Marinduque.

The members are elected via plurality-at-large voting: the province is divided into two districts, each having five seats. A voter votes up to five names, with the top five candidates per district being elected. The vice governor is the ex officio presiding officer, and only votes to break ties. The vice governor is elected via the plurality voting system province-wide.

Aside from the regular members, the board also includes the provincial federation presidents of the Liga ng mga Barangay (ABC, from its old name "Association of Barangay Captains"), the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK, youth councils) and the Philippine Councilors League (PCL) as ex officio members. They join the board once they are elected as president of their respective league or federation shortly after the start of their terms following the regular local elections (in the case of PCL) or the barangay and SK elections (in the case of ABC and SK).

District apportionment

[edit]

The districts used in appropriation of members is not coextensive with the legislative district of Marinduque. Unlike congressional representation which is at-large, Marinduque is divided into two districts for representation in the Sangguniang Panlalawigan, with the western half of the province (Mogpog, Boac and Gasan) constituting the body's first district, and the eastern half (Santa Cruz, Torrijos and Buenavista) forming the second district.

In 2025, both districts gained 1 additional seat each after the Department of Finance upgraded the province's income classification to 2nd class, from 4th class.[1]

Elections Seats per district Ex officio seats Total seats
1st 2nd
1992–2025 4 4 3 11
2025–present 5 5 3 13

List of members

[edit]

Current members

[edit]

These are the members after the 2023 barangay and SK elections and the 2025 local elections.[2]

The names of regular members are listed in order of their rank in the local election in their respective district.

Seat Board member Party Term
number
Start of term End of term
1st district Mark Julius Caballes PFP 2 June 30, 2022 June 30, 2028
Antonio Mangcucang III PFP 2 June 30, 2022 June 30, 2028
Gilbert Daquioag Independent 1 June 30, 2025 June 30, 2028
Aurelio Leva III PFP 2 June 30, 2022 June 30, 2028
John Pelaez Independent 1 June 30, 2025 June 30, 2028
2nd district Joam Morales Lakas 1 June 30, 2025 June 30, 2028
Danilo Red PFP 2 June 30, 2022 June 30, 2028
Mercedes Rejano PFP 3 June 30, 2019 June 30, 2028
Primo Cruzado Pamintuan Independent 1 June 30, 2025 June 30, 2028
Ishmael Lim PFP 3 June 30, 2019 June 30, 2028
ABC Carlos de Peralta[3] Nonpartisan 1 January 29, 2024 January 1, 2026
PCL Vacant[a]
SK Bertinus Valencia[4] Nonpartisan 1 December 1, 2023 January 1, 2026
  1. ^ Vacant pending the election of a new set of officers of the province's Philippine Councilors League.

Vice Governor

[edit]
Election
year
Name Party
1992[5] Rosa Lecaroz NPC
1995 Teodorito Rejano Lakas-NUCD
1998
2001 Independent
2004 Leandro Palma Lakas
2007 Tomas Pizarro Independent
2010 Antonio Uy Jr. Liberal
2013 Romulo Bacorro Jr. Liberal
2016
2019 PDP–Laban
2022 Adeline Marciano-Angeles PDP–Laban
2025 Romulo Bacorro Jr. Independent

1st District

[edit]
Election
year
Member (party) Member (party) Member (party) Member (party) Member (party)
1992[5] Rodrigo Sotto
(LDP)
Bonifacio de Luna
(Independent)
Romeo Muhi
(LDP)
Rosario Jugo
(LDP)
1995 Rodrigo Sotto
(Lakas–NUCD)
Pedrito Nepomuceno
(Independent)
Leticia Monte
(Independent)
Zenaida Daquioag
(Lakas–NUCD)
1998 Adeline Marciano-Angeles
(Independent)
Rosemarie Opis-Malasig
(Lakas–NUCD)
Zenaida Daquioag
(Independent)
2001 Pedrito Nepomuceno
(Lakas–NUCD)
Rodrigo Sotto
(Independent)
Zenaida Daquioag
(Lakas–NUCD)
2004 Melecio Go
(Independent)
Allan Nepomuceno
(Independent)
Leticia Monte
(Independent)
Jaime Jasper Lim
(Independent)
2007 Jose Alvarez
(Independent)
Allan Nepomuceno
(Kampi)
Leticia Monte
(Kampi)
Jaime Jasper Lim
(ABC)
2010 Melecio Go
(Independent)
Allan Nepomuceno
(LP)
Mark Anthony Seño
(LP)
George Aliño II
(Independent)
2013 Adeline Marciano-Angeles
(NUP)
Theresa Caballes
(LP)
2016 John Pelaez
(Independent)
Gilbert Daquioag
(Independent)
2019 Adeline Marciano-Angeles
(PDP–Laban)
John Pelaez
(PDP–Laban)
Theresa Caballes
(UNA)
Gilbert Daquioag
(PDP–Laban)
2022 Aurelio Leva III
(PDP–Laban)
Antonio Mangcucang III
(PDP–Laban)
Mark Julius Caballes
(PDP–Laban)
Bernadine Opis-Mercado
(PDP–Laban)
2025 Aurelio Leva III
(PFP)
Antonio Mangcucang III
(PFP)
Mark Julius Caballes
(PFP)
Gilbert Daquioag
(Independent)
John Pelaez
(Independent)

2nd District

[edit]
Election
year
Member (party) Member (party) Member (party) Member (party) Member (party)
1992[5] Teodorito Rejano
(LDP)
Cesaria Zoleta
(LDP)
Norma Ricohermoso
(Independent)
Juan Maximo Lim
(LDP)
1995 Ildefonso de los Santos
(Lakas–NUCD)
Cesaria Zoleta
(Lakas–NUCD)
Juan Maximo Lim
(Independent)
1998 Leandro Palma
(Lakas–NUCD)
Norma Ricohermoso
(Lakas–NUCD)
Alfonso Rey
(Lakas–NUCD)
2001 Ildefonso de los Santos
(Independent)
Epifania Rosas
(PDP–Laban)
Alfonso Rey
(Independent)
2004 Eleuterio Raza Jr.
(Lakas)
Norma Ricohermoso
(Lakas)
Epifania Rosas
(Independent)
Alfonso Rey
(Lakas)
2007 Cesaria Zoleta
(Lakas)
Ildefonso de los Santos
(Lakas)
Yolando Querubin
(Lakas)
2010 Eleuterio Raza Jr.
(LP)
Amelia Aguirre
(Lakas-Kampi)
Epifania Rosas
(LP)
Harold Red
(LP)
2013 Juan Fernandez Jr.
(LP)
Amelia Aguirre
(NUP)
Norma Ricohermoso
(LP)
2016 Amelia Aguirre
(UNA)
Reynaldo Salvacion
(Independent)
2019 Juan Fernandez Jr.
(Independent)
Melgabal Encabo
(PDP–Laban)
Mercedes Rejano
(PDP–Laban)
Ishmael Lim
(PDP–Laban)
2022 Danilo Red
(Independent)
2025 Danilo Red
(PFP)
Joam Morales
(Lakas)
Mercedes Rejano
(PFP)
Ishmael Lim
(PFP)
Primo Cruzado Pamintuan
(Independent)

Liga ng mga Barangay member

[edit]
Election
year
ABC/LB
President
Barangay Captain of
2018 James Marty Lim
(until 2022)
Bgy. II, Gasan
Baldomero Limpiada Bgy. Balanacan, Mogpog
2023* Carlos de Peralta Bgy. Cagpo, Torrijos

*Took office in 2024

Philippine Councilors League member

[edit]
Election
year
PCL
President
Councilor in
2019 Aurelio Leva III
(PDP–Laban)
Boac
2022 Jose Neryl Manggol[6]
(PDP–Laban)
Mogpog
2025 (TBD)

Sangguniang Kabataan member

[edit]
Election
year
SK
President
SK Chairperson of
2018 Lauren Rosales Bgy. Bagong Silang, Santa Cruz
2023 Bertinus Valencia Bgy. Poblacion, Torrijos

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Patinio, Ferdinand (9 December 2024). "Comelec adds 42 provincial board seats in 21 areas for 2025 polls". Philippine News Agency. Retrieved 18 April 2025.
  2. ^ "Congratulations to Our Newly Elected Sangguniang Panlalawigan Members of Marinduque!". Pahina. 2025-05-13. Retrieved 2025-06-16 – via Facebook.
  3. ^ "73rd Regular Session of the 16th Sangguniang Panlalawigan (excerpt)". Marinduque TV. 2024-02-12. Retrieved 2025-06-16 – via Facebook.
  4. ^ Mataac, Romeo A.; Jr. (2023-11-30). "Mga bagong pinuno ng SK federation sa Marinduque, kilalanin | Province of Marinduque | Official Website". Retrieved 2025-06-16.
  5. ^ a b c "Philippine Local Government Interactive Dataset". University of the Philippines Center for Integrative and Development Studies. Retrieved 2025-06-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Congratulations Hon. Neryl Manggol!". Vice Governor Lyn Angeles, Province of Marinduque. Retrieved 2025-06-16 – via Facebook.