Mayor of Navotas
Mayor of The City of Navotas | |
---|---|
Style | His excellency |
Residence | Navotas City Hall |
Appointer | Elected via popular vote |
Term length | 3 years |
Inaugural holder | Mariano Israel |
Formation | 1859 |
Succession | Toby Tiangco |
Website | Office of the Mayor of Navotas |
The Mayor of Navotas (Tagalog: Alkalde ng Lungsod ng Navotas) is the head of the executive branch of the Navotas's government. The mayor holds office at Navotas City Hall. Like all local government heads in the Philippines, the mayor is elected via popular vote, and may not be elected for a fourth consecutive term (although the former mayor may return to office after an interval of one term). In case of death, resignation or incapacity, the vice mayor becomes the mayor.
Latest election
2013 Navotas mayoral election | ||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
UNA | Tiangco, John Reynald Marcelo "John Rey" | 52,523 | 65.17 | |
Liberal | Javier, Patrick Joseph Alfonso "PJ" | 25,412 | 31.53 | |
Margin of victory | 27,111 | 33.64 | ||
Invalid or blank votes | 2,662 | 3.30% | ||
Total votes | 80,597 | 100 | ||
UNA hold | ||||
List of leaders
List of Governadorcillos, 1859-1898
- 1. Mariano Israel - 1859-1860
- 2. Baldomero Cacnio - 1861-1873-1874 / 1881-1882/1885-1886
- 3. Jose Mariano Oliveros - 1862
- 4. Andres Pascual - 1863
- 5. Juan Sioson - 1864-1865
- 6. Miguel Oliveros - 1866-1867
- 7. Francisco Oliveros - 1868-1869
- 8. Eduardo Suarez - 1869-1870
- 9. Pedro Naval - 1871-1872
- 10. Natalio Cruz - 1875-1876
- 11. Domingo Tiangco - 1877-1878
- 12. Domingo Reyes - 1879-1880 / 1888-1889
- 13. Cipriano L. San Pedro - 1883-1884
- 14. Mariano Laiz Oliveros- 1887-1888
- 15. Mariano Naval - 1890-1891
- 16. Mateo de Vera - 1892-1898
During the period of the Philippine Commonwealth (from 1935-1945), the 1935 constitution ushered. This provided that the President of the Philippines should exercise general supervision over all local governments. This allowed Navotas to have three (3) leaders. This trend from 1946 to 1972 (during the second Philippine Republic) was toward decentralization. Congress passed laws giving more autonomy to Local Government Units through the grant of additional powers and lessening of national control affairs. This created four (4) Mayors of Navotas. During the Martial Law Period, President Marcos had changed the structure and functions of LGU’s, thus decentralization suffered the set back with the concentration of power on his hands. After December 31, 1975 (expiration of tenure of office of the local elective officials), the President assumed the power of appointment of the officials as authorized by the people in a referendum held on 27 February 1975. During the Marcos Regime, Navotas had two (2) Mayors.
List of Municipal Presidents: 1901-1931
- 1. Canuto E. Celestino - 1901-1903
- 2. Bernardo O. Dagala - 1903-1905
- 3. Hermogenes C. Monroy - 1905-1907
- 4. Rufino S. Hernandez - 1907-1909
- 5. Jose R. Pascual - 1909-1916
- 6. Angelo Angeles - 1916-1919
- 7. Arsenio C. Roldan, Sr. - 1919-1922
- 8. Alejandro D. Leongson - 1922-1928 /1931-1934
- 9. Angel C. Santiago - 1928-1931
List of Mayors: 1934 up to present
- 1. Benjamin A. Alonzo - 1934-1937
- 2. Felix R. Monroy - 1937-1946
- 3. Nemesio L. Angeles - March–September, 1944
- 4. Tomas R. Gomez - 1946-1947
- 5. Pacifico G. Javier, Sr. - 1948-1951
- 6. Roberto R. Monroy - 1952-1963
- 7. Felipe C. Del Rosario, Sr. - 1964-1980
- 8. Victor B. Javier - 1980-1986
- 9. Felipe C. Del Rosario, Jr. - 1986-1998
- 10. Cipriano Bautista - July 1, 1998 - May 11, 2000
- 11. Tobias Reynald M. Tiangco - May 12, 2000 - June 30, 2010
- 12. John Rey Tiangco - July 1, 2010 – present
Vice Mayor of Navotas
The Vice Mayor is the second-highest official of the city. The vice mayor is elected via popular vote; although most mayoral candidates have running mates, the vice mayor is elected separately from the mayor. This can result in the mayor and the vice mayor coming from different political parties.
The Vice Mayor is the presiding officer of the Navotas City Council, although he can only vote as the tiebreaker. When a mayor is removed from office, the vice mayor becomes the mayor until the scheduled next election. As of now the incumbent is Clint Geronimo