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1990 Cordillera autonomy plebiscite

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1990 referendum
1990 Cordillera Autonomous Region creation plebiscite
January 30, 19901998 →
Outcome
  • Autonomy rejected inBaguio and all provinces save forIfugao
  • Measure ratified in Ifugao and creation of Cordillera Autonomous Region
  • Creation of Cordillera Autonomous Region ruled as unconstitutional by theSupreme Court, Ifugao reverted back as being a component of theCordillera Administrative Region

Results by province (and city of Baguio)
On the map, the darker shades of a color indicate a larger majority for (green shades) or against (red shades) autonomy.
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A plebiscite for the ratification of the organic act creating the Cordillera Autonomous Region was held on January 30, 1990, to ask if the voters in the Cordillera Administrative Region wanted to be an autonomous region under Republic Act No. 6766. TheCordillera Administrative Region (CAR) consists of theprovinces ofAbra,Benguet,Ifugao,Kalinga-Apayao, andMountain Province, and the city ofBaguio. Only Ifugao voted in favor of autonomy, and a Supreme Court case later disallowed the creation of an autonomous region with just one province.

This was the first attempt by theCordillera autonomy movement to create an autonomous region after years of conflict by theCordillera People's Liberation Army. Asecond plebiscite in 1998 resulted inApayao (by then separated fromKalinga) voting for autonomy, and an establishment of an autonomous region still failed.

Background

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A plebiscite was held concerning the establishment of an autonomous region in the Cordilleras on January 30, 1990 via ratification of Republic Act No. 6766, otherwise known as "An Act Providing for an Organic Act for the Cordillera Autonomous Region". Voters registered in the component localities of theCordillera Administrative Region (provinces ofAbra,Benguet,Ifugao,Kalinga-Apayao, andMountain Province, and the highly urbanizedcity ofBaguio, which is not included in any province) participating in the vote. As per law, only provinces (and Baguio) which voted in favor of the ratification of the law would constitute part of the new Cordillera Autonomous Region.[1]

Campaign

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In the run-up to the plebiscite, theBaguio City Council and theBenguet Provincial Board both voted for the exclusion of their localities from the autonomous region due to what they described as "lopsided" tax-sharing system, where both Baguio and Benguet, the most prosperous places in the would-be autonomous region, be subsidizing the rest of the region.[2]

Conrado Balweg's group campaigned for a "no" vote in the plebiscite. Balweg said that the organic act is "a bogus law because what we fought for is not there."[3]

Results

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Initial results showed voters in five provinces and in Baguio rejecting autonomy, with onlyIfugao favoring inclusion. Vice PresidentSalvador Laurel, who earlier predicted the rejection of the measure, said that the government should seriously consider switching to afederal system, and that it, and the earlier rejection of autonomy in a Mindanao plebiscite is a significant victory for theNacionalista Party.[4]

TheCommission on Elections (COMELEC) declared on February 14, 1990 that the plebiscite failed in Baguio and in all provinces except Ifugao.[1] With the rejection being apparent, it was suggested to bring the question if establishing the Cordillera Autonomous Region with Ifugao as its sole component province to the COMELEC. According to SenatorAquilino Pimentel Jr., the rejection was based on lowlander settlers not considering themselves as Cordillerans, hence rejecting the law, while the highlander communities preferred the status quo. Analysts said that highlanders rejected the autonomy as they see the Act as a mere tool of the economic and political classes to perpetuate their exploitation, and that vested interests of politicians and multinational corporations would even "strengthen their dominion in the region".[5]

Summary of results[6]
LocalityForAgainstTotalRatified?
Total%Total%
Abra10,83216.83%53,52183.17%64,353No
Baguio7,91817.21%38,08382.79%46,001No
Benguet8,97410.91%73,24689.09%82,220No
Ifugao20,15858.55%14,26941.45%34,427Yes
Kalinga-Apayao17,91939.11%27,89860.89%45,817No
Mountain Province15,03447.67%16,50552.33%31,539No
Valid votes304,357Yes; later nullified

Aftermath

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TheCommission on Elections issued a resolution on February 14, 1990 declaring that Ifugao shall form the Cordillera Autonomous Region.[7] In March 1990, then-PresidentCorazon Aquino ordered for the reorganization of government offices in the impending creation of the Cordillera Autonomous Region, with Ifugao as the sole province.[8]

In December 1990, theSupreme Court ruled that the constitution prohibited a single province constituting an autonomous region, so Ifugao was not made an autonomous region to itself, and returned to the Cordillera Administrative Region.[9]

Congress passed another law as an organic act for Cordillera autonomy in December 1997.[10]A second plebiscite a year later was resoundingly rejected, with onlyApayao (by then a separate province) voting for autonomy.[11]

References

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  1. ^ab"Ordillo, et. al. vs. COMELEC".www.chanrobles.com. RetrievedJune 11, 2020.
  2. ^Burgos, Bobby (1989-11-29)."Protest mount against Cordillera autonomy".news.google.com.Manila Standard. Retrieved2020-06-22.
  3. ^"Balweg vows to campaign vs Cordillera autonomy".news.google.com.Manila Standard. 1989-11-30. Retrieved2020-06-22.
  4. ^Maragay, Fel V. (1990-02-01)."Cordillerans reject autonomy proposal".news.google.com.Manila Standard. Retrieved2020-06-22.
  5. ^Amor, Patria (February 4, 1990)."What now for Cordillera?".The Manila Standard. RetrievedJune 11, 2020.
  6. ^Buendia, Rizal G. (October 1991)."The Cordillera Autonomy and the Quest for Nation-Building: Prospects in the Philippines"(PDF).Philippine Journal of Public Administration.XXXV (4): 350.
  7. ^"The Aquino Management of the Presidency: Power to the Regions"(PDF).malacanang.gov.ph. June 1992. Retrieved2020-07-21.
  8. ^"Administrative Order No. 160, s. 1990". March 30, 1990.
  9. ^Lanuza, Angelo (1990-12-05)."Ifugao not Cordilleras, Tribnual rules".news.google.com.Manila Standard. Retrieved2020-06-22.
  10. ^"R.A. No. 8438: An Act to Establish the Cordillera Autonomous Region".The LawPhil Project. Congress of the Philippines. Retrieved4 January 2015.
  11. ^"This Week's Milestones: July 15 to 21".INQUIRER.net. 2018-07-15. Retrieved2020-07-21.

External links

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Local elections
Autonomous regional elections
Gubernatorial elections
Barangay elections
Sangguniang Kabataan elections
Regional-level plebiscites
Provincial-level plebiscites
Municipal- and city-level plebiscites
Elections and referendums in theCordillera Administrative Region
Local elections
Abra
Apayao
Baguio
Benguet
Ifugao
Kalinga
Mountain Province
Kalinga-Apayao (historical)
House elections
Plebiscites
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