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Alliance of Concerned Teachers

Political party in the Philippines


Summary

Political party in the Philippines

FieldValue
nameACT Teachers
colorcode#011A5D
logoACT Teachers logo.svg
full_nameAlliance of Concerned Teachers
abbreviation
sectorEducation
sloganAng Tunay na Tinig ng Teachers!
()
foundation1982
affiliation1_titleNational affiliation
affiliation1Bayan
Makabayan
headquartersQuezon City, Metro Manila
ideologyNational democracy
Progressivism
Left-wing nationalism
positionFar-left
colorsLight blue
representativesAntonio Tinio
current_congress20th
seats(Out of 63 party-list seats)
website

() Makabayan Progressivism Left-wing nationalism The Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT-Teachers) is a progressive national democratic mass organization of teachers, academics, and other education workers in the Philippines, established on June 26, 1982. It is the largest non-traditional teachers' organization in the country, and campaigns for the economic and political rights of teachers and other education workers as well as on wider social and political issues.

ACT Teachers Partylist is part of the left-wing Makabayan Bloc, and is known for its active campaign for salary hikes for teachers, successful tax reduction initiatives, optional poll service duty for teachers, and lowering of optional retirement age of public school teachers.

History

In 1989, ACT succeeded in its campaign for higher wages of $32 a month as well as improved benefits for teachers. This was achieved after public school teachers went on strike from July 24 to August 12.

On September 30, 2005, national council member of the ACT Vitoria Samonte was murdered, an act which was called a human rights violation.

Another national council member, Napoleon Pornasdoro, was murdered on February 27, 2006. They were also general secretary of the Southern Tagalog Teachers for Development.

ACT Teachers Partylist is also an active proponent of the Supreme Court cases against the Philippine government's K to 12 system, co-filing at least two K to 12-related cases in 2015, and successfully securing a temporary restraining order (TRO) against a government order that abolishes Filipino language subject in college.

On June 1, 2024, the coalitions of Philippine Federation of the Deaf and Alliance of Concerned Teachers staged a protest-rally at Liwasang Bonifacio against the Commission on the Filipino Language-Arthur P. Casanova, for the cultural retention of Filipino Sign Language (Republic Act 11106). The members said the FSL Unit of the CFL abolition will effectively layoff the deaf personnel, “thus, depriving Deaf Filipinos of their language rights and violating the mandate of RA 7104.”

Objectives

ACT's stated objectives are:

  • To unite teachers and other education workers to struggle for their democratic rights and economic welfare.
  • To advance a nationalist, scientific and mass-oriented education.
  • To encourage active and dynamic participation of teachers and other education workers in social transformation.
  • To represent, assist and defend its affiliates and their individual members, in particular, and the teachers and other education workers, in general, in the advancement of their legitimate rights and interests.
  • To launch campaigns to protect human rights, the environment and the national minorities/indigenous peoples, promote gender equality, genuine land reform, workers’ rights, and be involved with other social issues.
  • To help in the formation of the broadest unity of all oppressed sectors of Philippine society in advancing the interests of the Filipino people.
  • To unite with progressive individuals, groups and movements abroad who share common beliefs and aspirations with ACT-Philippines.

Membership requirements

Membership of ACT is open to national and regional organizations whose membership or composition include federations, unions, alliances, cooperatives, political, disciplinal or interest associations of teachers and education workers. Active and nationalist teaching and non-teaching personnel working in the education sector at any level (pre-school, elementary, secondary or tertiary) in both public and private institutions who are members of an education-based organization are eligible.

ACT is the umbrella group of two national organizations: the Congress of Teachers for Nationalism and Democracy (CONTEND), a militant and nationalist teachers' organization, and the National Federation of Teachers and Employees' Union (NAFTEU), the national organization of school-based labor unions. Membership in these organizations means automatic affiliation with ACT.

Individual members who are eligible are also accepted.

Organization

ACT's main organizing and consolidation activities are integration and education. Representatives of the organization make regular visits to update members on the organization's activities and campaigns. Discussions, dialogues, fora, and symposia are held related to current issues that directly or indirectly affect the education sector. ACT also promotes the principles and objectives of the organization among the population and campaigns against foreign influence on the Philippine educational system and wider society. ACT also provides institutional services like free legal aid, media representation, training, and other forms of assistance. It publishes a quarterly publication, the ACT Forum, for its membership.

Electoral performance

ElectionVotes%Seats
2010372,9031.26%
2013453,4911.66%
20161,180,7523.65%
2019395,3271.42%
2022330,5290.90%
2025348,9350.85%

Representatives to Congress

Period1st Representative2nd Representative
15th Congress
2010–2013Antonio Tinio
16th Congress
2013–2016Antonio Tinio
17th Congress
2016–2019Antonio TinioFrance Castro
18th Congress
2019–2022France Castro
19th Congress
2022–2025France Castro
20th Congress
2025–2028Antonio Tinio
Note: A party-list group, can win a maximum of three seats in the House of Representatives.

References

References

  1. (2023). "Party-Movement Interactions in a Contested Democracy: The Philippine Experience". Archium Ateneo.
  2. Ager, Maila. "Makabayan bloc endorses Poe-Escudero tandem". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  3. "SSL hurdles final reading at lower house". CNN Philippines.
  4. "REP. ANTONIO L. TINIO".
  5. "ACT Teachers Party-list » House Bills".
  6. (June–September 1989). "Teachers, Government Workers Win Wage Hikes". Philippine Labor Alert Newsletter.
  7. BLACKBURN, DANIEL. (2006). "Union leaders face violent attacks". International Union Rights.
  8. Torres-Tupas, Tetch. "K-12 to displace thousands of teachers, students, say critics". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  9. "SC stops CHED's 'anti-Filipino' new GE curriculum". Rappler.
  10. Gamil, Jaymee T.. "Congress urged to junk 2015 budget due to pro-DAP provisions". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  11. Cruz, RG. "Scrap legislative, executive 'pork', PNoy urged". ABS-CBN Corporation.
  12. (May 31, 2024). "Don’t abolish Filipino sign language". [[Manila Standard]].
  13. (June 1, 2024). "CFL slammed over plan to abolish sign language unit". [[The Philippine Star]].
  14. (January 31, 2008). "8-point Education Reform Agenda".
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