From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Nationalist People's Coalition
Conservative political party in the Philippines
Conservative political party in the Philippines
| Field | Value | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Nationalist People's Coalition | |||||
| logo | [[File:Nationalist People's Coalition.svg | 150px]] | ||||
| colorcode | ||||||
| leader1_title | Leader | |||||
| leader1_name | Mark Cojuangco | |||||
| leader2_title | Chairman | |||||
| leader2_name | Tito Sotto | |||||
| leader3_title | President | |||||
| leader3_name | Jack Duavit | |||||
| leader4_title | Secretary–General | |||||
| leader4_name | Mark Llandro Mendoza | |||||
| leader5_title | Spokesperson | |||||
| leader5_name | Mark Enverga | |||||
| founder | Danding Cojuangco | |||||
| foundation | ||||||
| split | Nacionalista | |||||
| headquarters | 808 Building, Meralco Avenue, San Antonio, Pasig, 1605 Metro Manila | |||||
| newspaper | NPC Herald | |||||
| ideology | {{Nowrap | Filipino nationalism | ||||
| Conservatism | ||||||
| <br> Social conservatism<ref>{{Cite book | title | Philippines | work=World Encyclopedia of Political Systems and Parties | publisher=Facts On File | year=1999 | pages=887}}}} |
| position | Centre-right | |||||
| national | Bagong Pilipinas (2024–present) | |||||
| {{collapsible list | title | Former: | Nationalist People's Coalition (1995) | |||
| LAMMP (1998) | ||||||
| PPC (2001) | ||||||
| KNP (2004) | ||||||
| TEAM Unity (2007; Teodoro wing) | ||||||
| GO (2007; Escudero–Legarda wing) | ||||||
| Team PNoy (2013) | ||||||
| PGP (2016) | ||||||
| HNP (2019) | ||||||
| UniTeam (2021–2024)}} | ||||||
| colors | Green, red, white | |||||
| seats1_title | Senate | |||||
| seats1 | ||||||
| seats2_title | House of Representatives | |||||
| seats2 | ||||||
| seats3_title | Provincial Governors | |||||
| seats3 | ||||||
| seats4_title | Provincial Vice Governors | |||||
| seats4 | ||||||
| seats5_title | Provincial Board members | |||||
| seats5 | ||||||
| affiliation1_title | Coalition members (1995) | |||||
| affiliation1 | {{ubl | |||||
| country | the Philippines |
Conservatism
Social conservatism}}
- NPC
- PRP
- KBL
The Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC) is a conservative political party in the Philippines which was founded in 1992 by presidential candidate Danding Cojuangco.
History
Formation

In 1990, amid political and economic uncertainty in the aftermath of the 1986 People Power Revolution, members of civil society and business groups invited businessman Danding Cojuangco, a former associate of deposed President Ferdinand Marcos, to lead a national coalition for the 1992 national elections. Cojuangco's supporters, who called themselves Friends of Danding, began organizing because of limited time before the polls.
Cojuangco expressed interest in running under the Nacionalista Party where he had long-standing ties, provided the nomination process was fair. Two other national figures were also seeking the party nomination, Senator Juan Ponce Enrile and Vice President Salvador Laurel who was the party president. Internal disputes arose between Laurel and former Rizal Governor Isidro Rodriguez over the nomination rules. With the issues unresolved and the party divided, Cojuangco's backers formed a new party, Partido Pilipino, led by Jerry Barican, Antonio Gatmaitan, and Butch Valdes. The Commission on Elections officially registered the party on February 5, 1991.
Nacionalista eventually split into the Laurel and Rodriguez wings, with the latter supporting Cojuangco. A court ruling in favor of the Laurel wing prompted Cojuangco's allies to consolidate under a broader umbrella group, the Nationalist People's Coalition. This coalition included the Rodriguez wing, Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL), Partido Pilipino and its regional parties such as Bagong Lakas ng Nueva Ecija, sectoral groups, and independent politicians.
Ramos years: 1992–1998
[[1992 Philippine general election|1992 election]]
In the 1992 elections, Cojuangco ran for president under the NPC banner with Senator Joseph Estrada, whose Partido ng Masang Pilipino coalesced with NPC, for vice president. Other NPC candidates for various races ran under affiliated parties. Cojuangco placed third, being defeated by Marcos' cousin Fidel Ramos, while Estrada won the vice presidential race in a landslide. After the elections, Partido Pilipino was renamed as the Nationalist People's Coalition, formalizing the group into a political party with leadership transferred to newly-elected NPC officers. Also, NPC joined the Lakas-led Rainbow Coalition, a House caucus coalition formed with multiple parties, including Lakas, and won 5 Senats seats (which 4 of them are half-termers placing between 13–24) which Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP, then known as Laban) dominated.
1995 elections: A party and an opposition coalition
NPC became a party and the official opposition against Lakas–Laban Coalition, led by Ramos and Ed Angara of Laban. NPC drafted including half-termers Nikki Coseteng and Arturo Tolentino, tapped Congressman Bongbong Marcos of KBL, former military mutineer Gringo Honasan and Miriam Defensor Santiago of PRP. It was then rumored that then-Senate President Ernesto Maceda already conceded to President Ramos days before the election day, as the latter also claimed. Only Santiago, Honasan, and Coseteng managed to win.
Estrada years: 1998–2001
1998 elections: Erap's Victory and the rise of Bright Boys
The NPC was a member of the Laban ng Makabayang Masang Pilipino (LAMMP) together with Angara's LDP, Estrada's PMP, and Pimentel's PDP–Laban. LAMMP served as the political vehicle of vice president Joseph Estrada in the 1998 presidential elections. Also, in the House elections, some youngesters who will be serve in the future as either senators or cabinet members are elected such as Chiz Escudero (became Senator), and Gilbert Teodoro (founder's nephew, and future Defense Secretary), and Ace Durano of Cebu which Estrada dubbed as the Bright Boys.
2000: Estrada Impeachment
After Speaker Manny Villar (LAMMP) successfully pushed impeachment on the house plenary, the pro-Estrada group kicked Villar out of speakership and they tapped Arnulfo Fuentebella as replacement. Fuentebella's speakership tenure is the only instance a current NPC member held the said position. It left the LAMMP after Estrada was removed from power in January 2001.
Arroyo years: 2001–2010
2001
When Gloria Macapagal Arroyo assumed the presidency in January 2001, her People Power Coalition (led by the Lakas) became the dominant group in Congress. The 75-member Lakas party led the "Sunshine Coalition," which included the 61-member NPC, members of the Liberal Party, and several other minor parties. The Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) party led the 20-member opposition bloc. In the Senate race, being not having candidate, NPC junked 5 opposition candidates from Pwersa ng Masa namely Defense Secretary Orlando Mercado, former DSWD Usec Jamby Madrigal, Muslim leader Ombra Tamano, former Sen. Santanina Rasul and former Information Undersecretary Reuben Canoy.
2003
Main article: Brat Pack (House of Representatives of the Philippines)
In 2003, NPC stalwarts led by Escudero, and Teodoro filed an impeachment complaint against Chief Justice Hilario Davide for allegedly misusing judiciary funds for acquiring luxury cars and homes, but even though the said impeachment complaint successfully gained votes of signatures enough for its succession, Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional, and the House killed the impeachment. With the failure of impeachment in the House, rumors speculated that the coalition will go to abolishment, as pro-impeachment congressmen, mainly from the NPC disappointed in the failure of impeachment. The rumors spread, also saying that there is a faction that are lacking of satisfaction on de Venecia and will challenge his speakership. NPC later prompted to quit in the coalition for the 2004 elections, and later rumored to join the opposition.
2004 elections
In 2003, the LDP and NPC backed businessman Danding Cojuangco as a potential presidential candidate in that year's elections. Cojuangco, the NPC chair, withdrew from the campaign. But before the end of the year, NPC was sending 'mixed signals' that possibly confuse the public whether they will stay on the administration camp or jump into the opposition. Although the NPC had no seats in the Senate, the party had 53 seats in the House of Representatives after the election.
After Cojuangco withdrawn from the presidential elections, the NPC was divided— with Danding, and his sons Charlie and Mark, and nephew Gilbert Teodoro hails for supporting incumbent while the other group led by Escudero, former Senate President Ernesto Maceda, and Darlene Custodio supported Fernando Poe Jr.'s campaign. Escudero, who became Poe's spokesman berated and protested against widespread cheating while in congressional canvassing.
2005
In mid-2005, led by its House Leader Chiz Escudero, his anti-Arroyo NPC colleagues launched an impeachment complaint against incumbent President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who was apologizing for being busted for calling an election commissioner to ensure her win. Ultimately, Lakas-led House crushed the impeachment 158–51.
2007
With Escudero and newly-sworn member Loren Legarda joining Geniuine Opposition (GO), LDP stalwarts Tito Sotto and Tessie Aquino Oreta left their party and joined the NPC, but the latter two become ticket candidates of administration's TEAM Unity. Sotto claimed that some GO supporters and politicians defecting to the NPC. Escudero and Legarda managed to win, but Sotto and Aquino-Oreta lost.
Escudero and Teodoro's ambition for 2010
Two of its former House stalwarts, Senator Chiz Escudero and Defense Secretary Teodoro left NPC for their presidential ambitions. Teodoro joined Lakas–Kampi and launched his presidential campaign there, while Escudero planned also to run for presidency, but later withdrawn his bid and launched NoyBi. NPC, led by its new chairman Faustino Dy Jr., forged a coalition with Manny Villar's Nacionalista to support the latter's presidential campaign with selection of Loren Legarda as running mate.
Aquino years: 2010–2016
2010: with Manny Villar
After Manny Villar of Nacionalista officially launched his campaign for presidency, his party and NPC launched a coalition building, with Legarda and Escudero are considered to be his running-mate, with the selection of the former.
2013
With Tito Sotto's chairmanship assumption, NPC forged an alliance with the administration's Team PNoy. But Sotto sided with Jejomar Binay's UNA, with Congressman Jack Enrile as one of its senatorial candidates.
2022–present: Bongbong Marcos years
2022 elections: Divided on presidentiables
After Cojuangco's death in 2020, NPC supported the vice presidential campaign of its chairman Sotto. But, in the preferences of presidential candidates, majority of them supported either Bongbong Marcos, or Panfilo Lacson's campaign, which was Sotto's running mate.
2025 elections: Sotto vs. Escudero in Senate Presidency
After the victory of Tito Sotto in senate elections of the same year, him and Chiz Escudero, are rumored to battle for senate presidency. One of their members in the Senate JV Ejercito proposed the two to make a gentlemen's agreement, with Escudero stay and Sotto will be the next seated. With majority of NPC Senate members voted to retain Escudero as Senate President, Legarda joined Sotto in the minority.
2025 Senate coup
Amid controversies of Escudero receiving donations from flood control contractors, which he denied, and with 15 votes (which includes all NPC members except Escudero), Escudero was kicked out from the Senate Presidency with the return of Sotto.
{{anchor|1995 Senatorial slate|Results}}1995 election
The NPC fielded a 12-person Senatorial slate in the 1995 elections as an opposition party to the administration of President Fidel V. Ramos. They ran against the administration-backed Lakas–Laban Coalition.
| Candidate | Party | Occupation / | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Previous position | Elected | ||||
| Rose Marie Arenas | NPC | Businesswoman | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Gaudencio Beduya | NPC | Former representative from Cebu | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Anna Dominique Coseteng | NPC | Senator | [[Image:Yes check.svg | 15px | Yes]] |
| Amanda T. Cruz | NPC | Businesswoman | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Ramon Fernandez | NPC | Professional basketball player | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Gregorio Honasan | Independent | Former colonel | [[Image:Yes check.svg | 15px | Yes]] |
| Bongbong Marcos | KBL | Representative from Ilocos Norte | |||
| son of Ferdinand Marcos | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] | ||
| Adelisa A. Raymundo | NPC | Former labor sectoral representative | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Manuel C. Roxas | NPC | Lawyer | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Almarin C. Tillah | NPC | Chair of the Bangsamoro National Congress | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Arturo Tolentino | NPC | Senator | [[Image:X mark.svg | 15px | No]] |
| Miriam Defensor Santiago | PRP | Former Bureau of Immigration | |||
| and Deportation commissioner, | |||||
| 1992 presidential candidate | [[Image:Yes check.svg | 15px | Yes]] |
Candidates
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2010}}2007 election
In the 2007 elections, the party won 26 seats:
- Mark Cojuangco
- Faustino Dy Jr.
- Giorgidi B. Aggabao
- Michael John Duavit
- Mark Mendoza
- Arthur Y. Pingoy Jr.
- Vicente Sotto III
- Ace Durano
- Avelino Razon Jr.
- Anthony Golez
- Ernesto Maceda
- Estelito Mendoza
- Darlene Antonino Custodio
- Daisy Avance Fuentes
- Sixto Brillantes
- Loren Legarda
- Anna Dominique Coseteng
- Sherwin T. Gatchalian
- Francis Nepomuceno
- Vic Amante
- Evelio Leonardia
- Joan V. Alarilla
- Angelito Gatlabayan
- Luis Asistio
- Ding Roman
- Enrique Cojuangco
- Claude Bautista
- Emmanuel "Manny" Piñol
- Juan Ponce "Jack" Enrile Jr.
- Eleanor Bulut-Begtang
- Arnulfo P. Fuentebella
- Crisanto S. Rances
- Felix William B. Fuentebella
- Elizabeth "Tita Beth" A. Delarmente
- Francis "Chiz" Escudero
- Tom P. Bongalonta, Jr.
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2010}}2010
2010 presidential elections
Loren Legarda – Vice-presidential candidate from the Nacionalista Party and LDP (lost)
Senate:
- Miriam Defensor Santiago (under the PRP and guest candidate of Lakas–Kampi, LDP, Nacionalista and PMP) (won)
- Rodolfo Plaza (guest candidate from PMP) (lost)
- Tito Sotto (won)
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2013}}2013
Senate:
- Loren Legarda – guest candidate from Liberal Party/Team PNoy (won)
- Jack Enrile – guest candidate from Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino/United Nationalist Alliance (lost)
- Edward Hagedorn – independent (lost)
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2016}}2016
- President: Grace Poe (lost)
- Vice President: Francis Escudero (lost)
Senate:
- Win Gatchalian (won)
- Tito Sotto (won)
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2019}}2019
Senate:
- Jinggoy Estrada (guest candidate, lost)
- JV Ejercito (lost)
- Lito Lapid (won)
- Imee Marcos (guest candidate, won)
- Grace Poe (guest candidate, won)
- Bong Revilla (guest candidate, won)
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2022}}2022
Vice President: Tito Sotto (lost)
Senate:
- Herbert Bautista (lost)
- Win Gatchalian (won)
- Loren Legarda (won)
- Francis Escudero (won)
- JV Ejercito (won)
- Manny Piñol (lost)
{{anchor|Candidates for Philippine general elections, 2025}}2025
Senate:
- Abby Binay (lost)
- Tito Sotto (won)
- Lito Lapid (won)
- Panfilo Lacson (won) (Guest candidate albeit running Independent)
Electoral performance
Presidential and vice presidential elections
| Year | Presidential election | Vice presidential election | Candidate | Vote share | Result | Candidate | Vote share | Result | 1992 | 1998 | 2004 | 2010 | 2016 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eduardo | ||||||||||||||
| "Danding" | ||||||||||||||
| Cojuangco Jr. | Fidel Ramos | |||||||||||||
| (Lakas) | Joseph Estrada | Joseph Estrada | ||||||||||||
| (NPC) | ||||||||||||||
| None | Joseph Estrada | |||||||||||||
| (PMP) | None | Gloria Macapagal Arroyo | ||||||||||||
| (Lakas) | ||||||||||||||
| NoneNPC faction led by Chiz Escudero endorsed Fernando Poe Jr. for president, while Cojuangco–Teodoro–Yap wing supported Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. | Gloria Macapagal Arroyo | |||||||||||||
| (Lakas) | NoneNPC endorsed Loren Legarda for president. | Noli de Castro | ||||||||||||
| (Independent) | ||||||||||||||
| NoneLegarda's running mate was Manny Villar, a Nacionalista. | Benigno Aquino III | |||||||||||||
| (Liberal) | Loren Legarda | Jejomar Binay | ||||||||||||
| (PDP–Laban) | ||||||||||||||
| NoneNPC endorsed Grace Poe for president. | Rodrigo Duterte | |||||||||||||
| (PDP–Laban) | NoneNPC endorsed Chiz Escudero (Independent) for vice president. | Leni Robredo | ||||||||||||
| (Liberal) | ||||||||||||||
| NoneThere are no official Presidential standard bearer even Sotto has running mate (Ping Lacson) who is independent. | Bongbong Marcos | |||||||||||||
| (PFP) | Vicente Sotto III | Sara Z. Duterte | ||||||||||||
| (Lakas) |
Legislative elections
| Congress of the Philippines | Year | Seats won | Result | Year | Seats won | Ticket | Result | 1992 | 1992 | 1995 | 1995 | 1998Contested in an electoral alliance with LDP and PMP as LAMMP. Seat total consists of 55 LAMMP representatives and 9 NPC representatives elected outside the LAMMP alliance. | 1998 | 2001 | 2001 | 2004 | 2004 | 2007 | 2007 | 2010 | 2010 | 2013 | 2013 | 2016 | 2016 | 2019 | 2019 | 2022 | 2022 | 2025 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LDP plurality | Single party ticket | LDP win 16/24 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas–Laban majority | NPC ticket | Lakas–Laban win 9/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas plurality | LAMMP | LAMMP win 7/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas plurality | Not | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| participating | People Power win 8/13 seats | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas plurality | KNP | K4 win 7/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas plurality | Split ticket | GO win 8/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas–Kampi plurality | Split ticket | Liberal win 4/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Liberal plurality | Split ticket | Team PNoy win 9/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Liberal plurality | PGP | Daang Matuwid win 7/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PDP–Laban plurality | Split ticket | Hugpong win 9/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PDP–Laban plurality | Split ticket | UniTeam win 6/12 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lakas plurality | Bagong Pilipinas | Bagong Pilipinas win 6/12 seats |
Notes
{{anchor|Current composition}}19th Congress
Senate
- JV Ejercito
- Francis Escudero
- Win Gatchalian
- Lito Lapid
- Loren Legarda
House of Representatives
District Representatives
- Tyrone Agabas
- Genaro Alvarez
- Erico Aristotle Aumentado
- Lorna Bautista-Bandigan
- Gabriel Bordado
- Elias Bulut, Jr.
- Luis Campos, Jr.
- Solomon Chungalao
- Carlos Cojuangco
- Faustino Michael Dy III
- Ian Paul Dy
- Michael John Duavit
- Mark Enverga
- Sandra Eriguel
- Evelina Guevarra-Escudero
- Bayani Fernando
- Arnie Fuentebella
- Weslie Gatchalian
- Greg Gasataya
- J. Veronique Lacson-Noel
- Loren Legarda
- Dahlia Ambayec-Loyola
- Manuel Luis Lopez
- Bernardita Ramos
- Strike Revilla
- Xavier Jesus Romualdo
- Roman Romulo
- Manuel Sagarbarria
- Angelina "Helen" Tan
- Arnulfo Teves, Jr.
- Gerardo Valmayor
- Noel Villanueva
- Victor Yap
Current party officials
- Leader: Mark Cojuangco
- President: Jack Duavit
- Chairman: Tito Sotto
- Secretary-General: Mark Llandro Mendoza
- Spokesperson: Mark Enverga
- Senate President: Francis Escudero
Party leadership history
Main article: List of members of the Nationalist People's Coalition
Chairman
| Chairperson | Term start | Term end | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Danding Cojuangco | 1991 | ||
| Faustino Dy Jr. | 2009 | ||
| [[File:Tito Sotto III (cropped).jpg | 113x113px]] | Tito Sotto | 2013 |
References
References
- Guillermo, Artemio R.. (2012). "Historical dictionary of the Philippines". Scarecrow Press.
- (2015). "The Report: Philippines 2015". Oxford Business Group.
- (2019). "Political Handbook of the World 2018-2019". CQ Press.
- (2010). "Routledge Handbook of Political Management". Routledge.
- (1999). "Philippines". Facts On File.
- Perron, Louis. (2009). "Election Campaigns in the Philippines". Routledge.
- Day, Alan John. (2002). "Political Parties of the World". John Harper Publishing.
- Macaraeg, Pauline. (January 27, 2019). "Who to Vote For? Get To Know the Political Parties in the Philippines". Esquiremag.ph.
- Arcangel, Xianne. (November 15, 2023). "PDP-Laban's membership dwindles, Lakas-CMD now dominant House party". CNN Philippines.
- link. (September 28, 2007 NPC website Retrieved December 17, 2006.)
- Romero, Paolo. (October 11, 2003). "Lakas-NPC alliance tried and tested — JDV".
- (1995-05-18). "Manila poll winners finally proclaimed". Kamahalan Publishing Corporation.
- Maragay, Fei. (May 5, 1995). "Maceda conceded defeat – Ramos".
- Evangelista, Romie A. "Angara party roots for Danding". Manila Standard Today.
- (January–March 2000). "The Other Brat Pack". The Investigative Reporting Magazine.
- (December 15, 2016). "Background Note: Philippines". [[United States Department of State]].
- Danao, Efren. (March 15, 2001). "NPC to junk 5 Senate bets from opposition".
- Romero, Paolo. (October 24, 2003). "House impeaches Davide".
- Romero, Paolo. (November 12, 2003). "House votes 115-77 to junk impeachment".
- (June 10, 2004). "'Sunshine Coalition' bubuwagin sa 13th Congress".
- Romero, Paolo. (November 12, 2003). "JDV belittles bid to unseat him as Speaker".
- Samia, Pamela. (October 12, 2003). "NPC timetable set for 2004 polls".
- Romero, Paolo. (October 6, 2003). "NPC rebuffs LDP: No decision on coalition yet".
- (2003-11-16). "'NPC sending mixed signals for 2004'".
- [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/philippines/ Introduction: Philippines] CIA -The World Fact Book Retrieved December 10, 2006.
- "Danding Cojuangco and the NPC".
- Romero, Paolo. (July 2, 2005). "Palace prefers impeachment to destabilization".
- Diaz, Jess. (September 7, 2005). "House votes 158-51 to kill impeachment".
- (2007-01-28). "Sotto says row with UNO prompted 'defection' to NPC".
- Mendez, Christina. (October 29, 2009). "Escudero quits NPC".
- Diaz, Jess. (August 8, 2009). "NPC to announce 2010 bets this month".
- Calica, Aurea. (October 31, 2009). "Villar likely to pick Loren".
- Punay, Edu. (June 20, 2020). "NPC, House leaders honor Danding".
- Gomez, Carla. (2022-04-20). "Sotto: NPC is free zone for choice of president".
- Abadilla, Bench. (2025-06-05). "Gentleman’s agreement on the table: Chiz Escudero to lead Senate now, Tito Sotto later?".
- Ager, Maila. (2025-05-21). "Escudero, Sotto seek Duterte bloc’s support for Senate presidency – Go".
- "Sotto open to term-sharing for Senate presidency".
- Magsambol, Bonz. (2025-07-28). "Chiz Escudero elected again as Senate president".
- Flores, Dominique Nicole. (September 2, 2025). "Top flood contractor admits P30-million donation to Escudero's campaign but...".
- Abarca, Charie. (2025-08-12). "Escudero denies helping contractor, admits P30M campaign donation".
- Tamayo, Bernadette E.. (2025-09-09). "Sotto to lead Senate again as majority votes to oust Escudero".
- Gomez, Carla. (2022-04-20). "Sotto: NPC is free zone for choice of president".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Nationalist People's Coalition — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report