2022 Manila local elections

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2022 Manila local elections

 2019
May 9, 2022 (2022-05-09)
2025 
Turnout78.21% Increase 9.1 pp
Mayoral election
 
Candidate Honey Lacuna Alex Lopez Amado Bagatsing
Party Asenso Manileño PFP KABAKA
Alliance Honey-Yul UniTeam Manila Team Amado
Running mate Yul Servo Raymond Bagatsing
Popular vote 538,595 166,908 118,694
Percentage 63.68% 19.74% 14.03%

A map showing the results of the Manila mayoral election by barangay

Mayor before election

Isko Moreno
Asenso Manileño

Elected mayor

Honey Lacuna
Asenso Manileño

Vice mayoral election
 
Candidate Yul Servo Raymond Bagatsing
Party Asenso Manileño KBL
Alliance Honey-Yul UniTeam Manila
Popular vote 586,855 185,431
Percentage 73.67% 23.28%

A map showing the results of the Manila vice mayoral election by barangay

Vice Mayor before election

Honey Lacuna
Asenso Manileño

Elected Vice Mayor

Yul Servo
Asenso Manileño

City Council election

36 of 38 seats in the Manila City Council
20 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party Asenso Manileño Independent PDP–Laban
Alliance Honey-Yul UniTeam
Last election 16 seats, 38.89% 2 seats, 3.83% 1 seat, 4.48%
Seats won 34 2 0
Seat change Increase 18 Steady Decrease 1
Popular vote 2,950,976 362,764 424,515
Percentage 68.56% 8.43% 9.86%

Local elections were held at Manila on May 9, 2022, as part of the Philippine general election. Held concurrently with the national elections, the electorate voted to elect a mayor, a vice mayor, thirty-six city council members and six district representatives to congress. Those elected took their respective offices on June 30, 2022, for a three-year-long term. 886,133 of 1,133,042 registered voters voted in this election.

Incumbent mayor Isko Moreno was opted to run for re-election for a second term, but he chose to run for president. Vice mayor Honey Lacuna and representative Yul Servo were elected to the mayoralty and vice mayoralty respectively, with Lacuna becoming the first woman to be elected to the office. The Asenso Manileño party became the only party represented in the city council after winning 34 seats in the legislature. The remaining two seats were won by independents Ninong Lacsamana of the 2nd district and Bobby Espiritu II of the 5th district.

Ernix Dionisio, Rolan Valeriano, Joel Chua, Edward Maceda, Irwin Tieng and Benny Abante were elected to be the representatives for the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth districts respectively.

Elections for mayor, vice mayor and for the six members of the House of Representatives are via first-past-the-post voting. For members of the city council, it is via multiple non-transferable vote, with the candidates with six highest votes winning.

Elections for mayor and vice mayor are done at an at-large basis. Elections for members of the House of Representatives of the Philippines and the Manila City Council are via the legislative districts of Manila.

There are an additional two ex officio seats in the city council, for the city federation presidents of the Liga ng mga Barangay (village councilors league) and the Sangguniang Kabataan (youth council league). These were originally elected in 2018, and whose terms were extended until 2023. Separate elections for these bodies will be in October 2023.

Background

Mayor Isko Moreno and Vice Mayor Honey Lacuna are the incumbents; both are members of Aksyon Demokratiko and the local party Asenso Manileño. Moreno was elected in 2019, defeating incumbent Mayor Joseph Estrada, while Lacuna was elected in 2016, succeeding Moreno.

Moreno chose not to seek reelection as the mayor of Manila and will instead run for president of the Philippines in 2022.[1][2] Asenso Manileño nominated Lacuna and incumbent 3rd district representative Yul Servo Nieto for mayor and vice mayor, respectively.[3] Lacuna's notable challengers for mayor are former Philippine National Police DICTM deputy director Elmer Jamias (People's Reform Party), former 5th district representative Amado Bagatsing (KABAKA), and Christy Lim-Raymundo (Reporma), the daughter of former mayor Alfredo Lim, who died in 2020. Bagatsing is the son of another former mayor, Ramon Bagatsing. In 2019, Jamias lost the vice mayoralty race, while Lim-Raymundo lost the city council election. Alex Lopez (Partido Federal ng Pilipinas), the son of former mayor Mel Lopez, later joined the mayoralty race on November 10, 2021, as a substitute to Calvin Punzalan.[4] Lopez also lost the 2019 elections in the congressional race at the 2nd district. Bagatsing also joined the mayoralty race during the substitution period; he previously ran for mayor in 2001 and in 2016 but lost.[5]

Meanwhile, in the vice mayoralty race, Nieto notably faced actor Raymond Bagatsing of Kilusang Bagong Lipunan. Bagatsing is the nephew of mayoral candidate Amado Bagatsing, making him a grandson of former mayor Ramon Bagatsing.[6] Raymond Bagatsing was later chosen as the running mate of Alex Lopez.

Previous potential candidates for mayor included former president and Manila Mayor Joseph Estrada and incumbent 1st district representative Manny Lopez. Estrada lost to Moreno in 2019 and said in July of the same year that he would run again for mayor.[7] However, he did not file his Certificate of Candidacy in October 2021. Meanwhile, Lopez, another son of former Manila Mayor Mel Lopez and the current chair of the House Committee on Metro Manila Development, was chosen by the PDP–LabanCusi wing as its mayoral candidate[8] but chose to seek reelection for representative instead, with his brother Alex taking his place in the mayoralty race.[9]

Candidates

Opinion polling

Mayor

Fieldwork Date(s) Pollster Sample Size MoE Abad
Ind.
Lim
Reporma
Bagatsing
KABAKA
Jamias
PRP
Lacuna
Asenso
Lopez
PFP
Undecided/
Other
Apr. 25–28 PUBLiCUS Asia Inc.[10] 1,625 ±3.00% 6% 7% 15% 1% 25% 12% 26%
Apr. 8–13 PUBLiCUS Asia Inc.[11] 7% 6% 4% 9% 26% 13% 35%
March 25 Start of Campaign Period for Local Candidates
Mar. 15–22 RPMDinc[12] 25% 53% 20% 2%
Feb. 22–28 RPMDinc[13] 26% 56% 15% 3%
Feb. 18–24 PUBLiCUS Asia Inc.[14] 4% 8% 3% 44% 10% 31%
Jan. 22–30 RPMDinc[15] 30% 57% 11% 2%
Dec. 16–23 RPMDinc[16] 28% 53% 12% 7%
Nov. 16–24 RPMDinc[17] 31% 48% 14% 7%

Vice Mayor

Fieldwork Date(s) Pollster Sample Size MoE Bagatsing
KBL
Lapinig
Reporma
Nieto
Asenso
Reyes
Ind.
Undecided/
Other
Apr. 25–28 PUBLiCUS Asia Inc.[10] 1,625 ±3.00% 34% 9% 16% 9% 32%
March 25 Start of Campaign Period for Local Candidates
Apr. 8–13 PUBLiCUS Asia Inc.[11] 31% 14% 17% 10% 28%

Results

Aftermath

References

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