Legislative districts of Isabela
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The Legislative Districts of Isabela, namely the first, second, third, fourth districts, are the representations of the Province of Isabela and the independent city of Santiago in the Philippine House of Representatives. The province was represented as a lone legislative district until 1972. It was part of the representation of Region II from 1978 to 1984, and from 1984 to 1986, it elected 3 assemblymen at-large. In 1986, it was redistricted into four legislative districts.
1st District
- City: Ilagan City
- Municipalities: Cabagan, Delfin Albano, Divilacan, Maconacon, Palanan, San Pablo, Santa Maria, Santo Tomas, Tumauini
- Population (2015): 390,977
Period | Representative |
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1987–1992 |
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1992–1995 | |
1995–1998 | |
1998–2001 |
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2001–2004 |
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2004–2007 |
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2007–2010 | |
2010–2013 |
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2013–2016 |
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2016–2019 |
2nd District
- Municipalities: Aurora, Benito Soliven, Burgos, Gamu, Mallig, Naguilian, Quezon, Quirino, Roxas, San Manuel, San Mariano
- Population (2015): 380,090
Period | Representative |
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1987–1992 |
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1992–1995 |
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1995–1998 | |
1998–2001 | |
2001–2004 |
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2004–2007 | |
2007–2010 | |
2010–2013 |
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2013–2016 | |
2016–2019 |
3rd District
- City: Cauayan City
- Municipalities: Alicia, Angadanan, Cabatuan, Luna, Reina Mercedes, San Guillermo, San Mateo
- Population (2015): 414,530
Period | Representative |
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1987–1992 |
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1992–1995 | |
1995–1998 | |
1998–2001 |
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2001–2004 |
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2004–2007 | |
2007–2010 | |
2010–2013 |
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2013–2016 | |
2016–2019 |
4th District (shared with Santiago City)
- City: Santiago City1
- Municipalities: Cordon, Dinapigue, Echague, Jones, Ramon, San Agustin, San Isidro
- Population (2015): 407,969
Period | Representative |
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1987–1992 |
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1992–1995 | |
1995–1998 | |
1998–2001 |
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2001–2004 |
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2004–2007 |
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2007–2010 |
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2010–2013 | |
2013–2016 | |
2016–2019 |
- ^1 Independent component city since July 4, 1994. Independent from the province and does not vote for provincial officials by virtue of Republic Act No. 7720. Only votes with Isabela for congressional representation.
- ^2 Died on February 26, 2003.
- ^3 Elected to complete the unexpired term of predecessor, assumed office on May 19, 2003.
Lone District (defunct)
Period | Representative |
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1907–1909 |
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1909–1912 |
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1912–1916 | |
1916–1919 |
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1919–1922 |
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1922–1925 |
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1925–1928 |
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1928–1931 |
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1931–1934 |
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1934–1935 |
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1935–1938 |
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1938–1941 | |
1941–1946 |
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1946–1949 |
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1949–1953 |
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1953–1957 | |
1957–1961 |
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1961–1965 | |
1965–1969 |
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1969–1972 |
- ^1 Unseated by the Assembly.
Jernegan, Prescott F. (2009). The Philippine Citizen. BiblioBazaar. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-115-97139-3.
At-large (defunct)
Period | Representative |
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1943–1944 |
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1984–1986 |
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References
- Philippine House of Representatives Congressional Library
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