2001 Philippine vice presidential confirmation

On January 20, 2001, President Joseph Estrada was overthrown by the peaceful Second EDSA Revolution (EDSA II). Vice president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was sworn in as the fourteenth president of the Philippines, leaving the office of the vice president vacant. According to Article VII, Section 9 of the 1987 Philippine Constitution, a vacancy in the vice presidency is filled by presidential nomination from among the members of the Senate and the House of Representatives, subject to confirmation by a majority vote of all members of each chamber voting separately.

2001 Philippine vice presidential confirmation

February 7, 2001 (2001-02-07)

24 and 257 members of the Senate and House
Majority of both Senate and House votes needed to win
 
Nominee Teofisto Guingona Jr.
Party Lakas
Electoral vote 18 (Senate)
140 (House)
Percentage 94.74% (Senate)
100.00% (House)

Vice President before election

Gloria Macapagal Arroyo

Confirmed Vice President

Teofisto Guingona Jr.

On February 6, 2001, Arroyo announced in a televised speech her nomination of Senate minority leader Teofisto Guingona Jr. as vice president. Other candidates she considered included Senate president Aquilino Pimentel Jr., and senators Franklin Drilon, Raul Roco, Loren Legarda, and Ramon Magsaysay Jr. Arroyo later stated that her choice would come from Mindanao, narrowing the selection to Guingona and Pimentel, before ultimately selecting Guingona as her nominee.

Confirmation votes

With 18 votes, the Senate confirmed the nomination of Teofisto Guingona Jr. Senators Miriam Defensor-Santiago, Juan Ponce Enrile, and John Henry Osmeña voted in the affirmative, although with reservations, pending the Supreme Court’s ruling on the legitimacy of Arroyo’s presidency. Senators Tessie Aquino-Oreta and Robert Barbers were noted to be absent during the vote. The House of Representatives unanimously confirmed Guingona's nomination, although Maguindanao's first district representative Didagen Dilangalen expressed dissent (despite not objecting to the motion to confirm made by South Cotabato's 1st district representative Luwalhati Antonino), stating he would block the confirmation as he considered Arroyo an acting president, and that there is no vacancy in the vice presidency.

Despite this, the Senate confirmed Guingona’s nomination through Resolution No. 82, while the House approved it through Resolution No. 178. Guingona took his oath of office on February 9, 2001, as the eleventh vice president of the Philippines.

2001 Philippine Senate
Vice presidential
confirmation vote:
Total votes
Yes 18 (94.74%)
Abstention 1 (5.26%)
Result: Confirmed
Roll call vote on the nomination
Senator Party Vote
Tessie Aquino-Oreta LAMMP Absent
Robert Barbers Lakas Absent
Rodolfo Biazon LAMMP Yes
Rene Cayetano Lakas Yes
Nikki Coseteng LAMMP Yes
Miriam Defensor Santiago PRP Yes
Franklin Drilon LAMMP Yes
Teofisto Guingona Jr. Lakas Abstain
Juan Flavier Lakas Yes
Gregorio Honasan Independent Yes
Robert Jaworski LAMMP Yes
Loren Legarda Lakas Yes
Ramon Magsaysay Jr. LAMMP Yes
Blas Ople LAMMP Yes
John Henry Osmeña LDP Absent
Serge Osmeña Liberal Yes
Nene Pimentel PDP–Laban Yes
Juan Ponce Enrile Independent Yes
Ramon Revilla Sr. Lakas Yes
Raul Roco Aksyon Yes
Tito Sotto LAMMP Yes
Francisco Tatad Gabay Bayan Yes
2001 Philippine House
Vice presidential
confirmation vote:
Total votes
Yes 140 (100.00%)
Result: Confirmed

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