18th Congress of the Philippines
The 18th Congress of the Philippines, composed of the Philippine Senate and House of Representatives, met from July 22, 2019, until June 1, 2022, during the last three years of Rodrigo Duterte's presidency. The convening of the 18th Congress followed the 2019 general elections, which replaced half of the Senate membership and the entire membership of the House of Representatives.
Leadership
Senate
- President: Tito Sotto
- President pro tempore: Ralph Recto
- Majority Floor Leader: Juan Miguel Zubiri
- Minority Floor Leader: Franklin Drilon
House of Representatives
- Speaker:
- *Alan Peter Cayetano, until October 13, 2020
- *Lord Allan Velasco, from October 13, 2020
- [Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines|Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines|Senior Deputy Speaker]:
- *Paulino Salvador Leachon, from October 14, 2020
- Deputy Speakers:
- *Paolo Duterte, until October 13, 2020
- *Dinand Hernandez
- * Evelina Escudero
- * Loren Legarda
- * Conrado Estrella III
- * Prospero Pichay Jr.
- * Roberto Puno
- * Eddie Villanueva
- * Aurelio Gonzales Jr., until December 7, 2020
- * Johnny Pimentel, until December 7, 2020
- * Luis Raymund Villafuerte, until October 14, 2020
- * Raneo Abu, until November 18, 2020
- * Neptali Gonzales II
- * Danilo Fernandez, until November 18, 2020
- * Rose Marie Arenas, from July 29, 2019
- * Rodante Marcoleta, from July 29, 2019
- * Henry Oaminal, from July 29, 2019
- * Pablo John Garcia, from July 29, 2019
- * Vilma Santos, from August 13, 2019
- * Deogracias Victor Savellano, from August 13, 2019
- * Mujiv Hataman, from August 13, 2019
- * Mikee Romero, August 13, 2019 – October 2, 2020 and from October 14, 2020
- * Fredenil Castro, October 2 – November 18, 2020
- * Lito Atienza, from November 18, 2020
- * Rufus Rodriguez, from November 18, 2020
- * Arnolfo Teves Jr., from December 7, 2020
- * Benny Abante, from December 7, 2020
- * Wes Gatchalian, from December 7, 2020
- * Eric Martinez, from December 7, 2020
- * Juan Pablo Bondoc, from December 7, 2020
- * Bernadette Herrera, from December 7, 2020
- * Divina Grace Yu, from December 7, 2020
- * Rogelio Pacquiao, from December 7, 2020
- * Kristine Singson-Meehan, from December 7, 2020
- * Strike Revilla, from December 14, 2020
- * Isidro Ungab, from December 16, 2020
- * Abraham Tolentino, from December 16, 2020
- * Camille Villar, from February 2, 2021
- * Len Alonte, from March 25, 2021
- Majority Floor Leader: Martin Romualdez
- Minority Floor Leader:
- *Benny Abante, until October 16, 2020
- *Joseph Stephen Paduano, from October 19, 2020
Sessions
First Regular Session: July 22, 2019 – June 5, 2020- *July 22 – October 4, 2019
- *October 5 – November 3, 2019
- *November 4 – December 20, 2019
- *January 20 – March 13, 2020
- *March 14 – May 3, 2020
- **First Special Session: March 23, 2020
- *May 4 – June 5, 2020
- Second Regular Session: July 27, 2020 – June 4, 2021
- *July 27 – October 12, 2020
- *Second Special Session: October 13–16, 2020
- *November 16 – December 18, 2020
- *January 18 – March 26, 2021
- *May 17 – June 4, 2021
- Third Regular Session: July 26, 2021 – June 3, 2022
- *July 26 – September 30, 2021
- *November 8 – December 17, 2021
- *January 17 – February 4, 2022
- *May 23 – June 1, 2022
Meeting places
- Senate: GSIS Building, Pasay
- House of Representatives: Batasang Pambansa Complex, Quezon City
- * Batangas City Convention Center, Batangas City
- * Celebrity Sports Plaza, Quezon City
Composition
Both chambers of Congress are divided into parties and blocs. While members are elected via parties, blocs are the basis for committee memberships. Only members of the majority and minority blocs are accorded committee memberships. This is how blocs are determined:- Majority bloc: All members who voted for the Senate President or Speaker during the Senate presidential or speakership election.
- Minority bloc: All members who voted for the second-placed candidate during the Senate presidential or speakership election.
- Independent minority bloc: All members who did not vote for the winning or second-best nominee during the Senate presidential or speakership election.
- Independent bloc: All members who abstained from voting during the Senate presidential or speakership election.
- Not a member of any bloc: All members who have not voted during the Senate presidential or speakership election.
Members
Senate
The following are the terms of the senators of this Congress, according to the date of election:- For senators elected on May 9, 2016: June 30, 2016 – June 30, 2022
- For senators elected on May 13, 2019: June 30, 2019 – June 30, 2025
House of Representatives
Terms of members of the House of Representatives started on June 30, 2019, took office on July 22, 2019, and ended on June 30, 2022, unless stated otherwise.Agenda
Death penalty
As of July 2019, bills seeking to reinstate capital punishment in the Philippines have been revived in the Senate ahead of the opening of the 18th Congress.COVID-19 pandemic
The 18th Congress enacted the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act and Bayanihan to Recover as One Act as response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines.ABS-CBN franchise renewal
In May 2020, the House of Representatives acted on the pending franchise renewal bills of ABS-CBN that has been pending since July 2019.House Speakership crisis
In 2020, the position of Speaker was disputed, which in the latter part of the year threatened the passage of a bill legislating the national government's budget for 2021. The dispute involved then-speaker and Pateros–Taguig representative Alan Peter Cayetano and Marinduque representative Lord Allan Velasco. This started in July 2019, when the two had a "term-sharing agreement" which was brokered by President Rodrigo Duterte. Under that deal, Cayetano would serve as House Speaker for the first 15 months of the 18th Congress, or until October 2020. Cayetano was to step down from his position as speaker in order to give way for the election of Velasco as speaker.Cayetano, in March 2020, accused Velasco and his camp of a conspiracy to remove him from his position as House Speaker. Velasco denied Cayetano's allegation of supposed ouster plot, stating it "baseless." Cayetano initially oversaw deliberations on the 2021 national budget but tensions in the lower house of the Congress grew by September 2020. His camp abruptly ended sessions in which some legislators criticizing the move which prevented them from scrutinizing proposals on the 2021 budget.
Cayetano offered to resign but his camp claim that majority of the House of Representatives declined his resignation. On October 12, 2020, Lord Allan Velasco and some legislators convened at the Celebrity Sports Complex in Quezon City and conducted a house session where positions including the speakership was declared vacant and appointed Velasco as house speaker. Velasco's camp claimed that 186 lawmakers voted for his appointment as house speaker. Cayetano's camp declared the session a "travesty" and questioned the legality of the session itself. Cayetano maintained that he remains as house speaker. On the other hand, Cayetano called the appointment of Velasco as a speaker a "fake session" as he added that there was no prior plenary resolution authorizing the holding of a session outside the Batasang Pambansa and insists that the House of Representative mace used in the meeting is illegal.
On October 13, 2020, during the start of the special session of the House, Velasco's election as House Speaker on October 12, 2020 was formally ratified by 186 representatives assembled in the Batasang Pambansa. At the same time, Cayetano tendered his "irrevocable" resignation as House Speaker on his Facebook Live paving the way for Velasco to assume his position undisputed.
Legislation
Republic Acts
The 18th Congress passed a total of 311 bills which were signed into law by President Rodrigo Duterte. 119 of these laws were national in scope, while 192 were local:Treaties
One treaty has been approved by the Senate:| Resolution number | Title | Foreign party | Vote | Date of approval |
| RP-Russian Federation Treaty on Extradition | Russia |
Russia