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Majority Floor Leader of the Senate of the Philippines

The majority floor leader of the Senate of the Philippines (), or simply the Senate majority floor leader, is the leader elected by the political party or coalition of parties that holds the majority in the Senate of the Philippines.

By tradition, the Senate president or any presiding officer gives the majority leader priority in obtaining the floor and is also the traditional chairman of the Committee on Rules. The majority leader also manages the business of the majority bloc in the Senate.

The current Senate majority floor leader is Juan Miguel Zubiri.

Two deputy majority leaders serving concurrently assist the majority leader in his duties and assumes the latter's responsibilities when the majority leader is absent. JV Ejercito and Risa Hontiveros are serving as deputy majority leaders of the 20th Congress in the Senate.

History

1910s–1990s

The position of floor leader representing the chamber as a whole was created in 1916 upon the establishment of the Philippine Senate. Francisco Felipe Villanueva of the Nacionalista Party was elected as the Senate’s first floor leader. From then until the first abolition of the Senate in 1935, the Nacionalista Party emerged as the ruling party in Congress, establishing a virtually dominant-party system in the Philippines. In 1931, Claro M. Recto became the lone minority member after distancing himself from his Nacionalista partymates, thus becoming the minority leader and creating the distinction of a majority floor leader. Benigno Aquino Sr. was the first senator elected to the role in this capacity, leading the majority bloc. Recto, previously a member of the Democrata Party, rejoined the Senate majority after switching to the Nacionalista Party by 1934 and was elected floor leader.

By the 1st Congress, after several Nacionalista members led by Manuel Roxas broke away from the party to run under its liberal wing for the 1946 elections, which later established the Liberal Party, a form of the two-party system emerged. Vicente Francisco led the Liberal majority bloc after the party won 9 of the 16 contested seats in the first postwar Senate election. The Nacionalistas regained their majority in the 3rd Congress, led by Cipriano Primicias Sr. as floor leader. He is the longest-serving Senate majority floor leader in history, with a total uninterrupted tenure of 7 years and 339 days. Arturo Tolentino served as the last majority floor leader of the Senate from 1970 until 1972, when the chamber was dissolved following president Ferdinand Marcos’s declaration of martial law.

The Senate was reestablished under the 1987 Constitution. Orlando Mercado became the leader of the majority bloc, now composed of multiple political parties forming an internal alliance rather than functioning as standalone parties. Teofisto Guingona Jr. succeeded Mercado in 1990, until he was replaced by Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) senator Alberto Romulo at the fifth regular session of the 8th Congress. The LDP became the majority party in the Senate by 1992, with member Francisco Tatad serving as majority leader from 1996. A coup ousted incumbent Senate president Ernesto Maceda in 1998, installing Neptali Gonzales in the position and Lakas–NUCD–UMDP senator Franklin Drilon as majority leader.

2000s–present

Tatad was reelected to the position in 2000 under Drilon’s Senate presidency. Loren Legarda became the first and only woman senator elected as majority floor leader in 2001. Legarda left the majority in 2004 after allying with the opposition coalition Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino for her vice presidential bid against president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s running mate, senator Noli de Castro, and was replaced by Francis Pangilinan. The election of Juan Ponce Enrile as Senate president in November 2008 saw Pangilinan replaced by Juan Miguel Zubiri as majority leader, the youngest to be elected in Senate history. In the 15th Congress, Tito Sotto was elected to the position. He was notable for chairing the Committee on Rules which drafted the Senate’s rules on impeachment proceedings used during the trial of chief justice Renato Corona. Alan Peter Cayetano led the Senate majority in the 16th Congress, with Sotto returning to the position in 2016 until his election as Senate president in 2018 following a term-sharing agreement with Koko Pimentel.

Juan Miguel Zubiri was reelected as majority floor leader after eight years in 2018, becoming the first independent senator to serve in the position, and held the post until his election as Senate president at the start of the 19th Congress. Joel Villanueva then became Zubiri’s majority floor leader in 2022, resigning in 2024 when Zubiri stepped down as Senate president and was succeeded by Francis Escudero. Francis Tolentino subsequently served as the new majority leader until the end of his senatorial term in 2025. Villanueva aligned himself with Escudero’s majority after his reelection as Senate president, becoming majority leader at the start of the 20th Congress. Zubiri, who had previously served as majority leader during Tito Sotto’s first tenure as Senate president, reassumed the position on September 8, 2025, after Sotto was reelected to the Senate presidency following a leadership coup.

List of majority floor leaders

List of deputy majority floor leaders

See also

Notes

References

External links