List of political parties in the Philippines
There are many and diverse political parties in the Philippines. Most party membership consists primarily of political figures and leaders, with little or no grassroots membership.
The Philippines has a multi-party system with numerous political parties, in which no one party often has a chance of gaining power alone, and parties must work with each other to form coalition governments for political expediency and convenience. Since no political parties have sustaining membership to which party leaders are developed, most of the political parties have the rise-and-fall-and-rise character.
There are three types of parties in the Philippines. These are: major parties, which typically correspond to traditional political parties; minor parties or party-list organizations, which rely on the party-list system to win Congressional seats; and regional or provincial parties, which correspond to region-wide or province-wide organizations, respectively.
National parties in office
Major parties
There are two major coalitions for the upcoming 2019 Philippine general election:- PDP–Laban, the ruling party, leads the Coalition for Change. Most of the coalition's members are also part of the Hugpong ng Pagbabago.
- Liberal Party leads the Oposisyon Koalisyon, together with Akbayan and Aksyon Demokratiko, which will serve as the opposition bloc.
Parties represented in Congress
Party-lists represented in Congress
These parties won more than 2% of the vote. For the complete list, see Philippine House of Representatives election, 2019.Other national parties
COMELEC classifies "national" parties as parties that are not restricted to one locality.Local parties
Not registered with the government
These are national parties that are not registered with the Commission on Elections:Name | Abbr. | Leader | Ideology | Position | Notes |
Green Party of the Philippines | GPP | Green politics | Centre-left | Former member of Global Greens | |
Philippine Libertarian Party | PHILIPA | Julius Apud | Right-libertarianism | Right-wing | Emergent political party representing the local liberty movement; formerly an unregistered party list representing traders, innovators, and technologists for industrial modernization |
Libertarian Conservative Party of the Philippines | LCPP | Manuel Cababan | Libertarian conservatism | Right-wing | The political philosophy that seeks to enlighten and liberate the Filipinos. |
Koalisyong Katoliko Kristiyano | KKK | Rizalito David | Christian democracy | Centre-right | Emergent political party that is the offshoot of the Ang Kapatiran |
Communist Party of the Philippines | CPP | Jose Maria Sison | Marxism–Leninism–Maoism | Far-left | Offshoot of the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 |
Lakas Partido Komunista | LPK | Ban James Lumacad / John Wendell Lagazo / Jefferson Magbutay | Marxism–Leninism | Far-left | Separate youth entity |
Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 | PKP-1930 | Antonio Paris | Marxism–Leninism | Far-left | Established as Comintern Philippine branch |
Marxist-Leninist Party of the Philippines | MLPP | Caridad Magpantay | Marxism–Leninism | Far-left | Breakaway faction from the Communist Party of the Philippines established in 1997 |
Partido ng Manggagawang Pilipino – Pinagsanib | PMP-Pinagsanib | Patricio Ramirez | Syndicalism | Far-left | Breakaway faction from the Communist Party of the Philippines established in 2001 |
Rebolusyonaryong Partido ng Manggagagawa – Pilipinas | RPM-P | Arturo Tabara / Nilo dela Cruz | Marxism–Leninism | Far-left | Breakaway faction from the Communist Party of the Philippines established in 1998 |
Historical parties/coalitions
Parties
- Democratic Alliance
- Democratic Party
- Federalist Party
- Grand Alliance
- Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino
- KALIBAPI
- Lakas ng Bayan
- Lakas–CMD
- Lapiang Malaya
- Nationalist Citizens' Party
- *Citizens' Party
- Philippine Falange
- Progresista Party
- Progressive Party
- *Party for Philippine Progress
- Sakdalista
- *Ganap Party
- United Opposition
Major coalitions