16-693: WPP may refer to: Labor Party Philippines , also called WPP, is a Filipino political party. WPP plc , a British multinational advertising and public relations company WPP domain , a protein domain found in plants Wavefront parallel processing , a video coding technique White Patriot Party , a former American white supremacist paramilitary political party Windows software trace preprocessor United States Federal Witness Protection Program Woman's Peace Party , an American pacifist organization established in 1915 World Press Photo , holder of an annual press photography contest Topics referred to by
32-589: Is a political party in the Philippines. The Philippine Trade Union Center split into different groups, which included the Labor Party of the Philippines. Led by Cipriano Cid, Roberto Oca, Ignacio Lacsina and Felixberto Olalia, the Labor Party failed to win an election. Some members reorganized themselves into the Katipunang Manggagawang Pilipino (Association of Filipino Workers) at April 25, 1959, at
48-599: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Labor Party Philippines The Labor Party Philippines , also known as the Workers' and Peasants' Party ( WPP ; this is their preferred acronym) and formerly known as the Partido ng Manggagawa at Magsasaka (lit. Workers' and Farmers' Party; PMM ) and the Lapiang Manggagawa ( lit. ' Workers' Party ' ; LM ),
64-507: The 1992 elections , the party merged with the Lakas-NUCD . For the 1998 elections , the party merged with the Partido ng Demokratikong Reporma (Party for Democratic Reform). For the 2010 presidential election , the party announced its nomination of Secretary of Public Works and Highways Hermogenes Ebdane for president. Ebdane accepted the nomination in November 2009, but withdrew from
80-572: The 1998 Philippine Senate election . Haydee Yorac , Roy Señeres , and Rey Langit were among the candidates who failed to win a single seat in the Senate. In the 2004 elections , Reporma supported the candidacy of former Senator and Education Secretary Raul Roco from Aksyon Demokratiko , in which Reporma forged an electoral alliance with the PROMDI party of Cebu under the name " Alyansa ng Pag-asa " (Alliance of Hope). The party won one out of 235 seats in
96-422: The 2016 presidential election , the party nominated former ambassador and House representative for OFW Family Club Roy Señeres . Señeres was in the initial list of official candidates. However, he withdrew on February 5, 2016. Seneres eventually died of a heart attack three days later. Despite his withdrawal and death, he still remained on the ballot. The party presented Apolonia Soguilon as his substitute, but
112-486: The House of Representatives of the Philippines in the 2004 Philippine general election . The Lapiang Manggawa contested in the 2010 elections on their own, while Reporma has faded from the political scene. In 2020, former speaker Pantaleon Alvarez resigned from the ruling PDP–Laban and accepted de Villa's offer of him becoming secretary-general of the revived Reporma. In the 2022 elections , Reporma initially supported
128-627: The Liberal Party . However, some founders from that Lyceum of the Philippines meeting persisted and carried on the "Lapiang Manggagawa" name. It was also known, albeit briefly in 1965, as the Socialist Party of the Philippines. The party registered with the Commission on Elections in 1983. The party supported the Corazon Aquino - Salvador Laurel ticket in the 1986 presidential election . In
144-709: The Manila Hotel with Oca as party president but other groups soon disassociated themselves from the party. Founded on February 3, 1963, as the Lapiang Manggagawa (LM), Cipriano Cid, the founder, complained that the "party leaders were already being closely watched." The party broke up in August 1963, and its candidate for the Manila mayoralty, Roberto Oca, was recruited by the Nacionalista Party . Other members coalesced into
160-576: The Partido Lakas ng Manggagawang Pilipino (PLMP) in Clark Freeport Zone, Pampanga. Partido para sa Demokratikong Reporma The Partido para sa Demokratikong Reporma ( transl. Party for Democratic Reforms ; abbr. PDR ), commonly known as Partido Reporma , is a political party in the Philippines . It was founded by former Defense Secretary Renato de Villa when he left
176-399: The candidacy of Senator Panfilo Lacson , which initially installed him as the party's chairman, replacing Alvarez. The parties of Partido Reporma, United Nationalist Alliance , and Nationalist People's Coalition are in talks to forge an electoral alliance for the 2022 elections. However, on March 24, 2022, Lacson decided to run as an independent and resigned as a member and chairman of
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#1732855952818192-537: The party. Later that day, Alvarez, the party's president endorsed the candidacy of Vice President Leni Robredo . The following month, some members of Partido Reporma, including those from Aklan and Antique , expressed disappointment with Alvarez's decision as they continued rooting for the Lacson–Sotto tandem. But even though, party founder de Villa still suported Lacson's campaign. On September 20, 2024, Partido Demokratiko Pilipino formally formed an alliance for
208-538: The presidential race in December 2009. Ebdane ran instead for the governorship of Zambales ; he won, defeating Governor Amor Deloso . In 2012 Zambales' 2nd district special election , Ebdane's son Jun Omar successfully defended the district's seat in the House of Representatives of the Philippines against Deloso's daughter and from deceased Antonio M. Diaz 's daughter, who ran under the Nacionalista Party. For
224-511: The ruling Lakas-NUCD after failing to get the nomination as the party's presidential candidate in the 1998 elections . He chose then Pangasinan governor Oscar Orbos as his running mate. The Lapiang Manggagawa (Workers' Party) forged an electoral alliance with Reporma for the 1998 elections, and the two parties contested in the elections as " Reporma–LM ". However, De Villa and Orbos both lost to Joseph Estrada and Gloria Macapagal Arroyo , respectively. The alliance also failed to win seats in
240-403: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title WPP . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=WPP&oldid=1222013251 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
256-450: Was rejected because she had a different surname. Ultimately, Señeres still received around 22,000 votes in the election. The party fielded candidates for the 2019 senatorial election . PMM's ticket consisted of Shariff Albani, Gerald Arcega, Marcelino Arias, Melchor Chavez, Jose Sonny Matula, and Luther Meniano. The party supported Bongbong Marcos during the 2022 presidential election as cited by its unified national convention with
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