Cipriano P. Primicias Sr. | |
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Senator of the Philippines | |
In office December 30, 1951 – December 30, 1963 |
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Majority leader of the Senate of the Philippines | |
In office 1953 – December 30, 1963 |
|
President |
Ramon Magsaysay Carlos P. Garcia Diosdado Macapagal |
Preceded by | Tomás L. Cabili |
Succeeded by | José J. Roy |
Member of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Pangasinan's 4th District | |
In office 1934–1935 |
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Preceded by | Eusebio V. Sison |
Succeeded by | Nicomedes T. Rupisan |
In office December 30, 1941 – December 30, 1949 |
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Preceded by | Nicomedes T. Rupisan |
Succeeded by | Amadeo J. Perez |
Personal details | |
Born |
San Vicente, Alcala, Pangasinan, Philippine Islands |
September 14, 1901
Died | September 25, 1965 Quezon City, Philippines |
(aged 64)
Nationality | Filipino |
Political party | Nacionalista Party |
Cipriano Purugganan Primicias Sr. (September 14, 1901 – September 20, 1965) was a Filipino politician who was best known for his service as a Senator of the Philippines. He was born in 1901 at Alcala, in the northern Philippine province of Pangasinan to Javier Crescini Primicias and Cristeta Purugganan.
He completed his elementary education with highest honors, his high school courses with second-highest honors and passed the government first grade civil service tests when he was still in high school in 1919. He enrolled in the National Law College and at the same time worked as a clerk in the Bureau of Commerce in 1919 where he rose to the rank of Chief, Commercial Section. He finished his Bachelor of Laws degree in 1923 with highest honors and passed the bar examinations in the top five that same year.
In 1924, he quit his post at the Bureau of Commerce and began his law practice as an assistant attorney in the law office of then-Senator Alejo R. Mabanag. By 1936 he was the President of the Pangasinan Bar Association, a post he held till 1945.
A ranking member of the Nacionalista Party (NP), Primicias entered politics in 1934 when he was elected to the Philippine House of Representatives from the fourth district of Pangasinan. He represented his district for three consecutive terms beginning in 1934, 1941 and 1946. Being in the then-minority party at the time, Primicias was an oppositionist and fiscalizer in the House of Representatives.
During his last term in the House, Primicias was one of nine Congressmen and three Senators who opposed the ratification of the United States' Bell Trade Act of 1946 (also called the Philippine Trade Act of 1946) mostly because it required amending the Philippine Constitution to give American citizens and corporations equal access with Filipinos to the Philippines' natural resources. In addition the law also gave U.S. citizens the right to import goods without paying import duties and fixed the value of the Philippine peso to the U.S. dollar. Primicias and other opponents of the Bell Trade Act considered the measure an inexcusable surrender of Philippine sovereignty.