The Immutable Mandate: Senatorial Tenure, Vacancy, and the Constitutional Conundrum in Philippine Legislative Praxis
The Immutable Mandate: Senatorial Tenure, Vacancy, and the Constitutional Conundrum in Philippine Legislative Praxis Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ June 8, 2026 In the architecture of the 1987 Philippine Constitution, the Senate stands as a bastion of continuity and national representation. Article VI, Section 2 declares it "composed of twenty-four Senators," elected at large, embodying the sovereign will of the electorate in a fixed, collegial body. This numerical integrity is not merely administrative but ontological: the chamber's identity, quorum requirements (a majority of "each House" under Section 16(2)), and decision-making thresholds derive from this constitutional baseline. Yet, herein lies a profound conundrum, at once legal, political, and almost metaphysical: under what conditions does a senator's *seat*—the juridical abstraction of popular mandate—cease to exist within the count of twenty-four? Philippine law and precedent answer with austere precis...
