- Jamby Madrigal
-
Maria Ana Consuelo Abad Santos Madrigal Valade Senator of the Philippines In office
June 30, 2004 – June 30, 2010Presidential Adviser for Children’s Affairs In office
1999–2001Undersecretary of Social Welfare and Development In office
June 30, 1992 – June 30, 1998Personal details Born April 26, 1958
Manila, PhilippinesPolitical party Independent (2009–present)
Genuine Opposition (2007–2009)
LDP (2001–2007)Spouse(s) Eric Jean Valade Residence Batanes Occupation Civil servant Profession Politician Religion Roman Catholic Maria Ana Consuelo Madrigal-Valade (born Maria Ana Consuelo Abad Santos Madrigal April 26, 1958), better known as Jamby Madrigal, is a politician in the Philippines. She was elected during the 2004 general elections as a Senator. She ran for president in the 2010 presidential elections but lost.
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Early life and career
Jamby Madrigal was born in Manila, Philippines on April 26, 1958 to Antonio Madrigal (1921–2007) and Amanda Abad Santos-Madrigal. She is the granddaughter of the former Supreme Court Chief Justice Jose Abad Santos of San Fernando, Pampanga. Her granduncle – pre-Commonwealth Assemblyman Pedro Abad Santos – founded the Socialist Party of the Philippines. The Abad Santos brothers were from a modest family.
Her paternal grandfather was Senator Vicente Lopez Madrigal of Ligao, Albay, one of the Philippine Republic’s elected senators in 1949.She, her father, and grandfather are members of the rich Spanish-Visayan Madrigal family. Her aunt, Senator Pacita Madrigal-Gonzalez was a senator during the Quezon and Magsaysay administrations and was the first administrator of the Social Welfare Administration, the predecessor of today’s Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). Her late married uncle and aunt were former Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs Manuel Collantes and heiress Consuelo “Chito” Madrigal.[1]
Personal life
She married Frenchman Eric Jean Claude Dudoignon Valade on December 7, 2002 at the Calatagan, Batangas farm estate of her aunt, the late Doña Consuelo "Chito" Madrigal-Collantes (1921–2008).[2]
In May 2008 Jamby Madrigal formally filed court pleadings to contest the validity of the last will and testament of her late aunt Chito Madrigal-Collantes.[3][4][5]
Government service
In October 1999, President Estrada created the Office of the Presidential Adviser for Children’s Affairs. He appointed her to head this office, which gives the children of the poor access to the President’s highest councils.[citation needed]
She organized the First National Summit for Children in Malacañang Palace on October 26, 2000 where government agencies, local government units, industry leaders and non-government organizations signed a declaration of commitment upholding Child 21 – a framework on which to anchor all action plans and strategies relating to children.[citation needed] This declaration was a first in Southeast Asia – a fitting prelude to the United Nations’ World Declaration on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children, which was adopted during the World Summit for Children on September 30, 1990.[citation needed]
She travels nationwide while coordinating the agency’s feeding and educational programs, confirming her commitment to the cause of poor Filipino children.[citation needed] She became especially concerned over the fate of teachers and school children who were taken hostage by the Abu Sayyaf terrorists in 2001.[citation needed] After consultation with the victims themselves, she sought the help of clinical psychologists from Ateneo de Manila and Ateneo de Zamboanga, who soothed the trauma victims and trained their parents in stress management.[citation needed]
In addition to her work for her numerous foundations, in later 2003 she has become spokesperson for the youth-based Kontra Pulitika Movement (KPM) – which champions education, protection of the environment and economic empowerment through livelihood programs.[citation needed]
She has acted in a movie on the life of Luis Taruc, the Kapampangan founder of the Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa mga Hapon (Hukbalahap). Ka Luis was the protégé of her grandfathers, the Abad Santos brothers. In the film, ‘Anak Pawis’, she portrays her grandmother, Amanda Teopaco.[citation needed]
Political career
She is formerly the Chairperson of four Senate Committees:[6] Committee on Environment, Committee on Youth, Women and Family Relations, Committee on Peace, Unification and Reconciliation, and the Committee on Cultural Communities.[citation needed]
She has filed bills in the areas of education, juvenile justice, gender equality, empowerment, anti-trafficking and anti-pornography.[6] She has also authored bills on the protection of the indigenous peoples and their ancestral domain as well as the protection and conservation of the environment.[6]
She likewise sponsored bills advancing national economic interests, such as the repeal of the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1998, as well as measures seeking to place LPG under price control and for the recovery of PETRON and Malampaya.[6]
She recently filed a bill repealing RA 7942, the "Mining Act of 1995" and a bill for the imposition of a total log ban.[citation needed] Both bills aim to protect the last remaining natural resources from wholesale plunder.[6]
In an opposition protest, she was one of the political leaders who were subjected to the Manila Police water cannons while attending a religious procession on October 14, 2005.[7]
Madrigal has declared her candidacy for President in the upcoming 2010 presidential elections.
During the presidential campaign, Madrigal launched many allegations of corruption against Sen. Manny Villar (NP). Over the course of the campaign, Madrigal brought out "700 pages of evidence"[8] to prove that Villar had "realigned C-5 (a main Metro Manila thoroughfare) to pass by [Villar's] real estate developments so that [Villar] would be paid for right of way."[8] These accusations, coupled with the legislative backing of Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile (PMP), are said to have dealt the deathblow to Villar's presidential aspirations in 2010. She lost the election to Senator Benigno Aquino III.
References
- ^ "Manuel Collantes is dead; 91". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 2009-05-29. http://globalnation.inquirer.net/news/news/view/20090529-207727/Manuel-Collantes-is-dead-91. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
- ^ Madrigal, Maria Ana Consuelo | Personal Information
- ^ newsinfo.inquirer.net, Jamby Madrigal questions aunt’s signature on last will
- ^ abs-cbnnews.com video, TV Patrol: Jamby cries over inheritance fight
- ^ newsinfo.inquirer.net, ‘Jamby’ asks court to block lawyer of billionaire aunt
- ^ a b c d e http://www.jambymadrigal.com/
- ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20070808204022rn_1/www.senate.gov.ph/senators/sen_bio/madrigal_bio.asp
- ^ a b http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/nation/view/20090601-208213/Madrigal-testififies-vs-Villar
External links
- Jamby's Official Website
- Jamby's Senate Bio
- Jamby's I-Site Profile
- Will you vote for Jamby Madrigal for President? - 2010 Philippines Election Poll
- Presidential candidate runs amok in Tanay
<13th Senators of the 14th Congress of the Philippines (2007-2010) 15th>
Senior Senators (2004-2010) Junior Senators (2007-2010) Jamby Madrigal
Aquilino Pimentel, Jr.
Juan Ponce Enrile
Bong Revilla
Mar Roxas
Vacant ##Term ended June 30, 2010 Term ends June 30, 2013 # — Villar was also the previous Senate president of the 13th Congress.
## — Vacant due to election of Alfredo Lim as the mayor of Manila.<12th Senators of the 13th Congress of the Philippines (2004-2007) 14th>
Senior Senators (2001-2007) Junior Senators (2004-2010) Alfredo Lim ###
Jamby Madrigal
Aquilino Pimentel, Jr.
Juan Ponce Enrile
Bong Revilla
Mar RoxasTerm ended June 30, 2007 Term ended June 30, 2010 # — Villar became the next Senate president during the 14th Congress.
## — Position vacated when Noli de Castro was elected to the vice presidency.
### — In 2007, Lim vacated his position prior to his election as the mayor of Manila.Categories:- Senators of the 14th Congress of the Philippines
- Senators of the 13th Congress of the Philippines
- 1958 births
- Living people
- People of Kapampangan descent
- People from Manila
- Filipino people of Spanish descent
- Visayan people
- Filipino Roman Catholics
- Philippine presidential candidates
- Struggle/Fight of Democratic Filipinos politicians
- United Opposition (Philippines) politicians
- Santa Clara University alumni
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