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Bases: 
AMERICAN RULE
American Policy in the Philippines 
O The First Philippine Commission: 
Schurman Commission 
-Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell 
University, 
New York. 
O Authority of the US should be extended all over the 
Philippines in a peaceful manner. 
O Secure with the least possible delay the benefits of a 
wise and generous protection of life and property. 
O Customs and traditions of the Filipinos should be 
respected.
The Schurman Commission 
O Arrived in Manila: March 1899. 
-conducted an investigation into the condition of 
the country. Purpose: interviewed the highly educated 
and wealthy Filipinos; Illustrados. 
O Principles: 
a. The enforcement of American sovereignty over 
the entire Philippines. 
b. Self-government shall be given to the Filipinos 
compatible with the maintenance of order and with a 
wise, just, and economical administration of public 
affairs. 
c. Protection of the Civil Rights of the Filipinos. 
d. Promotion of the welfare of the Filipinos.
Taft Commission 
Second Commission of the Philippines 
William Howard Taft 
O 1900: instructed by McKinley to establish a 
government for the Filipinos, should be in 
accordance to its customs and traditions of the 
people. 
O Introduced: Free Primary Education and English 
language should be the medium of instruction. 
-described as an organizing Commission. It did 
not leave the Philippines but stayed on to organize 
the civil government.
Military Rule 
O General Wesley Merritt, Military 
Commander 
-ordered to establish a military 
government. 
-remained Military Governor until 
October. 
O General Elwell Otis 
-succeeded Gen. Merritt, remained in his 
post up to 1900. 
O General Arthur MacArthur 
-succeeded Gen. Otis.
O Military Governor 
-representative of the Pres. Of the US in Phil. 
-exercised wide powers which included =executive, 
legislative, and judicial . 
O 1899 
-divested of his judicial powers, transferred to the 
judiciary. 
-other powers: taken away from him. 
O 1900 
-legislative powers were transferred to the 
Philippine Commission. 
O 1901 
-executive powers were given to the civil governor.
O Military Governor’s DUTIES: 
1. Pacification of the provinces which had not yet 
recognized the authority of the US. 
2. Maintenance of peace and order in areas 
already pacified. 
3. Orders the organization of town under provincial 
governments. 
O Baliwag, Bulakan 
-the first town under the Americans to hold local 
elections. 
Military Government: introduced public school 
systems; soldiers acting as teachers.
Civil government 
O March 1901 
- US Congress passed the Army Appropriation 
Act. 
O Senator John Spooner (Wisconsin) 
- inserted an amendment in the act: Authorize the 
US Pres. To establish civil government in the Phil. 
“Spooner Amendment” 
Basis of the civil government. 
Before approval: Phil. was administered by the US 
Pres. through the acting representative, the military 
governor. 
After passage: administration of the Phil was passed to 
congress.
O July 4, 1901 
- the civil government was inaugurated. 
- Howard Taft: the first civil governor. 
**Chairman of the Philippine 
Commission 
 the early-law making body of the 
Phil under the Americans. 
- He exercised legislative powers.
Taft’s policy 
O Enormity of the Problems: 
1. Not all the provinces of the Phil were 
peaceful and orderly. 
2. Guerrilla’s were still fighting the 
Americans. 
3. Famine in some places. 
4. Sanitation was very poor. 
“There was not enough money to 
reconstruct and rehabilitate the devastated 
country.”
O Taft appealed to the American Congress to appropriate 
sufficient funds to give relief to the suffering Filipinos. 
-given P6,000,000 to help the Filipinos start a new 
life. 
O 1903 
-Taft went to Rome to negotiate the purchase of the 
so-called friar lands so that they could be distributed to the 
tenants. 
-succeeded in purchasing 410,000 acres of the friar 
lands and had them resold to tenants on easy installment 
plans.
O Governor Taft 
- remembered for his “The Philippines is for the Filipino” 
Policy. 
- noted that some Americans were greedy and wanted 
to exploit the Filipinos for their own selfish ends. 
O February 1903 
- while in Iloilo City, he boldly exclaimed that Americans 
and foreigners should leave the Philippines at once if they 
“found fault in the way the Government was being run.” 
- the government is for the Filipinos. 
- he criticized Americans who were impatient of his 
policy of attraction and doctrine of the “Philippines is for the 
Filipinos.
Banishments of the Patriots 
O Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera, Benito Lagarda, Felipe 
Buencamino, Cayetano Arellano telling the Schurman 
Commission that the Filipinos are not prepared for self-government. 
O Apolinario Mabini 
- the most irreconcilable of all, wrote articles attacking the 
Americans. He urged the Filipinos to continue the struggle against 
the enemy. 
O Americans decided to banish the Filipino leaders who refused to 
collaborate with them. 
O Apolinario Mabini, Artemio Ricarte, Maximo Hizon, Julian 
Gerona, Pablo Ocampo Were sent to Guam as exiles.
The Philippine Bill of 1902 
Cooper Law 
“Philippine Act of 1902” 
1. Approved all acts of the US Pres. relative to the Phil. 
2. Provided a bill of rights which guaranteed to Filipinos for right of 
free speech, free press, and freedom to petition for the redress of 
grievances. 
3. Executive Departments: provided for Department of Commerce 
and Police, Department of Interior, Department of Finance and 
Justice, and Department of Public Instruction. 
4. Given the right to send two representative: “Resident 
Commissioners” to the US Congress so they could work for the 
interest of the Philippines. 
The Filipinos could not vote. 
Important provisions of the Cooper Law: The Filipinos could establish 
a Philippine Assembly 2 years after peace and order had been 
proclaimed throughout the Philippines by the US Pres.
Census of 1903 
O Governor Taft 
-recommended to the US President 
Theodore Roosevelt that peace and order 
be proclaimed. 
O March 2, 1903 
-proclaimed by Gov. Taft as Census 
Day.
O Preparation of Census: 
The Census takers were instructed to note down: 
a. The # of inhabitants in the locality they 
were assigned to; 
b. List the # and kind of industries, 
diseases, and all kinds of information about the 
people and the country. 
O 1905 
-the results of the Census taking were 
published in 4 volumes. 
O Philippine Population (March 2, 1903) 
 7, 635, 426.
Political Parties 
O Sedition Law (1901) 
“Any Filipino advocating Independence or 
separation from the US would be punished 
severely.” 
O Brigandage Act 
“Severe penalty is provided for those found 
in company with/were members of armed groups. 
O Law of 1903 
“Reconcentration(Zoning) of the inhabitants 
of a town known to have thieves and outlaws.”
O Filipinos were allowed to form political parties: 
platforms were not based on independence. 
O Trinidad H, Pardo de Tavera 
- allowed to form the first officially 
recognized political party in the Phil. 
- founded the “Federal Party” whose 
platform was based on: Making the Phil. a state of 
the US. 
O Nacionalista Party (1901) 
- the first Nacionalista party formed by the 
Filipinos who opposed the platform.
O The Liberal Party (1902) 
-favored the American Rule, changed it’s 
name: “Progresista Party.” 
O The First Democratic Party (1902) 
O 1907 
- 2 political parties favoring independence 
decided to merge became the 2nd Nationalista 
Party. 
- led by young lawyers: Sergio Osmena 
(Cebu) & Manuel L. Quezon (Tayabas). 
- became popular of it’s independence 
platform.
The Election of 1907 
O Cooper Act of the Philippine Bill of 1902 
- “The Filipinos could elect delegates to the 
Philippine Assembly 2 years after peace and order had 
been proclaimed.” 
O The issue at hand: 
1. Immediate Independence. 
-Nationalista Party 
2. Eventual Independence 
-Progresista Party. 
O Election of July 30, 1907 
-People: in favor of immediate independence. 
-Nationalista Party: won 59 seats. 
-Progresista: 16 seats. 
-Independence: 5 seats.
The First Philippine Assembly 
O Philippine Assembly: Lower House 
O The Philippine Commission: Upper House 
-inaugurated at the old Opera House on Rizal 
Avenue on October 16, 1907. 
-William H. Taft(Secretary of War): guest 
speaker. 
“The vowed policy of the national administration under these 
two Presidents [McKinley and Roosevelt] has been and is to 
govern the islands, having regard to the interest and welfare 
of the Filipino people. The policy looks to the improvement of 
the people both industrially and in self-governing capacity.”
O Elected officers: 
1. Sergio Osmena (29 y.o.): Speaker. 
2. Manuel L. Quezon: Majority Floor Leader. 
*They adopted to the rules of the American Congress to 
guide them in their deliberations. 
IMPORTANCE: The first significant step toward Filipino- 
American cooperation. 
“Previously performed by the Philippine Commission: 
dominated by its American members. 
O Philippine Assembly: divided into two. 
 Upper house: composed of Americans. 
 Lower house: exclusively for Filipinos.
The Work of the Assembly 
Outline of Goals: 
O Cooperation with the US on the basis of 
mutual respect. 
O Making the Assembly an instrument in 
achieving autonomy of the Philippines. 
O Passing of laws intended to hasten the 
economic, social and political development of 
the country. 
O The substitution of the oppressive policy in the 
past with progressive policy.
Achievements: 
O Establishment of an agricultural bank. 
O Construction of new railway lines 
O Installation of telegraph and telephone line. 
O Construction of school houses, roads, bridges & 
irrigation canals. 
O Creation of Bureau of Labor for the Protection of the 
Laboring Class. 
O Establishment of the School of Fine Arts of the 
University of the Philippines. 
O Establishment of the National Library.
The Resident Commissioners 
O The Philippine Assembly elected 2 Resident 
Commissioners: 
1st Resident Commissioners: 
1. Pablo Ocampo (1907-1909) 
2. Benito Legarda (1907-1912) 
O Manuel L. Quezon 
-elected resident commissioner in 1902 to replace 
Ocampo. 
O 1912 
-Manuel Barnahaw replaced Legarda.
O Other resident commissioners: 
Teodoro R. Yangco (1917-1920) 
Jime C. de Veyra (1917-1923) 
Isauro Cabaldon (1920-1928) 
Pedro Guevarra (1923-1935) 
Cantilo Osias (1929-1934) 
Francisco Delgado (1934-1935) 
They worked hard for laws beneficial to the 
Philippines. 
Fought bills presented to Congress which were 
detrimental to the Filipinos.
Public School System 
O After the Battle of Manila Bay: 
-Americans established the first school on Corregidor. 
O After the Mock Battle of Manila 
-schools were established. 
-free and open to all. 
More and more Filipinos speaking in different native languages 
O 1899-1900 
Literacy rose. 
came to understand one another. 
-Primary Grade: more than 100,000 school children 
enrolled. 
O 1901 
-Dep. of Public Instruction was established. 
-American teachers: brought to the Philippines and sent to 
the different provinces of the Philippines to bring to the Filipino 
children the “ENGLISH LANGUAGE.”
Economic Development 
O Senator Recto 
-observed that, “while the oratorical clamor for 
independence continued to thunder deafeningly. 
Economic Policies were silently, but surely chaining 
the nation to the oars of the Colonial galley.” 
O Direct result of free trade relations, or the operation 
of preferential tariff arrangements, between the US 
and the Phil. 
O Economic policy- implemented at the beginning of 
the American regime to eliminate competition from 
other countries.
O 1899 
-old tariff arrangements under the Spaniards 
continued. 
-American products were received on equal 
footing with foreign products. 
-old tariff: still satisfactory the Philippines was 
enjoying a flourishing foreign trade. 
O American businessman: demanded that the old tariff 
be revised. Purpose: giving protection to the American 
goods. 
O Article IV (Treaty of Paris 1898) 
-granted Spain “Most favored Nation Treatment,” 
in the field of trade for a period of 10 years. 
*Obstacle to any such change.
Establishment of Free Trade 
O April 1, 1909 
-restrictive clause in Article IV of the Treaty of 
Paris was lifted. 
O August 1902 
-partial free trade was established when US 
Congress approved the “Payne-Aldrich Act.”
Payne-Aldrich Act 
American goods of all kinds and in unlimited quantities could 
enter the specific quota limitations. 
*SUGAR: limited to 300,000 long tons annually. 
*CIGARS: 150,000,000 
*WRAPPER TOBACCO: 300,000 pounds 
*FILLER TOBACCO: 1,000,000 pounds. 
O Rice: completely shut-out of the American market. 
 result: of the objection of rice growers in the 
Southern states. 
O 1913 
-free trade relations established remained practically 
unchanged until the passage of the Tydings-McDuffie Act in 
1934.
O The Philippine Assembly: vigorously protested the 
establishment of free trade on the ground that it 
would have a re-judicial effect on the revenues of 
the country. Difficult: to protect the native industries. 
-passed a resolution expressing itself against 
free trade for 2 reasons: 
1. It would result to, “So tying us up with 
American economic system to disturb it sometime 
afterwards would bring about economic ruin to the 
Phil.” 
2. The Filipinos were afraid that the economic 
association would be an obstacle to the achievement 
of national independence.
Philippine trade: increased considerably with the 
establishment of sovereignty in the Phil., adoption of free 
trade. 
O Philippine Imports: increased 91x. 
-From $1,350,000 (1899) to $92,600,000 (1930) 
O Philippine exports to US: increased 32X. 
-from $3,935,000 to $84, 873,000 (1930). 
O Philippine trade to all countries: 
-$28,751,227 (1899) to $72,734,991 (1930)
O Market for: 
1. iron and steel 
products 
2.automobiles 
3.cotton goods 
4. cigarettes 
5. dairy 
O To US: 
1. sugar 
2. coconut oil 
3. copra 
4. hemp 
5. tobacco products 
O 1943 
-constituted more 
than 80% of the total exports. 
-Americans good 
purchased by the Philippines 
constituted about 65% of 
total imports.
Results of Free Trade 
O Increase in volume and value of Philippine trade 
with the US increased government revenues. 
-bought an improvement in the standard living 
of the Filipinos, was 300% over those of other 
peoples of Asia. 
-income from export trade with US: spent 
maintenance of public schools, sanitation, public 
hygiene, and preservation of law and order. 
 construction of more roads, bridges, 
railway lines, and other transportation and 
communication facilities.
O Improvements in public works: insured the continued 
use of American goods. 
O The construction of roads, bridges, railways systems 
meant the use of American tools, equipment and 
materials. 
O Good roads: the use of more American cars, trucks, 
and vehicles which used American tires, gasoline, 
and spare parts.
O Prosperity: not only artificial and illusory, but was 
dependent upon the continuation of free trade 
relations between Phil. and US. 
O Income from the export of raw materials to the US: 
nearly always indirect proportion to the income 
available for the purchase of goods coming form 
America. 
 income from free trade: used not only to 
import consumer goods from the US, but also to 
maintain and support the Phil. Government. 
“The closure of the American market upon 
achieving independence, would automatically 
imperil the economic stability of the Filipinos and 
reduce their ability to properly maintain and 
support their government.”
O Filipinos became more Americanized in tastes in 
habits. 
O Debilitating colonial attitude: helped prevent the 
development of manufacturing in the Philippines. 
 Filipinos would rather import their basic 
necessities from the US than embark on the difficult 
and certainly more expensive path to 
industrialization.
O Free Trade 
-reinforced the backward feudal agrarian system 
carried over from the Spanish regime and crippled the 
normal development of Philippine Industry. 
-enriched a few Filipinos but it also increased the 
suffering of the growing number of exploited farmers 
and workers of the country. 
1. Big landlords 
 continued to practice exploitative 
techniques they learned from their Spanish masters to 
the hapless peasentry. 
 landlords & import export traders 
exerted little effort to meet the competition in the open 
world markets by way of mechanization and 
modernization of agricultural techniques.
O Trade Preferences 
-required unskilled labor and low wage rates, 
precluded the growth of manufacturing and industrialization. 
Result: poor living conditions, agrarian unrest, and periodic 
peasant uprisings and labour strikes (1920,1930) 
O Export crops: sugar, principal output of the country. 
-tariff protection resulted in undue increase in 
investment in sugar-producing lands and machinery, heavily 
financed by the Philippine government through the 
Philippine National Bank, as well as American and foreign 
investors. 
-led to the growth of a powerful native sugar bloc, 
along with other Philippine vested interests, resisted real 
freedom by pleading for the extension of free trade after 
independence.
O Leaders of the country debated whether the 
Filipinos could afford to be independent or not of 
the American market, pleaded fro the retention 
of free trade relations for fear of losing tariff 
protection for Philippine export products. 
O Having to “dispense” with American goods to 
which the Filipinos had been so accustomed 
and which they could not produce.
Commonwealth 
O Administrative body that governed the 
Philippines (1935-1946)
Problems of Economic 
Readjustments 
O Commonwealth 
1. economic readjustments (independent status) 
2. elimination of foreign domination of certain 
sectors of the national economy. 
O Philippine Economy 
-built upon complete dependence on the American 
market which free trade arrangements established 
between the Phil and US (1909). 
-In accordance with the constitutional injunction 
that the national patrimony must be preserved for the 
Filipino people.
TRADE RELATIONS with the UNITED STATES 
O Provision of the Tydings-McDuffie Law 
-established a transitional period from the sixth to 
the tenth year after the inauguration of the 
Commonwealth. 
 Government would collect export taxes on 
Philippine exports to the US. 
O Imposition of duties: 5% (1940), increase by 5% each 
year, of the regular rates of duties collected by the US. 
O Until 25% is reached in the 10th year or the last year 
prior to the establishment of independence.
O Jones-Castigan Act (1934) 
-provided for the imposition of duty-free 
quotas on sugar and the laws imposing excise 
taxes on coconut oil and cordage exports to the 
US; would take effect at the same time. 
“The Philippines would pay full-duty on all it’s 
exports to the US while products of the US 
would enter the country duty-free.”
O Increasing of duties on major exports: included 
in the Tydings-McDuffie Law 
1. compel the Phil. To diversify its 
products. 
2. decrease the cost of production 
3. seek non-American products 
O Sugar, coconut, cordage industries: comprised 
90% of all Phil. Exports and depended the very 
financial structure of municipal and provincial 
government, Commonwealth.
O Commonwealth expected: 
1. expenses of an independent existence 
after 1945-1946. 
2, industrialization program 
3. maintenance of an expensive diplomatic 
consular service 
4. national defense.
O Manuel Quezon 
Section 13 “Tydings-McDuffie Law”: Joint US and 
Phil. Conference to be held in the latter part of the 
Commonwealth to: remedy the “Imperfections and 
inequalities” of the law. 
-after the inauguration, made representations 
with President Roosevelt requesting the conference be 
held earlier. 
-issued early in 1935: executive order (No. 780) 
creating: “Technical Trade Committee” purpose: 
gathering and interpreting statistical information to be 
used in the joint conference.
O Composed of representatives: sugar and 
other agricultural interests. 
1. Conclusion: application of the export 
taxes would seriously “cripple, completely 
annihilate” most of the major industries of the 
country. “Reduce government revenues, 
increase unemployment, prevent the payment 
of the country’s indebtedness.” 
2. Under existing international economic 
conditions: impossible to find new markets for 
Philippine sugar, copra, coconut oil and cordage.
O 1937 
-Quezon & Pres. Roosevelt agreed to establish a joint 
Philippine-American committee to study: 
1. economic problems 
2. recommend a program for economic adjustment. 
O Joint Preparatory Committee on Philippine Affairs (JPCPA) 
-April 14, 1937: hearings were held in Washington, 
San Francisco & Manila over a year. 
-recommended (1938) the grant of political 
independence to the Phil. “July 4, 1946” and extension of 
free trade relations between the US and Phil. Up to 1960.
O August 7, 1939 
-The US Congress enacted: 
“Tydings-Kocialkowski Act” 
(AKA: Philippine Economic Adjustment Act) 
-modified certain provisions of the previous 
Law. 
O Provided: 
1. Abaca: exempted from export duties. 
2. Cigar, scrap tobacco, filler tobacco, 
coconut oil, pearl or shell buttons: enter the US 
under decreasing quotas. 
3. aimed for preparing the country in 1946.
O The law did not embody the JPCPA’s 
recommendation: 
“Free trade relations be extended beyond the 
Commonwealth period.” 
(Provide for a trade conference between 
representatives of the US and Phil. To be held not 
later than 1944. 
Purpose: formulating recommendations on trade 
relations.) 
O Remedial Legislation (1939) 
-gave Filipino producers and exporters a 
chance to make necessary adjustments preparatory 
to independence in 1946.
O Commonwealth 
-recognized the necessity of overhauling the 
economy and wearing it away from independence 
on the American Market. 
-carried out an economic readjustment plan: 
using the funds transferred by the US to the Phil. 
(collection of excise taxes on coconut oil)
O Included: 
1. diversification and increase of agricultural 
production. 
2. development of various natural resources 
of the country. 
3. expansion of domestic market through 
increased consumption of local products. 
4. development and improvement of 
transportation and communication facilities. 
5. scientific reasearch. 
6. industrialization & development of 
markets outside of the US.
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Bases of American Rule

  • 2. American Policy in the Philippines O The First Philippine Commission: Schurman Commission -Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell University, New York. O Authority of the US should be extended all over the Philippines in a peaceful manner. O Secure with the least possible delay the benefits of a wise and generous protection of life and property. O Customs and traditions of the Filipinos should be respected.
  • 3. The Schurman Commission O Arrived in Manila: March 1899. -conducted an investigation into the condition of the country. Purpose: interviewed the highly educated and wealthy Filipinos; Illustrados. O Principles: a. The enforcement of American sovereignty over the entire Philippines. b. Self-government shall be given to the Filipinos compatible with the maintenance of order and with a wise, just, and economical administration of public affairs. c. Protection of the Civil Rights of the Filipinos. d. Promotion of the welfare of the Filipinos.
  • 4. Taft Commission Second Commission of the Philippines William Howard Taft O 1900: instructed by McKinley to establish a government for the Filipinos, should be in accordance to its customs and traditions of the people. O Introduced: Free Primary Education and English language should be the medium of instruction. -described as an organizing Commission. It did not leave the Philippines but stayed on to organize the civil government.
  • 5. Military Rule O General Wesley Merritt, Military Commander -ordered to establish a military government. -remained Military Governor until October. O General Elwell Otis -succeeded Gen. Merritt, remained in his post up to 1900. O General Arthur MacArthur -succeeded Gen. Otis.
  • 6. O Military Governor -representative of the Pres. Of the US in Phil. -exercised wide powers which included =executive, legislative, and judicial . O 1899 -divested of his judicial powers, transferred to the judiciary. -other powers: taken away from him. O 1900 -legislative powers were transferred to the Philippine Commission. O 1901 -executive powers were given to the civil governor.
  • 7. O Military Governor’s DUTIES: 1. Pacification of the provinces which had not yet recognized the authority of the US. 2. Maintenance of peace and order in areas already pacified. 3. Orders the organization of town under provincial governments. O Baliwag, Bulakan -the first town under the Americans to hold local elections. Military Government: introduced public school systems; soldiers acting as teachers.
  • 8. Civil government O March 1901 - US Congress passed the Army Appropriation Act. O Senator John Spooner (Wisconsin) - inserted an amendment in the act: Authorize the US Pres. To establish civil government in the Phil. “Spooner Amendment” Basis of the civil government. Before approval: Phil. was administered by the US Pres. through the acting representative, the military governor. After passage: administration of the Phil was passed to congress.
  • 9. O July 4, 1901 - the civil government was inaugurated. - Howard Taft: the first civil governor. **Chairman of the Philippine Commission  the early-law making body of the Phil under the Americans. - He exercised legislative powers.
  • 10. Taft’s policy O Enormity of the Problems: 1. Not all the provinces of the Phil were peaceful and orderly. 2. Guerrilla’s were still fighting the Americans. 3. Famine in some places. 4. Sanitation was very poor. “There was not enough money to reconstruct and rehabilitate the devastated country.”
  • 11. O Taft appealed to the American Congress to appropriate sufficient funds to give relief to the suffering Filipinos. -given P6,000,000 to help the Filipinos start a new life. O 1903 -Taft went to Rome to negotiate the purchase of the so-called friar lands so that they could be distributed to the tenants. -succeeded in purchasing 410,000 acres of the friar lands and had them resold to tenants on easy installment plans.
  • 12. O Governor Taft - remembered for his “The Philippines is for the Filipino” Policy. - noted that some Americans were greedy and wanted to exploit the Filipinos for their own selfish ends. O February 1903 - while in Iloilo City, he boldly exclaimed that Americans and foreigners should leave the Philippines at once if they “found fault in the way the Government was being run.” - the government is for the Filipinos. - he criticized Americans who were impatient of his policy of attraction and doctrine of the “Philippines is for the Filipinos.
  • 13. Banishments of the Patriots O Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera, Benito Lagarda, Felipe Buencamino, Cayetano Arellano telling the Schurman Commission that the Filipinos are not prepared for self-government. O Apolinario Mabini - the most irreconcilable of all, wrote articles attacking the Americans. He urged the Filipinos to continue the struggle against the enemy. O Americans decided to banish the Filipino leaders who refused to collaborate with them. O Apolinario Mabini, Artemio Ricarte, Maximo Hizon, Julian Gerona, Pablo Ocampo Were sent to Guam as exiles.
  • 14. The Philippine Bill of 1902 Cooper Law “Philippine Act of 1902” 1. Approved all acts of the US Pres. relative to the Phil. 2. Provided a bill of rights which guaranteed to Filipinos for right of free speech, free press, and freedom to petition for the redress of grievances. 3. Executive Departments: provided for Department of Commerce and Police, Department of Interior, Department of Finance and Justice, and Department of Public Instruction. 4. Given the right to send two representative: “Resident Commissioners” to the US Congress so they could work for the interest of the Philippines. The Filipinos could not vote. Important provisions of the Cooper Law: The Filipinos could establish a Philippine Assembly 2 years after peace and order had been proclaimed throughout the Philippines by the US Pres.
  • 15. Census of 1903 O Governor Taft -recommended to the US President Theodore Roosevelt that peace and order be proclaimed. O March 2, 1903 -proclaimed by Gov. Taft as Census Day.
  • 16. O Preparation of Census: The Census takers were instructed to note down: a. The # of inhabitants in the locality they were assigned to; b. List the # and kind of industries, diseases, and all kinds of information about the people and the country. O 1905 -the results of the Census taking were published in 4 volumes. O Philippine Population (March 2, 1903)  7, 635, 426.
  • 17. Political Parties O Sedition Law (1901) “Any Filipino advocating Independence or separation from the US would be punished severely.” O Brigandage Act “Severe penalty is provided for those found in company with/were members of armed groups. O Law of 1903 “Reconcentration(Zoning) of the inhabitants of a town known to have thieves and outlaws.”
  • 18. O Filipinos were allowed to form political parties: platforms were not based on independence. O Trinidad H, Pardo de Tavera - allowed to form the first officially recognized political party in the Phil. - founded the “Federal Party” whose platform was based on: Making the Phil. a state of the US. O Nacionalista Party (1901) - the first Nacionalista party formed by the Filipinos who opposed the platform.
  • 19. O The Liberal Party (1902) -favored the American Rule, changed it’s name: “Progresista Party.” O The First Democratic Party (1902) O 1907 - 2 political parties favoring independence decided to merge became the 2nd Nationalista Party. - led by young lawyers: Sergio Osmena (Cebu) & Manuel L. Quezon (Tayabas). - became popular of it’s independence platform.
  • 20. The Election of 1907 O Cooper Act of the Philippine Bill of 1902 - “The Filipinos could elect delegates to the Philippine Assembly 2 years after peace and order had been proclaimed.” O The issue at hand: 1. Immediate Independence. -Nationalista Party 2. Eventual Independence -Progresista Party. O Election of July 30, 1907 -People: in favor of immediate independence. -Nationalista Party: won 59 seats. -Progresista: 16 seats. -Independence: 5 seats.
  • 21. The First Philippine Assembly O Philippine Assembly: Lower House O The Philippine Commission: Upper House -inaugurated at the old Opera House on Rizal Avenue on October 16, 1907. -William H. Taft(Secretary of War): guest speaker. “The vowed policy of the national administration under these two Presidents [McKinley and Roosevelt] has been and is to govern the islands, having regard to the interest and welfare of the Filipino people. The policy looks to the improvement of the people both industrially and in self-governing capacity.”
  • 22. O Elected officers: 1. Sergio Osmena (29 y.o.): Speaker. 2. Manuel L. Quezon: Majority Floor Leader. *They adopted to the rules of the American Congress to guide them in their deliberations. IMPORTANCE: The first significant step toward Filipino- American cooperation. “Previously performed by the Philippine Commission: dominated by its American members. O Philippine Assembly: divided into two.  Upper house: composed of Americans.  Lower house: exclusively for Filipinos.
  • 23. The Work of the Assembly Outline of Goals: O Cooperation with the US on the basis of mutual respect. O Making the Assembly an instrument in achieving autonomy of the Philippines. O Passing of laws intended to hasten the economic, social and political development of the country. O The substitution of the oppressive policy in the past with progressive policy.
  • 24. Achievements: O Establishment of an agricultural bank. O Construction of new railway lines O Installation of telegraph and telephone line. O Construction of school houses, roads, bridges & irrigation canals. O Creation of Bureau of Labor for the Protection of the Laboring Class. O Establishment of the School of Fine Arts of the University of the Philippines. O Establishment of the National Library.
  • 25. The Resident Commissioners O The Philippine Assembly elected 2 Resident Commissioners: 1st Resident Commissioners: 1. Pablo Ocampo (1907-1909) 2. Benito Legarda (1907-1912) O Manuel L. Quezon -elected resident commissioner in 1902 to replace Ocampo. O 1912 -Manuel Barnahaw replaced Legarda.
  • 26. O Other resident commissioners: Teodoro R. Yangco (1917-1920) Jime C. de Veyra (1917-1923) Isauro Cabaldon (1920-1928) Pedro Guevarra (1923-1935) Cantilo Osias (1929-1934) Francisco Delgado (1934-1935) They worked hard for laws beneficial to the Philippines. Fought bills presented to Congress which were detrimental to the Filipinos.
  • 27. Public School System O After the Battle of Manila Bay: -Americans established the first school on Corregidor. O After the Mock Battle of Manila -schools were established. -free and open to all. More and more Filipinos speaking in different native languages O 1899-1900 Literacy rose. came to understand one another. -Primary Grade: more than 100,000 school children enrolled. O 1901 -Dep. of Public Instruction was established. -American teachers: brought to the Philippines and sent to the different provinces of the Philippines to bring to the Filipino children the “ENGLISH LANGUAGE.”
  • 28. Economic Development O Senator Recto -observed that, “while the oratorical clamor for independence continued to thunder deafeningly. Economic Policies were silently, but surely chaining the nation to the oars of the Colonial galley.” O Direct result of free trade relations, or the operation of preferential tariff arrangements, between the US and the Phil. O Economic policy- implemented at the beginning of the American regime to eliminate competition from other countries.
  • 29. O 1899 -old tariff arrangements under the Spaniards continued. -American products were received on equal footing with foreign products. -old tariff: still satisfactory the Philippines was enjoying a flourishing foreign trade. O American businessman: demanded that the old tariff be revised. Purpose: giving protection to the American goods. O Article IV (Treaty of Paris 1898) -granted Spain “Most favored Nation Treatment,” in the field of trade for a period of 10 years. *Obstacle to any such change.
  • 30. Establishment of Free Trade O April 1, 1909 -restrictive clause in Article IV of the Treaty of Paris was lifted. O August 1902 -partial free trade was established when US Congress approved the “Payne-Aldrich Act.”
  • 31. Payne-Aldrich Act American goods of all kinds and in unlimited quantities could enter the specific quota limitations. *SUGAR: limited to 300,000 long tons annually. *CIGARS: 150,000,000 *WRAPPER TOBACCO: 300,000 pounds *FILLER TOBACCO: 1,000,000 pounds. O Rice: completely shut-out of the American market.  result: of the objection of rice growers in the Southern states. O 1913 -free trade relations established remained practically unchanged until the passage of the Tydings-McDuffie Act in 1934.
  • 32. O The Philippine Assembly: vigorously protested the establishment of free trade on the ground that it would have a re-judicial effect on the revenues of the country. Difficult: to protect the native industries. -passed a resolution expressing itself against free trade for 2 reasons: 1. It would result to, “So tying us up with American economic system to disturb it sometime afterwards would bring about economic ruin to the Phil.” 2. The Filipinos were afraid that the economic association would be an obstacle to the achievement of national independence.
  • 33. Philippine trade: increased considerably with the establishment of sovereignty in the Phil., adoption of free trade. O Philippine Imports: increased 91x. -From $1,350,000 (1899) to $92,600,000 (1930) O Philippine exports to US: increased 32X. -from $3,935,000 to $84, 873,000 (1930). O Philippine trade to all countries: -$28,751,227 (1899) to $72,734,991 (1930)
  • 34. O Market for: 1. iron and steel products 2.automobiles 3.cotton goods 4. cigarettes 5. dairy O To US: 1. sugar 2. coconut oil 3. copra 4. hemp 5. tobacco products O 1943 -constituted more than 80% of the total exports. -Americans good purchased by the Philippines constituted about 65% of total imports.
  • 35. Results of Free Trade O Increase in volume and value of Philippine trade with the US increased government revenues. -bought an improvement in the standard living of the Filipinos, was 300% over those of other peoples of Asia. -income from export trade with US: spent maintenance of public schools, sanitation, public hygiene, and preservation of law and order.  construction of more roads, bridges, railway lines, and other transportation and communication facilities.
  • 36. O Improvements in public works: insured the continued use of American goods. O The construction of roads, bridges, railways systems meant the use of American tools, equipment and materials. O Good roads: the use of more American cars, trucks, and vehicles which used American tires, gasoline, and spare parts.
  • 37. O Prosperity: not only artificial and illusory, but was dependent upon the continuation of free trade relations between Phil. and US. O Income from the export of raw materials to the US: nearly always indirect proportion to the income available for the purchase of goods coming form America.  income from free trade: used not only to import consumer goods from the US, but also to maintain and support the Phil. Government. “The closure of the American market upon achieving independence, would automatically imperil the economic stability of the Filipinos and reduce their ability to properly maintain and support their government.”
  • 38. O Filipinos became more Americanized in tastes in habits. O Debilitating colonial attitude: helped prevent the development of manufacturing in the Philippines.  Filipinos would rather import their basic necessities from the US than embark on the difficult and certainly more expensive path to industrialization.
  • 39. O Free Trade -reinforced the backward feudal agrarian system carried over from the Spanish regime and crippled the normal development of Philippine Industry. -enriched a few Filipinos but it also increased the suffering of the growing number of exploited farmers and workers of the country. 1. Big landlords  continued to practice exploitative techniques they learned from their Spanish masters to the hapless peasentry.  landlords & import export traders exerted little effort to meet the competition in the open world markets by way of mechanization and modernization of agricultural techniques.
  • 40. O Trade Preferences -required unskilled labor and low wage rates, precluded the growth of manufacturing and industrialization. Result: poor living conditions, agrarian unrest, and periodic peasant uprisings and labour strikes (1920,1930) O Export crops: sugar, principal output of the country. -tariff protection resulted in undue increase in investment in sugar-producing lands and machinery, heavily financed by the Philippine government through the Philippine National Bank, as well as American and foreign investors. -led to the growth of a powerful native sugar bloc, along with other Philippine vested interests, resisted real freedom by pleading for the extension of free trade after independence.
  • 41. O Leaders of the country debated whether the Filipinos could afford to be independent or not of the American market, pleaded fro the retention of free trade relations for fear of losing tariff protection for Philippine export products. O Having to “dispense” with American goods to which the Filipinos had been so accustomed and which they could not produce.
  • 42. Commonwealth O Administrative body that governed the Philippines (1935-1946)
  • 43. Problems of Economic Readjustments O Commonwealth 1. economic readjustments (independent status) 2. elimination of foreign domination of certain sectors of the national economy. O Philippine Economy -built upon complete dependence on the American market which free trade arrangements established between the Phil and US (1909). -In accordance with the constitutional injunction that the national patrimony must be preserved for the Filipino people.
  • 44. TRADE RELATIONS with the UNITED STATES O Provision of the Tydings-McDuffie Law -established a transitional period from the sixth to the tenth year after the inauguration of the Commonwealth.  Government would collect export taxes on Philippine exports to the US. O Imposition of duties: 5% (1940), increase by 5% each year, of the regular rates of duties collected by the US. O Until 25% is reached in the 10th year or the last year prior to the establishment of independence.
  • 45. O Jones-Castigan Act (1934) -provided for the imposition of duty-free quotas on sugar and the laws imposing excise taxes on coconut oil and cordage exports to the US; would take effect at the same time. “The Philippines would pay full-duty on all it’s exports to the US while products of the US would enter the country duty-free.”
  • 46. O Increasing of duties on major exports: included in the Tydings-McDuffie Law 1. compel the Phil. To diversify its products. 2. decrease the cost of production 3. seek non-American products O Sugar, coconut, cordage industries: comprised 90% of all Phil. Exports and depended the very financial structure of municipal and provincial government, Commonwealth.
  • 47. O Commonwealth expected: 1. expenses of an independent existence after 1945-1946. 2, industrialization program 3. maintenance of an expensive diplomatic consular service 4. national defense.
  • 48. O Manuel Quezon Section 13 “Tydings-McDuffie Law”: Joint US and Phil. Conference to be held in the latter part of the Commonwealth to: remedy the “Imperfections and inequalities” of the law. -after the inauguration, made representations with President Roosevelt requesting the conference be held earlier. -issued early in 1935: executive order (No. 780) creating: “Technical Trade Committee” purpose: gathering and interpreting statistical information to be used in the joint conference.
  • 49. O Composed of representatives: sugar and other agricultural interests. 1. Conclusion: application of the export taxes would seriously “cripple, completely annihilate” most of the major industries of the country. “Reduce government revenues, increase unemployment, prevent the payment of the country’s indebtedness.” 2. Under existing international economic conditions: impossible to find new markets for Philippine sugar, copra, coconut oil and cordage.
  • 50. O 1937 -Quezon & Pres. Roosevelt agreed to establish a joint Philippine-American committee to study: 1. economic problems 2. recommend a program for economic adjustment. O Joint Preparatory Committee on Philippine Affairs (JPCPA) -April 14, 1937: hearings were held in Washington, San Francisco & Manila over a year. -recommended (1938) the grant of political independence to the Phil. “July 4, 1946” and extension of free trade relations between the US and Phil. Up to 1960.
  • 51. O August 7, 1939 -The US Congress enacted: “Tydings-Kocialkowski Act” (AKA: Philippine Economic Adjustment Act) -modified certain provisions of the previous Law. O Provided: 1. Abaca: exempted from export duties. 2. Cigar, scrap tobacco, filler tobacco, coconut oil, pearl or shell buttons: enter the US under decreasing quotas. 3. aimed for preparing the country in 1946.
  • 52. O The law did not embody the JPCPA’s recommendation: “Free trade relations be extended beyond the Commonwealth period.” (Provide for a trade conference between representatives of the US and Phil. To be held not later than 1944. Purpose: formulating recommendations on trade relations.) O Remedial Legislation (1939) -gave Filipino producers and exporters a chance to make necessary adjustments preparatory to independence in 1946.
  • 53. O Commonwealth -recognized the necessity of overhauling the economy and wearing it away from independence on the American Market. -carried out an economic readjustment plan: using the funds transferred by the US to the Phil. (collection of excise taxes on coconut oil)
  • 54. O Included: 1. diversification and increase of agricultural production. 2. development of various natural resources of the country. 3. expansion of domestic market through increased consumption of local products. 4. development and improvement of transportation and communication facilities. 5. scientific reasearch. 6. industrialization & development of markets outside of the US.