Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Mayor of Davao City
Local chief executive of Davao City, Philippines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The mayor of Davao City (Cebuano: Punong Dakbayan sa Davao) is the chief executive of the government of Davao City in Davao Region, Philippines.[1] The mayor leads the city's departments in executing ordinances and delivering public services.[1] The mayorship is a three-year term and each mayor is restricted to three consecutive terms, totalling nine years, although a mayor can be elected again after an interruption of one term.
The incumbent mayor is Rodrigo Duterte, the 16th and former Philippine president, who previously held the mayoralty from 1988 to 1998, 2001 to 2010, and from 2013 to 2016.[1] As Duterte remains detained at The Hague following his March 2025 arrest, the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) has designated the vice mayor, his son Sebastian Duterte, as acting mayor on June 30, 2025.[2][3]
Remove ads
History
Summarize
Perspective
On March 16, 1936, Davao Assemblyman Romualdo C. Quimpo filed a bill seeking to create the chartered City of Davao. This bill would later be signed by President Manuel L. Quezon as Commonwealth Act No. 51 on October 16, 1936. Davao City shall then be governed by a Mayor as an independent City.[4]
In 1967, the province of Davao was divided into three provinces: Davao del Norte, Davao Oriental and Davao del Sur. Geographically, Davao City became part of Davao del Sur, but was no longer its provincial capital. It became the commercial center of Southern Mindanao. This period also saw the election of an indigenous person to the city mayorship when Elias Baguio Lopez, a full-blooded Bagobo, won the 1967 local elections.
In 1972, Davao City became the regional administrative capital of Southern Mindanao. Thereafter, upon its reorganization as the regional capital of the Davao Region (Region XI), it was the sole highly urbanized city in the Davao Region.
In 1986, President Corazon Aquino appointed Rodrigo Duterte as OIC Vice Mayor. Duterte later ran for Mayor and won, taking the top post from 1988 to 1998, from 2001 to 2010, and yet again from 2013 to 2016. The incumbent city mayor is his youngest child, Sebastian Duterte.[5]
Remove ads
Notable mayors
Summarize
Perspective
Santiago Artiaga

Before claiming the honor as Davao City’s first sitting mayor, Santiago Artiaga (1878–1962), one of the first pensionados (state scholars) during the American occupation, was already a colorful, if controversial, figure in Manila. As the city engineer, the highest position next to the mayor, he had clashes with the city council and, as acting city mayor, was the envy of his detractors.
In 1933, he filed an early retirement from public service, but this was not accepted. He continued to serve as city engineer until 1936 when he resigned to accept the appointment as de jure mayor of Zamboanga City. Two weeks thereafter, he was reassigned to Davao as its first city mayor.
For nearly three years Artiaga served diligently as local chief executive, but had to leave after President Manuel L. Quezon plucked him out for another assignment. On October 13, 1939, Malacañang announced his appointment as the new provincial governor of Bukidnon, replacing Agustin Alvarez who took over as the new city mayor of Davao.[6]
Rodrigo Duterte

Rodrigo Duterte, a lawyer and former city prosecutor, served seven terms as mayor of Davao City. In 2016, he was elected as the 16th president of the Philippines.
Duterte was born on March 28, 1945, in Maasin, Southern Leyte. His father, Vicente Duterte, served as mayor of Danao, Cebu and governor of Davao, and his mother, Soledad Roa-Duterte, was a public school teacher and a noted community activist.
Duterte's rise from the legal ranks to politics began when he was named special counsel at the City Prosecution Office in Davao City in 1977. He became assistant city prosecutor two years later, serving until 1986.
In May 1986, he was appointed OIC vice mayor of Davao City by the revolutionary government of Corazon Aquino. He won as mayor of Davao City in the 1988 local elections under the Lakas ng Dabaw banner, defeating former OIC mayor Zafiro Respicio and popular broadcaster Jun Pala.
Nicknamed "The Punisher" by Time Magazine for his controversial methods, Duterte nevertheless was successful in reducing crime. Furthermore, he was credited with helping to make Davao City cleaner by enforcing a smoking ban, and for his LGBT-friendly measures. His popularity was such that he served seven terms as mayor, sidestepping term limits with stints as a congressman and vice mayor, and drew huge ratings with a weekly television program "Gikan sa Masa, Para sa Masa."[7]
Sara Duterte

Sara Duterte served as mayor of Davao City twice — during the first half of presidency of Benigno Aquino III and during the entire presidency of her father. She became the city's first female mayor, and the youngest to ever be elected in its history.
Duterte entered the vice presidential race at the last hour via substitution after initially claiming that she had no interest in seeking a national post.[8] Duterte won as Vice President of the Philippines in the 2022 Philippine presidential election, as part of the UniTeam alliance with former senator Bongbong Marcos, the son of the late President Ferdinand Marcos, as her running-mate for the presidency.
In 2024, Duterte resigned as secretary of education and also the vice chairperson of the an anti-insurgency task force (NTF-ELCAC), an anti-insurgency task force.[9][10] Political analysts have observed that, despite her initial election alliance with Marcos, a developing breach between the Marcos and Duterte political families is correlated with her rising absence from public appearances with the president.[11]
Remove ads
List
Summarize
Perspective
Remove ads
Vice Mayor of Davao City
The vice mayor is the second-highest official of Davao City.[1] The vice mayor is elected via popular vote; although most mayoral candidates have running mates, the vice mayor is elected separately from the mayor. This can result in the mayor and the vice mayor coming from different political parties.[1]
The vice mayor is the presiding officer of the Davao City Council, although he can only vote as the tiebreaker. When a mayor is removed from office or is unable to assume the position due to temporary incapacity (whether physical or legal), suspension, or an official leave of absence, the vice mayor serves as acting mayor until the elected mayor can return or until the next election.
Vice Mayor Sebastian Duterte assumed the role of Acting Mayor on June 30, 2025, which resulted in Councilor Rodrigo 'Rigo' Duterte II being designated as the Acting Vice Mayor of Davao City.[15]
Remove ads
Elections
- 1988 Davao City local elections
- 1992 Davao City local elections
- 1995 Davao City local elections
- 1998 Davao City local elections
- 2001 Davao City local elections
- 2004 Davao City local elections
- 2007 Davao City local elections
- 2010 Davao City local elections
- 2013 Davao City local elections
- 2016 Davao City local elections
- 2019 Davao City local elections
- 2022 Davao City local elections
- 2025 Davao City local elections
Remove ads
References
Further reading
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads