The 11th Congress of the Philippines  (Filipino : Ikalabing-isang Kongreso ng Pilipinas ), composed of the Philippine Senate  and House of Representatives , met from July 27, 1998, until June 8, 2001, during the 31-month presidency of Joseph Estrada  and the first four months of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's presidency . The convening of the 11th Congress  followed the 1998 national elections , which replaced half of the Senate membership, and the entire membership of the House of Representatives. The Estrada impeachment  was the highlight of the 11th Congress.
Sessions 
First Regular Session : July 27, 1998 – June 4, 1999
First Special Session : January 4 – February 5, 1999Second Regular Session : July 26, 1999 – June 9, 2000
Second Special Session : January 3 – February 4, 2000Third Regular Session : July 24, 2000 – June 8, 2001
Third Special Session : January 1 – February 16, 2001
Leadership 
Senate 
House of Representatives 
Speaker :
Manny Villar  (Las Piñas , LAMMP ), until November 13, 2000Arnulfo Fuentebella  (Camarines Sur–3rd , LAMMP ), November 13, 2000 – January 24, 2001Feliciano Belmonte Jr.  (Quezon City–4th , Lakas ), from January 24, 2001Deputy Speakers :
Luzon:
Alfredo Amor Abueg Jr. (Palawan–2nd , LAMMP ), until November 13, 2000 
Butz Aquino  (Makati–2nd , LAMMP ), November 13, 2000 – January 24, 2001Carlos Padilla  (Nueva Vizcaya , LAMMP ), from January 24, 2001 
Visayas:
 
Mindanao:
 Majority Floor Leader :
Mar Roxas  (Capiz–1st , Liberal ), until January 2, 2000Eduardo Gullas  (Cebu–1st , LAMMP ), January 2 – November 13, 2000Bella Angara  (Aurora , LDP ), November 13, 2000 – January 24, 2001Sergio Apostol  (Leyte–2nd , Lakas ), from January 24, 2001Minority Floor Leader :
Members 
Final Senate composition. Final House of Representatives composition. 
Senate 
The following are the terms of the senators of this Congress, according to the date of election:
House of Representatives 
Eleventh Congress representation map of the Philippines [ 3] 
See also 
Notes 
^ Died on July 11, 1999. 
^ Appointed as Vice President of the Philippines  on February 7, 2001. 
^ Appointed as Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports  on February 9, 2001. 
^ Died on September 29, 2000. 
^ Appointed as Secretary of National Defense  on January 25, 2001. 
^ Died on June 12, 2001. 
^ Appointed as Secretary of Trade and Industry  on January 2, 2000. 
^ Appointed as Secretary of Transportation  on January 20, 2001. 
^ Ran as Partido Reporma member in 1998 election.[ 1]  
^ Appointed as Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources  on March 29, 2001. 
^ Died on July 15, 1998. 
^ Died on January 5, 2001. 
^ Election annulled on August 29, 2000, after an electoral protest. 
^ Took office on August 29, 2000, replacing Girlie Villarosa . 
^ Appointed as National Security Adviser  on February 19, 2001. 
^ Died on May 12, 2001. 
^ Disqualified for lack of residency.[ 2]  
^ Appointed as Secretary of Agriculture  on February 12, 2001. 
^ Succeeded Leonardo Q. Montemayor. 
  
References 
^ News5Everywhere (March 24, 2022). NEWS ExplainED: Kasaysayan ng Partido Reporma . Retrieved October 7,  2024  – via YouTube. {{cite AV media}}:  CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)^ G.R. No. 134015 (July 19, 1999), Juan Domino vs. Commission on Elections, Narciso Ra. Grafilo, Jr., Eddy B. Java, Juan P. Bayonito, Jr., Rosario Samson and Dionisio P. Lim, Sr.  ^ "List of All House Members: 11th Congress"  (PDF) . congress.gov.ph . Archived from the original  (PDF)  on August 3, 2010. Retrieved March 14,  2009 .  
External links 
Further reading 
Philippine House of Representatives Congressional Library 
Paras, Corazon L. (2000). The Presidents of the Senate of the Republic of the Philippines . ISBN  971-8832-24-6 . Pobre, Cesar P. (2000). Philippine Legislature 100 Years . ISBN  971-92245-0-9 .