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List of female senators of the Philippines

This is a list of women senators of the Philippines. It is a guide to identify the women in the Philippines who have served as senators in the Senate of the Philippines, as distinct from the existing whole list of Philippine senators.

History
in 2018 The first female senator elected in the Philippines was Geronima Pecson, who reaped the third largest number of votes during the Philippine senatorial elections of 1947. During her senatorial term, Pecson headed the Senate Committee on Education, the Senate Committee on Health and Public Welfare, and the Joint Congressional Committee on Education. Eva Estrada-Kalaw was the first woman to be re-elected as senator. Tecla San Andres Ziga was the first woman in the Philippines to top the bar examinations for law degree graduates. She was elected as a senator in 1963. Leticia Ramos-Shahani became the first Filipino woman to become president pro tempore of the Senate in 1993. Santanina Rasul is the first Filipina Muslim senator. Miriam Defensor Santiago was the first Filipino and first Asian from a developing country to be elected as a judge of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on December 12, 2011. She later resigned the post due to suspected ME/CFS, which turned out to be lung cancer. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was the first female senator who was elected as vice president (1998–2001) and later installed to the presidency (2001–2010). She became the first female speaker of the House of Representatives in 2018. Loren Legarda is the first Filipino female senator to top the Senate race twice in 1998 and 2007. She also became the first Filipino woman to become majority floor leader of the Senate. She was also the youngest senator during the 11th Congress. She is the only female member of the Senate's history to serve in four different decades. Legarda is currently serving her fourth term as a senator, making her the longest-serving female senator in the Philippines. Pia Cayetano is the youngest woman elected senator in Philippine history at the age of 38. She was elected in 2004, then re-elected in 2010. She returned to the Senate in 2019. Upon her reelection in 2025, she became the second woman to be elected to a fourth term as senator. Loi Ejercito Estrada became the first first spouse (to Joseph Ejercito Estrada) to be elected in the Senate. She served from 2001 to 2007 after her husband's removal from the presidency in 2001. Risa Hontiveros is the Philippines' first democratic socialist woman senator, representing the Akbayan party. In 2022, she became the first Filipino to serve as Deputy Minority Floor Leader of the Senate. In 2025, she became the first woman to occupy the post of Deputy Majority Floor Leader.{{Cite web|last=Abarca |first=Charie |date=2024-08-13 |title=Hontiveros warns vs repeat of ‘deprioritization’ of funds in 2025 budget ==Female senators==
Female senators
: denotes incumbent senator ==Timeline of female senators==
Timeline of female senators
ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:12 PlotArea = top:10 bottom:30 right:150 left:20 AlignBars = early DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1945 till:2025 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1945 Colors = id:canvas value:rgb(0.97,0.97,0.97) id:red value:red id:Ind value:gray(0.7) id:Lakas value:rgb(0.69,0.88,0.9) id:LDP value:rgb(0,0,0.8) id:Lib value:rgb(0.94,0.9,0.55) id:Nac value:rgb(0.6,0.98,0.6) id:NPC value:rgb(0.29,0.63,0.17) id:PDP-L value:rgb(1,0.84,0) id:PMP value:rgb(1,0.65,0) id:PRP value:rgb(0.94,0.5,0.5) id:UNA value:rgb(1,0.3,0) Backgroundcolors = canvas:canvas BarData = barset:Sens bar:Ramos bar:Rasul barset:Sens2 bar:Legarda bar:Ejercito bar:Madrigal barset:Sens3 PlotData= width:5 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till barset:Sens from:1947 till:1953 color:Lib text:"Geronima Pecson (1947–1953)" from:1955 till:1961 color:Nac text:"Pacita Madrigal-Warns (1955–1961)" from:1961 till:1967 color:Lib text:"Maria Kalaw Katigbak (1961–1967)" from:1963 till:1969 color:Lib text:"Tecla San Andres Ziga (1963–1969)" from:1965 till:1972 color:Nac text:"Eva Estrada Kalaw (1965–1972)" from:1967 till:1972 color:Nac text:"Magnolia Antonino (1967–1972)" from:1967 till:1972 color:Nac text:"Helena Benitez (1967–1972)" bar:Ramos from:1987 till:1992 color:LDP from:1992 till:1998 color:Lakas text:"Leticia Ramos-Shahani (1987–1998)" bar:Rasul from:1987 till:1992 color:Lib from:1992 till:1995 color:Lakas text:"Nina Rasul (1987–1995)" barset:Sens2 from:1992 till:2001 color:NPC text:"Nikki Coseteng (1992–2001)" from:1992 till:1998 color:LDP text:"Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (1992–1998)" from:1995 till:2001 color:PRP text:"Miriam Defensor Santiago (1995–2001)" from:1998 till:2004 color:LDP text:"Teresa Aquino-Oreta (1998–2004)" bar:Legarda from:1998 till:2004 color:Lakas from:2004 till:2004 color:Ind text:"Loren Legarda (1998–2004)" bar:Ejercito from:2001 till:2004 color:Ind from:2004 till:2007 color:PMP text:"Loi Ejercito (2001–2007)" bar:Madrigal from:2004 till:2007 color:LDP from:2007 till:2009 color:PDP-L from:2009 till:2010 color:Ind text:"Jamby Madrigal (2004–2010)" barset:Sens3 from:2004 till:2016 color:Nac text:"Pia Cayetano (2004–2016)" from:2004 till:2016 color:PRP text:"Miriam Defensor Santiago (2nd term) (2004–2016)" from:2007 till:2019 color:NPC text:"Loren Legarda (2nd term) (2007–2019)" from:2013 till:2025 color:UNA text:"Nancy Binay (2013–2025)" from:2013 till:2025 color:Ind text:"Grace Poe (2013–2025)" from:2013 till:2025 color:Nac text:"Cynthia Villar (2013–2025)" from:2016 till:2022 color:Lib text:"Leila de Lima (2016–2022)" from:2016 till:2025 color:red text:"Risa Hontiveros (2016–present)" from:2019 till:2025 color:Nac text:"Pia Cayetano (2nd term) (2019–present)" from:2019 till:2025 color:Nac text:"Imee Marcos (2019–present)" from:2022 till:2025 color:NPC text:"Loren Legarda (3rd term) (2022–present)" from:2025 till:2025 color:Nac text:"Camille Villar (2025–present)" barset:skip Per Congress Women voted for their right suffrage and to run for public office in the 1937 Philippine women's suffrage plebiscite. The National Assembly was a unicameral legislature at this time. The 1940 Philippine constitutional plebiscites restored, among other things, the bicameral Congress, and the Senate was first elected in 1941. ==References==
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