As an opposition candidate against the ruling
Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL), Pangarungan was elected Assemblyman of then
Central Mindanao from 1979 to 1982. After the EDSA revolution in 1986, Pangarungan was appointed acting governor of Lanao del Sur, replacing governor Mohamad Ali Dimaporo, a powerful ally of then President
Ferdinand Marcos during the martial law regime.
Saving 12 Carmellite Nuns A challenge to his administration was the kidnapping of 12 Carmelite nuns from their Marawi hilltop convent by lawless group of men. From the Vatican,
Pope John Paul II appealed to their captors to release the nuns who were later brought to Lumbayanague across south of Lake Lanao. After two weeks of continued search, Pangarungan led government security forces and encircled the kidnappers' holdout. Under heavy pressure, the outnumbered kidnappers were forced to release all the nuns, safe and unharmed.
Abolition of 2,000 ghost barangays Pangarungan was later appointed as undersecretary of Department of Interior and Local Government by President
Corazon Aquino. He was tasked as chairman of the inter-agency committee that investigated the ghost barangays in the Muslim provinces. After 6 months of ocular investigations and upon his recommendations, President Aquino signed an executive order abolishing some 2,000 ghost barangays in the two Lanao provinces, saving the government billions of pesos in regular allotments to the non-existent or uninhabited villages. As undersecretary, he also helped craft an executive order granting regular salaries and allowances to barangay (village) officials in the country.
Governor In the 1988 elections, he was elected governor of Lanao del Sur, beating the political dynasties in the province. As governor, he built the 4-hectare provincial capitol complex overlooking the scenic Lake Lanao, the provincial library, People's Park and commissioned other infrastructure projects. He also concreted 110 kilometers of two major road networks: the Lake Lanao circumferential road and the Marawi-Malabang Road. At that time, the
internal revenue allotment (IRA) of the provincial government was a meager P850,000 a month compared to the P160 million monthly at 2017 figures. During Pangarungan's watch, the province was drug-free because of his staunch campaign against illegal drugs trade. Under his governorship, Lanao del Sur and its capital was much peaceful, with no recorded firefights or skirmishes between government and rebel forces. He negotiated the surrender of thousands of MNLF and MILF rebels. For his unprecedented achievements, Pangarungan was awarded thrice as one of the "Most Outstanding Governors of the Philippines" in three consecutive years: 1989, 1990 and 1991.
Peacemaker Pangarungan was also a member of the Philippine delegation at the
World Muslim Congress in Karachi, Pakistan in 1983, where he sponsored the adoption of the 'Karachi Declaration for Peace & Unity' to revive the long stalled peace talks between the Marcos government and the rebel MNLF and BMLO forces. The delegation included Senators Acmad Domocao Alonto, Salipada Pendatun, speakers Uttoh Ututalum and Abulkhayr Alonto, Court of Appeals justice Mama Busran and Princess Tarhata Lucman. In 1987, President Cory Aquino sent Senators Aquilino Pimentel Jr., Agapito Butz Aquino, Norberto Gonzales and Pangarungan to the Organization of Islamic Conference in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to revive the peace talks with the MNLF- Nur Misuari faction. This led to the signing of the Jeddah Accord of 1987. Nur Misuari ended his exile and returned to the Philippines to eventually sign the 1996 Final Peace Accord with the government.
Mindanao power crisis In 2007, he became President of the Agus 3 Hydropower Corporation; and later in 2013 as chairman/CEO of the Maranao Energy Corp.(MENCO) that won the government bid on the Agus 3 hydropower project (240 Megawatts) in 2015. Pangarungan pursued the Agus 3 project to help address the crippling power outages in Mindanao in 2010 to 2015.
Enthronement as a sultan He was enthroned Sultan of the Sultanate of Madaya,
Marawi City on July 5, 2009, attended by 12,000 dignitaries and guests.
Secretary, National Commission on Muslim Filipinos Salvador Medialdea (rightmost) during the 2019
Eid al-Fitr Celebration. On July 9, 2018, President Rodrigo Duterte appointed Pangarungan as secretary with cabinet rank and chairman, National Commission on Muslim Filipinos (NCMF). Under its charter, Republic Act 9997, the commission is tasked to uplift the socio-economic and cultural lives of the approximately 8 million Muslims in the Philippines. Pangarungan's priority agenda was to reform the NCMF long dogged by corruption, ensure a comfortable and affordable annual Hajj (Pilgrimage) to Makkah, Saudi Arabia for thousands of Filipino pilgrims, and led a joint nationwide project with the United Nation Development Program (UNDP) and the Japanese Government in strengthening national and local resilience against violent extremism. Pangarungan launched the project at the Mindanao State University in Marawi City on January 23, 2019 in time with the twin explosions in a cathedral in Jolo, Sulu that killed twenty parishioners and 111 wounded. Three days later, a grenade explosion rocked a mosque in Zamboanga City that killed 2 imams and wounding 4 others. These violent incidents were widely condemned by Muslim and Christian leaders in the country.
ISO 9001:2015 Seal of Excellence Certification Under Pangarungan leadership, the NCMF received ISO 9001:2015 Seal of Excellence Certification by Bureau Veritas of France on December 16, 2021. This was in recognition of his accomplishments in reforming the Hajj pilgrimage by providing the best accommodation to thousands of Filipino pilgrims in 4.7 to 5-star hotels in Saudi Arabia; in reducing the Mutawiff or Hajj service fees by substantial reduction in plane fares. Pangarungan also activated and implemented the 24 mandates of the Commission under its NCMF charter including national peace-building, the development to greater heights of halal, shariah, Islamic finance, and the Madrasah educational system. He proactively responded to the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic through the Commission's ongoing relief operations and other assistance to the calls for help by more than 200,000 muslim families nationwide.
Chairman, Commission on Elections On March 7, 2022, Pangarungan was appointed by President Rodrigo Duterte as ad-interim Chairman, Commission on Elections with a term of seven years until February 2, 2029. With barely two months to prepare for the May 9, 2022 National and Local Elections, Pangarungan and the other Commissioners geared up preparations.
Fastest Results, Honest and Peaceful Elections The election was hailed by foreign and local observers as the fastest in Philippine history with the results transmitted in the Comelec Transparency Server before midnight of election day. Its voter turnout of 83.11% was the highest in Philippine election history. It was also the most peaceful election with only 27 incidents of violence compared to 166 violent incidents in the 2019 polls and 133 incidents during the 2016 elections. This was due to the series of peace-covenant signings among candidates in election hotspots that Pangarungan initiated across the country . Proclaimed swiftly in record time were the winning candidates for President [Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr.], Vice President [Sara Z. Duterte], Senators and Party-list. In a national survey by Pulse Asia, the prevailing sentiment of Filipinos at 82% is one of trust that the outcome of the recent national and local elections is accurate and credible. Satisfaction with the automated voting system, which employed the use of vote counting machines (VCMs) was expressed by 89% of Filipinos. The bicameral Commission on Appointments of the 18th Congress however failed to act on the appointment of Pangarungan and other Commissioners of the Comelec, Commission on Audit and Civil Service Commission for lack of quorum leading to the bypass of their appointments. ==Personal life, family and ancestry==