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Master franchise in the Philippines is owned by a local company associated with George Yang. [14] Orange Brutus Fast Food: 1980 Brutus Food Systems Inc. One of first fastfood burger chain in Cebu [15] Pancake House Casual dining: 1974 Max's Group: Peri-Peri Chicken Casual dining: 2005 Pizza Hut: Casual Dining: Philippine Pizza, Inc. Popeyes ...
Akbayan is noted as a leading member of the progressive movement in the Philippines, [5] [1] having been formed in 1998 by a variety of progressive political organizations. There are approximately 100 thousand members of Akbayan, with a pool of voter interest ranging anywhere between 150 thousand to 1 million people (at most 2.5% of Philippine ...
The Progressive Movement for the Devolution of Initiatives or Probinsya Muna Development Initiative (lit. ' Province First Development Initiative ' ; [ 2 ] IPA: [prɔˈbɪnʃa ˈmuna] ), abbreviated as PROMDI or Abag-Promdi , is a political party in the Philippines based in Cebu .
In 2024, COMELEC delisted and canceled the registration of Anakpawis ahead of the 2025 Philippine general election for "failing to obtain at least two (20) percent of votes cast for the party-list system and failed to obtain a seat in the last two (2) preceding elections."
There are three types of parties in the Philippines. These are: (a) major parties, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] which typically correspond to traditional political parties; (b) minor parties or party-list organizations, which rely on the party-list system to win Congressional seats; and (c) regional or provincial parties, which correspond to region-wide or ...
The Progresista Party (Filipino and Spanish: Partido Progresista; lit. ' Progressive Party ') was a political party in the Philippines during the early 20th century. Formed in 1900 as the Federalist Party (Partido Federalista), the party originally had the Philippines becoming a U.S. state as one of its original platforms, which was later rescinded.
The National Confederation of Cooperatives (NATCCO) was organized by credit union pioneers in the Philippines who believed that the task of co-op development lies primarily in the hands of the private sector. As early as the 1950s to 70s, co-op sector leaders were aware that in order to succeed they could not rely on government alone.
The 1994 pride march was organized by the Metropolitan Community Church (MCC) and the Progressive Organization of Gays in the Philippines (Progay) on June 26 and was dubbed as Stonewall Manila as a 20th anniversary commemoration of the 1969 riots in Stonewall Inn in the United States. [1] It was alternatively known as the Pride Revolution. [2]