Kabataan, also known as the Kabataan Partylist ( KPL, ) and formerly known as Ang Nagkakaisang Kabataan Para sa Sambayanan ( ANAK ng BAYAN, ), is a partylist in the Philippines affiliated with the leftist political coalition Makabayan. It is currently represented by Raoul Manuel at the Philippine Congress since 2022. According to its website, the partylist represents the youth sector, and aims to "galvanize the Filipino youth’s unity for social change," believing that the youth should "devote its intellect, energy, and courage to building a new society devoid of corruption, inequality, and social injustice."
The partylist was first formed in 2001 in the aftermath of the Second EDSA Revolution, and vied for a seat in the Congress in the 2004 elections, where they failed to secure a single seat. However, they managed to secure a single seat in the succeeding elections since then.
In May 2001, YMJC met with the leaders of Anakbayan, the League of Filipino Students, the College Editors Guild of the Philippines, the National Union of Students of the Philippines, and the Student Christian Movement of the Philippines in Sampaloc, Manila to discuss methods to advance youth interests in the country. The convening groups eventually resolved to create a youth party, creating the Ang Nagkakaisang Kabataan Para sa Sambayanan (ANAK ng BAYAN, ). On June 19, 25 representatives from involved groups and Kabataan Artista Para sa Tunay na Kalayaan (KARATULA, ) formally inaugurated ANAK ng BAYAN at the University of the Philippines Diliman. The date was chosen to coincide with the 140th birth anniversary of national hero José Rizal.
In 2005, ANAK ng BAYAN renamed itself as the Kabataan Partylist, in order to avoid confusion with similar names such as Anakbayan and the political party Akbayan. Kabataan ran again for representation at the 2007 elections, securing 228,000 votes. However, this is below the 2% of the total partylist votes requirement for partylist representation. A 2009 Supreme Court ruling changed the partylist law, thus allowing Kabataan (among other groups) to field its first representative to the Congress, Raymond Palatino.
Kabataan became a convening member of the left-leaning bloc Makabayan (Makabayan, ) in 2009.
Kabataan filed House Bill 6799, "Anti-No-Permit, No-Exam Policy" bill in Congress. The Commission on Higher Education issued Memorandum Order 02 Series of 2010 banning the "no permit, no exam" policy in response to the Kabataan bill.
In the 2013 elections, Kabataan fielded three nominees led by Terry Ridon. COMELEC threatened to disqualify the group due to campaign-related violations, a move seen by the group as being orchestrated by the Aquino III administration in an attempt to "push out progressive partylists". Kabataan successfully secured another seat again, with Ridon replacing Palatino as the representative of the partylist.
The group was also linked by the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) and the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) to the communist group CPP-NPA-NDFP, which the group and other members of the Makabayan bloc strongly denied. This particular case was explored in a 2020 Senate hearing on red-tagging. President Rodrigo Duterte has since denied claims on red-tagging, saying that the government was only "identifying" them as "communists".
No seats won |
Raymond Palatino (14th Congress of the Philippines) |
Raymond Palatino (15th Congress of the Philippines) |
Terry Ridon (16th Congress of the Philippines) |
Sarah Elago (17th Congress of the Philippines) |
Sarah Jane Elago (18th Congress of the Philippines) |
Raoul Manuel (19th Congress of the Philippines) |
Renee Co (20th Congress of the Philippines) |
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