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Gabriela Women's Party
Gabriela Women's Party
from Wikipedia

The Gabriela Women's Party (General Assembly Binding Women for Reform, Integrity, Equality, Leadership and Action), or simply GABRIELA, is a progressive Filipino political party that advocates for women's issues and represents Filipino women in the House of Representatives.

Key Information

The party is separate, although allied, with GABRIELA National Alliance of Filipino Women.[1] GABRIELA, the alliance, is a nationwide network of grassroots organizations, institutions, and programs that address social issues such as human rights, poverty, globalization, militarism, violence, rape culture, health, sex trafficking, censorship[2] and other issues affecting women. The alliance has regional chapters in Metro Manila, Cordillera Administrative Region, and Mindanao; sub-regional chapters in Negros, Panay and Samar, and provincial chapters in Bicol and Cebu. GABRIELA's membership includes Filipino women from marginalized sectors of society and works towards their education and empowerment.[3] The organization also engages in counseling services, medical missions, free clinics, and trainings on women's health and women's rights.[4]

History

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GABRIELA, the alliance, was founded in April 1984 after 10,000 women marched in Manila, defying a Marcos decree against demonstrations.[5] GABRIELA was named in honor of Gabriela Silang,[6] a Filipina revolutionary, who led a revolt against Spain in 1763 following her husband's assassination.[7] Amidst a backdrop of widespread social inequality and unrest, GABRIELA aimed to synthesize issues of national liberation, poverty and women's emancipation.[8] The organization's founders pushed for "Third World feminism" which focused on comprehensive social transformation, rather than focusing on individual forms of oppression.[9] GABRIELA's advocacy challenges patriarchy, alongside resisting foreign influence and neocolonialism.[10]

In October 2024, GABRIELA fielded former Kabataan Partylist Representative Sarah Elago as their lead representative for the 2025 House sectoral elections, with pushing the legalization of abortion in the country, and did not agree with the term usage of sex workers to prostitutes.[11]

Electoral performance

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In 2003, the Gabriela Women's Party was launched with the help of GABRIELA members and other women's and people's organizations.[5] In the 2004 election for the House of Representatives the party-list received 464,586 votes (3.6518% of the nationwide vote) and won a seat for first nominee Liza Maza.[12][13] In the 2007 election, the party won two seats in the nationwide party-list vote. The Gabriela Women's Party was the only women's party to obtain a second term in Congress.[14] On September 14, 2025, COMELEC chairperson George Garcia announced Gabriela Women's Party's Sarah Elago proclaimed as the 64th winning party-list representative on September 17, 2025 after Duterte Youth party-list disqualified.[15][16][17]

Election Votes % Seats
2004 464,586 3.65% 1
2007 621,171 3.89% 2
2010 1,001,421 3.31% 2
2013 713,492 2.60% 2
2016 1,367,795 4.22% 2
2019 445,696 1.61% 1
2022 413,909 1.15% 1
2025 256,811 0.61% 1[a]

Representatives to Congress

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Programs and positions

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One Billion Rising (OBR) Task Force Philippines

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One Billion Rising (OBR) is a global campaign founded to end rape and sexual violence against women. Since 2013, GABRIELA have led the One Billion Rising Task Force in the Philippines and abroad where its chapters are situated.[18]

The Philippine task force members include:[18]

Human trafficking

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In the Philippines, GABRIELA is actively involved in awareness campaigns to prevent the trafficking of women and girls from the Philippines. Its strategies consist of seminars and information dissemination to NGOs and government agencies and awareness campaigns at the community level.[19] In 1999, GABRIELA launched the Purple Rose Campaign against the sex trafficking of Filipino women and children.[20] The campaign achieved a milestone with the passage of the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003 with GABRIELA representative Liza Maza as the bill's co-sponsor.[21] GABRIELA is also actively involved in the Vow to Fight Against Violence on Women and the Free Our Sisters/Free Ourselves campaign.[22]

International chapters

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GABRIELA has chapters in the United States, the Netherlands, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Italy, Germany and the United Kingdom.[14]

Notes

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Gabriela Women's Party is a feminist sectoral party-list in the dedicated to advancing the rights and welfare of marginalized women through legislative advocacy and organizing, established on October 28, 2000, as the electoral arm of the GABRIELA , a national network of women's groups founded in 1984 amid protests against the Marcos dictatorship. With over 100,000 members across the country and abroad, the party has prioritized issues such as combating , , , and , contributing to landmark laws including the Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004 and the Expanded Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2012 during its congressional tenures from 2004 to 2022 and its recent return via a single seat in the 2025 midterm elections following Comelec's seat expansion. Notable for its militant activism rooted in anti-imperialist and socialist frameworks, Gabriela has organized mass mobilizations and direct services like and medical missions for vulnerable women, yet it remains embroiled in controversies, with Philippine and anti-insurgency task forces alleging it functions as a and political front for the of the Philippines-New People's Army, assertions supported by claims of CPP nominations for its candidates and operational overlaps, though the party dismisses these as baseless red-tagging intended to suppress dissent and has challenged them legally.

History

Formation as a Women's Alliance (1984–1990s)

GABRIELA, formally the General Assembly Binding Women for Reforms, Integrity, Equality, Leadership, and Action, was founded in April as a coalition of 42 women's organizations amid the dictatorship. The alliance emerged from a march of approximately 10,000 women in that defied Marcos-era decrees banning demonstrations, marking a pivotal escalation in organized women's resistance against authoritarian rule and patriarchal oppression. Named after , an 18th-century Ilocana revolutionary who led an uprising against Spanish colonial forces, the group aimed to unite women across sectors—particularly from marginalized rural and urban poor communities—for advocacy on economic justice, , and gender-specific reforms. Key co-founders included former beauty queens turned activists Nelia Sancho and Maita Gomez, alongside Indai Sajor, Judy Taguiwalo, and Lidy Nacpil, who drew from prior underground networks opposing . In its early years, GABRIELA functioned as a , organizing campaigns against state repression, foreign burdens, and toward women, while prioritizing sectors like peasants, workers, and indigenous groups. The alliance's formation reflected broader anti-dictatorship momentum, integrating women's issues into national liberation struggles and launching initiatives like the "Women's Rights are Human Rights" slogan to highlight abuses under Marcos. By 1986, following the that ousted Marcos, GABRIELA held its Third National Congress in March, expanding its network and critiquing the incoming administration for failing to address systemic inequalities despite the . Under Aquino, the group persisted in protests against policies that exacerbated poverty among women, maintaining its stance as a broad rather than aligning fully with the post-EDSA government. Throughout the 1990s, GABRIELA grew into a national alliance of over 100 organizations, focusing on combating , labor exploitation, and the trafficking of women amid globalization's impacts. It spearheaded drives in rural areas to empower marginalized women against feudal landlordism and conducted international solidarity work, establishing chapters abroad to address vulnerabilities. A notable late-decade effort was the 1999 launch of the Purple Rose Campaign Against of Filipino Women and Children, which mobilized networks to expose and challenge the of women in prostitution rings linked to and migration pressures. This period solidified GABRIELA's role as a non-partisan hub, independent of electoral politics, emphasizing over institutional co-optation while navigating tensions with administrations perceived as perpetuating elite interests.

Expansion into National Advocacy and Party-List Registration (2000s)

In the early 2000s, GABRIELA transitioned from primarily to broader national advocacy by leveraging the ' party-, established under the 1987 Constitution and first implemented in the 2001 elections to provide representation for marginalized sectors, including women. In 2000, GABRIELA co-founded the party-list coalition with other progressive groups, enabling it to participate in national politics and advance women's issues through shared representation. This marked an initial expansion, as Liza Maza, a GABRIELA nominee, secured a congressional seat under from 2001 to 2004, focusing on legislation addressing and economic marginalization. Seeking dedicated sectoral representation, GABRIELA launched the Gabriela Women's Party as an independent entity in 2003, registering it with the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) for the party-list polls. The party emphasized advocacy for under-represented women, including rural workers, urban poor, and indigenous groups, building on GABRIELA's network of over 200 affiliates. In the 2004 midterm elections, it ranked seventh among 66 contending groups, garnering sufficient votes—approximately 430,000 or 2.8% of the party-list total—to elect Maza as its first dedicated representative in the 13th Congress. This period solidified GABRIELA's national presence, with the party-list mechanism allowing direct influence on policy, such as contributing to the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003 through efforts prior to its standalone success. The expansion reflected a strategic shift toward electoral engagement while maintaining ties to allied leftist networks, though critics, including government statements, have alleged links to insurgent recruitment, claims the party disputes as politically motivated. By mid-decade, the party's registration and electoral debut positioned it as a persistent voice for gender-specific reforms amid broader socio-economic critiques.

Recent Developments and Electoral Adjustments (2010s–2025)

In the 2010s, Gabriela continued its legislative push for women's protection amid the Aquino and early Duterte administrations, filing bills to address and economic marginalization, including measures for expanded reproductive health services and anti-trafficking enforcement. The party maintained its single-seat representation in the following the 2013 elections, where it garnered sufficient votes under the to qualify, focusing campaigns on rural women's issues and opposition to perceived neoliberal policies. By the 2016 midterms, Gabriela secured another term with one seat, advocating against the Duterte administration's drug war, which it argued disproportionately victimized poor women through extrajudicial killings and family disruptions. The 2019 elections saw Gabriela retain its seat amid heightened scrutiny, with representatives like criticizing government red-tagging practices that labeled the party as insurgent-linked, potentially deterring voters. During the from 2020 onward, the party shifted focus to emergency aid for women informal workers and healthcare access, organizing relief drives and protesting inadequate social protections in the national budget. In the 2022 midterms, Gabriela again won one seat despite declining vote shares and ongoing red-tagging by state forces, which the party attributed to its anti-imperialist and pro-marginalized stances clashing with administration priorities. Electoral adjustments intensified post-2022 as Gabriela recalibrated amid Marcos Jr.'s presidency, emphasizing digital outreach and alliances within the progressive bloc to counter declining support from urban youth and moderate voters. In the May 12, 2025, midterms, the party ranked 55th with votes insufficient for initial qualification under the projected 63 party-list seats, marking an apparent end to its 21-year continuous presence since 2004. However, on September 17, 2025, the Commission on Elections proclaimed Gabriela the winner of the newly added 64th seat to fulfill the constitutional 20% party-list allocation in the 316-seat , elevating its share from 19.8% and seating nominee , a former party-list representative. This adjustment, independent of separate disqualifications like Duterte Youth's, allowed Gabriela to resume advocacy on budget critiques and women's economic rights, denouncing the 2025 national budget as favoring elites over the masses.

Ideology and Positions

Core Advocacy on Women's Rights

Gabriela Women's Party prioritizes the empowerment of marginalized Filipino women, including workers, peasants, urban poor, and indigenous groups, through organizing, , and direct services aimed at fostering initiative, skills, and for and equality. The party advances women's welfare via legislative measures and campaigns targeting systemic barriers to participation in electoral politics and governance. A central focus is combating (VAW), with the party co-authoring Republic Act No. 9262, the Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004, and serving as principal author of Republic Act No. 11313, the Safe Spaces Act of 2019, which addresses in public spaces. It has pushed for amendments to expand the Anti-VAWC law to include electronic violence and harsher penalties, alongside House Resolution No. 650 for ratifying Convention No. 190 on and . Gabriela affiliates provide psychosocial counseling, legal assistance, shelters, and home visits to VAW survivors, handling cases primarily involving (61% from 2002–2005 data) and (14%), while running awareness campaigns like VOW vs. VAW and the Blow-a-Whistle initiative to encourage reporting in communities. The party also co-sponsored the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003 and advocates for laws criminalizing as a form of exploitation. On reproductive health, the party views restricted access as a VAW dimension contributing to high maternal mortality (10 deaths daily as of early 2000s data) and has sponsored bills for comprehensive services, including modern contraceptives to reduce abortions and teen pregnancies (142,276 cases in 2023). It principally authored Republic Act No. 11210, the 105-Day Expanded Maternity Leave Law of 2019, and promotes the Prevention of Adolescent Pregnancy and Comprehensive Sexuality Education bills. In , Gabriela Women's Party co-authored Republic Act No. 11058, the Standards Law of 2018, and supports the for Daycare Workers (House-approved) alongside a ₱1,200 national to address exploitation of women in informal and low-wage sectors. It emphasizes and living wages for women, particularly in and domestic work, as part of broader economic efforts. The party also champions anti-discrimination through co-authorship of Republic Act No. 9710, the of Women of 2009, and ongoing pushes for the SOGIESC Equality Bill and Absolute Divorce Bill (House-approved on third reading as of 2025). Additional measures include Republic Act No. 11861, the Expanded Solo Parents Welfare Act of 2022, to support vulnerable mothers.

Broader Socio-Economic and Anti-Imperialist Stances

The Gabriela Women's Party promotes a self-reliant focused on fulfilling the basic needs of the population, emphasizing national sovereignty over dependence on foreign economic influences. It critiques neoliberal policies, including , , and , as drivers of and inequality that disproportionately affect women. The party advocates for comprehensive agrarian reform to grant women equal rights to the land they cultivate, alongside policies ensuring full and with living wages. In legislative efforts, it has pushed for eliminating regressive taxes such as and excise taxes, arguing these exacerbate economic hardships for marginalized women. These socio-economic positions are intertwined with the party's anti-imperialist outlook, which views foreign domination—particularly by the United States—as a root cause of domestic exploitation and underdevelopment. Gabriela frames imperialism as perpetuating economic dependency through mechanisms like unequal trade and debt, calling for resistance to such interventions to enable genuine national progress. The party has mobilized against foreign military pacts, including opposition to U.S. troop exercises and proposed Philippines-Japan military access agreements, asserting these heighten risks of conflict and undermine sovereignty. Through rallies and declarations, it links women's economic oppression to global imperialist structures, urging collective action for land redistribution, decent work, and freedom from external militarization.

Critiques of Government Policies

Gabriela Women's Party has consistently criticized Philippine government economic policies for exacerbating and gender disparities among women. In June 2024, the party condemned a proposed P35 daily increase as "insulting" and insufficient to address inflation's impact on low-income women, advocating instead for a P750 across-the-board hike to cover basic needs like food and childcare. Similarly, in March 2025, Gabriela highlighted rising hunger rates affecting women and children, attributing them to inadequate relief measures under the Marcos Jr. administration and calling for expanded social services over militarized spending. The party has also faulted prior policies like the 2018 Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion () Law and rice liberalization for driving up prices of essentials, disproportionately burdening female-headed households in informal sectors. On security and anti-drug campaigns, Gabriela has denounced extrajudicial killings and state violence, particularly under the Duterte administration's drug war, which the party described as "flawed" for failing to curb narcotics while resulting in thousands of deaths, including women and bystanders. In November 2022, party representatives urged the to prosecute former President for , citing cases of and enforced disappearances linked to the campaign. Extending to the Marcos era, Gabriela accused the administration in March 2025 of perpetuating repressive tactics through the to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), labeling it a tool for red-tagging activists and violating via harassment and fabricated terror charges under the 2020 Anti-Terrorism Act. In the realm of women's rights implementation, Gabriela has lambasted governments for failing to curb violence against women (VAW), pointing to Philippine National Police data showing increases in rape and domestic abuse cases amid weak enforcement of the Magna Carta of Women. The party sought a formal apology from the Marcos administration in March 2023 for neglecting compensation to World War II comfort women, arguing it perpetuated historical injustices without accountability. Additionally, Gabriela opposed budget cuts in 2023 to agencies preserving history and culture, viewing them as deliberate erasure of narratives critical of authoritarian legacies, which indirectly undermines education on gender-based atrocities. These positions reflect the party's broader framing of policy shortcomings as rooted in patriarchal and elite-driven governance, prioritizing foreign alliances and suppression over substantive gender equity.

Organizational Structure and Operations

Leadership and Internal Governance

The Gabriela Women's Party functions as the electoral and legislative extension of the GABRIELA National Alliance of Women, a federated network of over 200 organizations representing marginalized Filipino women in communities, workplaces, and schools. Internal integrates alliance executives with party representatives, prioritizing collective input from member groups to align advocacy with sectoral needs. The alliance's Secretary General oversees strategic direction, coordination of campaigns, and party operations, elected through internal processes involving delegates from affiliate organizations. Clarice Palce has served as Secretary General since at least early 2025, succeeding figures like Joms Salvador and the late Petite Peredo-Calaguas, who passed away on August 8, 2025. Party-list representatives in , nominated via national consultations within the , handle legislative and serve as public faces of leadership; was proclaimed on September 17, 2025, as the party's sole representative for the 20th following the allocation of a 64th party-list seat. Prior terms featured multiple seats held by (2019–2025) and Emmi de Jesus (2019–2025), who focused on bills advancing women's economic and reproductive rights. Governance emphasizes democratic federation, with decisions on policy platforms, candidate selection, and resource allocation made through sectoral assemblies and national congresses that aggregate resolutions, ensuring to over members across 15 regions and overseas chapters. This supports sustained but has drawn for opaque nominee vetting amid allegations of external influences, though the party maintains internal transparency via affiliate reporting.

Affiliated Networks and International Ties

The Gabriela Women's Party operates as the electoral arm of the broader GABRIELA National Alliance of Filipino Women, a federation comprising over 200 women's organizations, institutions, and programs focused on sectors such as communities, workplaces, and schools. Domestically, it aligns with the bloc, a coalition of progressive party-list groups including , , and ACT Teachers, which coordinates electoral strategies and legislative advocacy on issues like and . This affiliation facilitated joint campaigns, such as the coalition's senatorial and House bids formalized on October 4, 2024, emphasizing opposition to foreign intervention and . Internationally, the party's ties stem primarily through the GABRIELA alliance's overseas extensions, including GABRIELA USA, established as the first U.S.-based chapter to advance Filipino women's organizing among diaspora communities. GABRIELA USA functions as a member of BAYAN USA—a counterpart to the Philippine (Bayan)—and the International Women's Alliance, a network promoting anti-imperialist feminist solidarity across countries. The alliance also maintains linkages with global women's groups for mutual support on and empowerment initiatives, as evidenced by participation in campaigns like those documented by the . Additionally, GABRIELA holds membership in the World Organisation Against (OMCT), collaborating on monitoring for marginalized women in the Philippines. These connections extend the party's advocacy beyond national borders, focusing on migrant workers' rights and transnational gender justice without formal party-list diplomatic roles.

Electoral Performance

Historical Election Results (2001–2022)

The Gabriela Women's Party participated in the inaugural party-list elections in 2001 but failed to secure any seats, as only groups like (three seats), (one seat), and Butil (one seat) qualified for representation. The party achieved its breakthrough in the 2004 general elections, winning one seat in the , represented by first nominee Liza Maza. Subsequent elections saw improved performance, with the party consistently qualifying under the , which allocates seats based on a minimum two percent vote share per seat (up to three maximum per group). In 2007, Gabriela won two seats through the nationwide party-list vote. It maintained two seats in both the 2010 and 2013 midterm elections.
Election YearSeats WonVote Share (Approximate)Key Representatives
20041~2%Liza Maza
20072~4%Liza Maza, Luzviminda Ilagan
20102~4%Luzviminda Ilagan, Emmi de Jesus
20132~4%Luzviminda Ilagan, Emmi de Jesus
20163~6%Emmi de Jesus, , Sarah Jane Elago
Gabriela reached its electoral peak in the 2016 elections, securing three seats and affirming its position among top party-list groups. Performance declined in later cycles, with one seat each in the 2019 and 2022 elections, amid a broader contraction in support for progressive party-lists. These results reflect the party's reliance on grassroots mobilization among women voters, though exact vote tallies varied with turnout and competition from over 100 party-list contenders per cycle.

Key Representatives and Legislative Record

Gabriela Women's Party representatives in the have included Luzviminda , who served from 2007 to 2016 during the 14th and 15th Congresses, focusing on and anti-violence measures. succeeded as a representative starting in 2016 for the 17th Congress, authoring over 250 principal bills by 2025, primarily addressing labor protections, gender-based violence, and reproductive rights. joined as the party's third nominee, proclaimed by the Commission on Elections on September 17, 2025, and taking her oath on September 23, 2025, for the 20th Congress, bolstering the House minority bloc. The party's legislative record emphasizes advocacy for pro-women laws, with early representatives like Liza Maza co-authoring Republic Act No. 9208, the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003, which criminalized and provided victim protections. Representatives also contributed to Republic Act No. 9262, the Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004, establishing mechanisms for protection orders and penalties for domestic abuse. In recent terms, Brosas sponsored House Bill No. 1799 for absolute , which advanced through the House in May 2024 after nearly two decades of pushes but stalled in the Senate by June 2025. Other notable filings include Brosas's House Bill No. 8859 in 2023, declaring August 14 as National Memorial Day for comfort women to commemorate victims of , and the "Bawal Bastos sa Eleksyon" bill filed in April 2025 to disqualify candidates for misogynistic statements during elections. Brosas also filed anti-endo legislation to end contractualization and secure worker tenure, alongside co-authorship of bills on and protections, though many remain pending due to the party's minority status. In 2025, Brosas voted in favor of House Bill No. 11376, adding P200 to the daily for workers, albeit with reservations on its adequacy. Overall, while prolific in bill sponsorship—totaling hundreds across terms—passage rates are limited, with successes tied to broader coalitions on flagship anti-violence and anti-trafficking measures.

2025 Seat Proclamation and Disputes

The Commission on Elections (COMELEC), sitting as the National Board of Canvassers, proclaimed Gabriela Women's Party as the winner of the 64th party-list seat in the on September 17, 2025, following the May 12, 2025, midterm elections. This allocation addressed the shortfall in party-list representation, which had initially totaled 63 seats at 19.8% of the 316-seat House, below the constitutional 20% mandate under Republic Act No. 7941; COMELEC Chairman announced the adjustment on September 14, 2025, to ensure compliance by filling the final seat with the next eligible group based on vote shares. Gabriela, which secured approximately 1.1% of party-list votes (around 800,000 votes) but initially fell short of standard seat thresholds due to competition from over 140 groups, thus ended a one-term absence from after previously holding seats continuously from 2004 to 2022. Sarah Jane Elago, Gabriela's first nominee and a former representative for the party-list, received the certificate of proclamation and took her before Speaker on September 24, 2025, marking her return to the 20th Congress. The proclamation capped a delayed process, as initial canvassing in May and June 2025 focused on higher-ranking groups, with Gabriela's eligibility confirmed only after resolving vacancies from disqualified parties like Duterte Youth, which had been proclaimed but faced separate legal challenges. Disputes arose immediately, with the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) filing a on September 17, 2025, to void the proclamation, arguing it unconstitutionally exceeded the 20% party-list cap when combined with prior allocations, including Duterte Youth's seats, and violated the intent of the to represent marginalized sectors rather than allegedly insurgent-linked groups. COMELEC responded on September 18, 2025, affirming readiness to defend the decision in court, citing adherence to the formula in BANAT v. COMELEC (2009) for proportional allocation and vote thresholds. Critics, including NTF-ELCAC officials, further contended that Gabriela's inclusion undermined the system's integrity amid ongoing red-tagging allegations tying the party to communist fronts, though Gabriela dismissed these as baseless harassment aimed at suppressing women's advocacy. As of late September 2025, the had not issued a , allowing Elago's seating, but the highlighted tensions over party-list nominations and enforcement of anti-subversion laws.

Controversies

Alleged Ties to CPP-NPA-NDF

The Philippine government, through the to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), has repeatedly alleged that the Gabriela Women's Party functions as a legal for the of the Philippines-New People's Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF), a designated terrorist group by both Philippine and U.S. authorities. These claims, articulated since at least 2021, assert that Gabriela engages in activities to bolster the insurgent group's urban operations and mass base expansion, drawing on testimonies from former NPA members who surrendered to authorities. In March 2022, three ex-CPP-NPA-NDF cadres publicly stated during a that Gabriela representatives approached them for during their involvement in the organization's activities, framing the party-list as a conduit for channeling supporters into struggle. NTF-ELCAC officials, including former spokesperson Antonio Parlade, have cited these accounts alongside historical patterns of CPP infiltration into progressive NGOs, arguing that Gabriela's advocacy aligns with the group's national democratic ideology, such as anti-imperialist rhetoric and calls for that mirror NDF platforms. The has petitioned the Commission on Elections (Comelec) multiple times—most notably ahead of the 2022 polls—to disqualify Gabriela, claiming its participation violates the Party-List System Law by advancing armed overthrow of the government rather than sectoral representation. Gabriela has consistently rejected these allegations as baseless "red-tagging," a tactic it attributes to state suppression of legitimate dissent, and has filed formal complaints against NTF-ELCAC officials for and defamation before Comelec and other bodies. Party representatives, including former legislator , argue that such accusations endanger activists and lack judicial validation, pointing to Comelec's repeated approvals of their as evidence of compliance. Independent fact-checks have debunked some personalized claims of CPP membership among Gabriela affiliates but have not directly addressed organizational ties, leaving the matter contested without conclusive court rulings. NTF-ELCAC counters that exposing these links via surrenderee testimonies constitutes disclosure, not , and cites operational intelligence from anti-insurgency campaigns as corroboration, though specifics remain classified.

Accusations of Recruitment and Front Organization Role

Three former members of the , who surrendered to authorities, testified on March 15, 2022, that the Gabriela Women's Party serves as a primary recruitment channel for the insurgent groups, particularly targeting university students through its youth affiliate, Gabriela Youth. One deponent, using the alias "Ka Julie," stated she was recruited in 2012 at the via Gabriela Youth activities, where propaganda on social issues drew her in; she later became the group's chairperson before formal indoctrination into the CPP-NPA-NDF as a party member responsible for exposing military operations. Another, alias "Ka Ben," recounted joining through Gabriela chapters in , which facilitated her progression into NPA ranks. These testimonies, presented by the to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), portray Gabriela as functioning less as an independent women's and more as a "legal that leverages its party-list status in to propagate CPP ideology, mobilize mass actions, and channel recruits into armed struggle. Earlier accounts from 2019 corroborate this pattern, with former rebel Nancy Dologuin describing her as a student-athlete at through Gabriela's collaboration with the League of Filipino Students (LFS), leading to her involvement in NPA operations. Accusations extend to Gabriela's alleged use of and public platforms for subtle recruitment, such as framing government critiques in terms aligned with CPP narratives on class struggle and , thereby desensitizing participants to . NTF-ELCAC officials have cited these mechanisms as enabling the party to sustain the insurgency's urban support base, with ex-rebels estimating that recruits from such groups form a significant portion—up to 90% in some claims—of NPA cadres. The Philippine has designated Gabriela as part of the CPP's broader network of sectoral fronts, arguing this dual role undermines its constitutional mandate as a marginalized sector representative under Republic Act No. 7941.

Funding Sources and Constitutional Violations

The Gabriela Women's Party has faced accusations from the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) of receiving financial assistance from foreign sources, constituting a violation of Philippine law prohibiting political parties from accepting contributions from foreign governments or entities. In August 2021, National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. publicly stated that such funding breached constitutional and statutory prohibitions, prompting NTF-ELCAC lawyers to seek a subpoena duces tecum from courts to compel disclosure of Gabriela's financial records as evidence. These claims align with broader petitions, including a 2019 disqualification case supported by NTF-ELCAC, alleging foreign funding alongside ties to insurgent groups, though no convictions or final disqualifications on funding grounds have been reported as of October 2025. The specific constitutional provision invoked in these allegations is the ban under Republic Act No. 7166 (An Act Providing for Synchronized National, Provincial and Municipal Elections), Section 89, which mirrors Article II, Section 7 of the Constitution's emphasis on independent national economy by prohibiting foreign interference in domestic through funding. Critics, including NTF-ELCAC, argue that Gabriela's purported acceptance of such funds undermines its status as a legitimate party-list under Republic Act No. 7941 ( Act), which requires representatives to advocate for marginalized sectors without serving as fronts for external influences or armed organizations. In September 2025, following the Commission on Elections' (Comelec) of Gabriela for the 64th party-list seat to meet the 20% constitutional allocation under Article VI, Section 5(2), NTF-ELCAC petitioned the to void the seat, contending that awarding it to an allegedly foreign-funded and insurgent-linked group violates the representational intent of the and exceeds the cap by legitimizing ineligible entities. Gabriela has denied these funding allegations, asserting that its operations rely on domestic membership dues, local donations, and state allocations for party-list groups, without soliciting from foreign organizations. However, the lack of transparent financial disclosures beyond standard Commission on Elections filings has fueled ongoing scrutiny, with no independent audits confirming or refuting foreign inflows as of the latest available data. These disputes highlight tensions in enforcing party-list purity, where unverified foreign ties could disqualify groups from the three-seat limit per party under Section 5(2) of Article VI, potentially distorting .

Criticisms and Defenses

Ideological and Tactical Critiques

Critics, including Philippine government officials and , have characterized Gabriela Women's Party's ideology as aligned with the (CPP), a Marxist-Leninist-Maoist insurgent group designated as a terrorist organization by the Philippine government and several international bodies. This perspective holds that Gabriela functions as a "legal front" for the CPP-New People's Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF), prioritizing anti-imperialist and class-struggle objectives over standalone feminist reforms, thereby framing women's oppression primarily as a byproduct of and foreign influence rather than addressing gender dynamics independently. Such ideological integration, detractors argue, leads to positions that conflate domestic policy critiques with calls for systemic overthrow, as evidenced by Gabriela's consistent opposition to neoliberal economic policies and military alliances like the U.S.-Philippines Visiting Forces Agreement, which align closely with CPP . Tactically, Gabriela has faced accusations of exploiting the —intended under Republic Act No. 7941 to represent marginalized sectors—for advancing non-electoral agendas, including alleged recruitment and funding diversion to armed groups. Former President specifically alleged in 2022 that Gabriela lawmakers channeled allocations to procure firearms for the NPA, undermining the system's goal of legislative representation. Further critiques highlight inconsistent , where the party is described as largely inactive on routine women's issues but mobilizes prominently during politically charged protests or high-profile cases, often employing confrontational street actions that escalate into disruptions, such as blockades or clashes with authorities, rather than pursuing sustained legislative or community-based solutions. This approach, opponents contend, prioritizes ideological agitation over pragmatic gender advocacy, potentially alienating broader women's constituencies by associating feminist causes with revolutionary violence.

Responses to Red-Tagging and Government Scrutiny

Gabriela Women's Party has repeatedly denied allegations of ties to the (CPP), (NPA), and National Democratic Front (NDF), characterizing red-tagging by government entities as a form of harassment intended to suppress legitimate advocacy for and electoral participation. The party maintains that such labeling lacks evidence and constitutes an "expensive red-tagging spree" aimed at disenfranchising female voters, as stated by Representative in response to a 2019 by the to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC) seeking to cancel their registration on grounds of promoting NPA principles and receiving foreign funds. In specific instances, Gabriela has pursued legal recourse against perceived red-tagging. On March 26, 2025, the party filed a complaint with the Commission on Elections (Comelec) against NTF-ELCAC, accusing it of violating Comelec Resolution No. 1116 by labeling Brosas as CPP-affiliated and associating Gabriela with communist violence in a , alongside claims of gender-based misogynistic attacks on members. Former Representative described these actions as "systematic vilification" that "undermines... the people's free exercise of their right to participate in public affairs" and interferes with women's political involvement through intimidation. This marked the third such complaint by the Makabayan bloc ahead of the 2025 elections. Gabriela has also publicly countered red-tagging in high-profile cases, framing it as fear of empowered women. In October 2020, following NTF-ELCAC official Antonio Parlade's warning to actress against associating with the group due to alleged rebel ties, Gabriela expressed solidarity, questioning, "Why be afraid of women defending other women?" and rejecting the accusations as baseless threats. Similar responses occurred in 2021, when the party accused the of using "red-tagging gimmicks" by planting CPP-NPA materials during arrests of Gabriela activists, and in 2022, denouncing the Department of Justice's approach as a "tool for repression, not ." Amid ongoing scrutiny, including a September 2025 petition by NTF-ELCAC to void their post-election proclamation as unconstitutional, Gabriela has vowed resilience, with Brosas declaring in May 2025, "They can't bury us," in defiance of tactics perceived as electoral . The party argues that red-tagging not only endangers lives but also erodes democratic representation, particularly for marginalized women, without substantiating insurgent affiliations beyond advocacy for and social reforms.

Impact on Women's Movement Legitimacy

Critics of the Gabriela Women's Party argue that its documented associations with the of the Philippines-New People's Army-National Democratic Front (CPP-NPA-NDF), a designated terrorist organization by the Philippine and international bodies including the and , have eroded the perceived legitimacy of the broader movement in the . Testimonies from former NPA members, including those who surrendered to authorities, have claimed that Gabriela's local chapters served as recruitment conduits for female insurgents, framing participation in women's advocacy as a pathway to armed struggle under the guise of empowerment against patriarchal and capitalist oppression. These revelations, corroborated in military briefings and congressional testimonies, suggest that Gabriela's integration of Marxist-Leninist ideology into gender advocacy—prioritizing class warfare over standalone feminist reforms—has fostered public distrust, portraying women's organizations as potential fronts for subversion rather than neutral advocates for equality. The CPP-NPA's history of violence, including over 40,000 deaths attributed to the since 1969 according to government data, amplifies this effect, as any perceived endorsement of such groups taints allied causes. Philippine military officials, such as Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr., have publicly labeled Gabriela a "" that exploits women's vulnerabilities for , leading to a where legitimate gender-based campaigns face dismissal or red-tagging as insurgent propaganda. This dynamic has prompted conservative and centrist observers to question the movement's independence, arguing that conflating anti-violence against women initiatives with defenses of rebel figures undermines empirical credibility and causal focus on solutions like legal protections, instead diverting attention to ideological confrontations. Gabriela representatives counter that such accusations are fabricated to suppress progressive women's voices, citing reports that frame red-tagging as a tool of state repression rather than evidence-based critique. However, the persistence of defections and intelligence reports linking party leaders to NDF consultations—such as those documented in 2019 defense briefings—bolsters claims that the party's sectoral focus inadvertently legitimizes insurgent narratives, fracturing solidarity within the women's movement between those prioritizing non-partisan reforms and those aligned with national democratic fronts. Consequently, events like Gabriela-led protests have faced reduced mainstream support, with polling data from 2022 indicating heightened public wariness of left-leaning advocacy groups amid ongoing efforts. This polarization has arguably stalled broader gains, as resources and attention shift from verifiable issues like economic disparities affecting women to defending against affiliation charges.

Reception and Legacy

Achievements in Legislation and Awareness

Gabriela Women's Party representatives have sponsored or co-sponsored several bills that advanced women's protections, notably the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act (Republic Act No. 9208), enacted on May 26, 2003, which Liza Maza, then a party representative, served as principal sponsor to criminalize and provide victim support mechanisms. Maza also contributed to the passage of the Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act (Republic Act No. 9262), signed into law on March 8, 2004, establishing protections against domestic abuse and gender-based violence. In the 17th Congress, party members supported the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Law (Republic Act No. 11058), approved on August 14, 2018, which mandates safer workplaces, including for women in hazardous sectors. The party has filed measures like House Bill No. 9349, the Absolute Divorce Bill, which passed the on third reading on May 22, 2024, aiming to legalize after nearly two decades of advocacy, though it awaits Senate approval and presidential signature as of October 2025. Other authored bills, such as the for Daycare Workers, have advanced to House approval but remain pending in the . In awareness efforts, Gabriela has conducted campaigns targeting urban poor communities, including the "Seven Deadly Sins Against Women" initiative to highlight systemic forms like domestic abuse and trafficking, contributing to broader public discourse on gender-based harms. The party participates in global events like One Billion Rising, with representatives joining City events on March 5, 2025, to rally against toward women through dances and calls for systemic reform. These activities, rooted in organizing over 200 women's groups, emphasize on rights in workplaces, schools, and communities, though their impact is primarily documented through self-reported advocacy outputs rather than independent metrics.

Broader Political Influence and Failures

Despite securing party-list seats in the since 2004, the Gabriela Women's Party's broader political influence has been confined to niche advocacy within the legislative minority, with no expansion into senatorial, gubernatorial, or mayoral positions. Its representatives have co-authored bills on women's issues, such as expansions to the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act and the and Their Children Act, but these efforts have not translated into transformative shifts in national policy or coalition-building with major parties. The party's marginal vote shares—typically under 1% of total party-list votes—reflect limited appeal beyond urban poor and activist communities, restricting its role to vocal opposition rather than agenda-setting power. Electoral shortcomings highlight key failures in broadening influence. In the May 2025 midterm elections, Gabriela initially failed to secure a , ending a 21-year congressional presence, and was only proclaimed winner of the 64th party-list in September after the Commission on Elections added positions to comply with the 20% party-list allocation mandate under the . This reliance on procedural adjustments rather than robust underscores a persistent inability to mobilize widespread support, attributed by observers to its uncompromising leftist and perceived alignment with insurgent-linked networks, which alienate moderate voters and invite sustained red-tagging. Consequently, Gabriela has struggled to influence electoral reforms, economic policies, or cross-sector alliances, remaining sidelined in mainstream political discourse.

References

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