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Jose Bulaon Lingad

Also Known As: "Joe", "JBL"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Brgy. San Jose Gumi, Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
Death: December 16, 1980 (66)
Brgy. San Agustin, San Fernando, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines (Assassinated by gunshot)
Place of Burial: Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
Immediate Family:

Son of Emigdio Carlos Lingad and Irene Eugenio Bulaon
Husband of Estela Lingad
Ex-partner of Private; Private and Private
Father of Sylvia de Guzman; Private; Private; Private; Private and 5 others
Brother of Enrique Lingad; Private and Private

Occupation: Lawyer, politician
Managed by: Andrei Sarmiento
Last Updated:

About Jose B. Lingad

Jose "Joe" Bulaon Lingad was a Filipino lawyer, World War II veteran and politician.

In January 1980, the dictatorship held elections for governors, vice governors, mayors and vice mayors. Having just decimated the Liberal Party-Laban coalition in the fraud-ridden election for members of the Interim Batasang Pambansa in 1978, the Marcos dictatorship was then at the height of its powers.

The opposition coalition had decided to boycott the 1980 elections, but Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr. (already in exile at the time) believed that despite the certainty of being cheated, it would be an opportunity to further expose the regime’s oppressiveness, corruption and tyranny. He asked his friend Jose B. Lingad to run for governor of Pampanga against Estelito Mendoza, a close associate of Marcos.

Lingad had already been governor of the province, and a cabinet member during the administration of President Diosdado Macapagal. He was a congressman representing Pampanga’s first district when Marcos abolished Congress upon declaring martial law. He was arrested and detained for four months following the imposition of martial law, and since then had turned to farming for a living while continuing to participate in opposition activities to depose the dictator.

As expected, Lingad and his running mate for vice governor – the progressive lawyer Jose Suarez – were defeated by the dictatorship’s party, the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan. The so-called election was marked by intimidation, vote buying and plain cheating. Defiantly, Lingad filed a formal protest with the Commission on Elections.

While the election protest was pending, Lingad was shot dead by a lone gunman while sitting alone in the driver’s seat of his car in the morning of December 16, 1980, along the national highway in San Fernando, the provincial capital. Witnesses identified the killer through photographs: he was a former constabulary sergeant. But before he could be tried, he himself was killed in a mysterious car accident. Thus, Lingad’s murder has remained unsolved and the mastermind is still unidentified.

National leaders of the political opposition all attended his wake. (Even Marcos paid tribute to him as “a friend and fellow veteran.”) At the funeral, Joaquin “Chino” Roces said: “Grieve not. We gather here today not to bury a man but to celebrate an event – the planting of a seed – the seed of freedom and liberation.”

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Jose B. Lingad's Timeline

1914
November 24, 1914
Brgy. San Jose Gumi, Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
1915
May 10, 1915
San Agustin Parish Church, Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
1942
September 25, 1942
Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
1948
December 2, 1948
1953
May 24, 1953
Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
1980
December 16, 1980
Age 66
Brgy. San Agustin, San Fernando, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
December 20, 1980
Age 66
San Nicolas Catholic Cemetery, Lubao, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines