Bugallon
Bugallon, officially the Municipality of Bugallon, is a first-class municipality in the province of Pangasinan, in the Ilocos Region of the Philippines.[1] It is situated in the second congressional district of Pangasinan, approximately 8 kilometers from the provincial capital of Lingayen and 198 kilometers north of Manila.[2] Formerly known as Salasa—a name retained by one of its barangays—the municipality was renamed in 1921 by congressional act to honor Major José Torres Bugallón, a local hero from the Philippine-American War.[2] As of the 2020 census conducted by the Philippine Statistics Authority, Bugallon has a population of 74,962 distributed across 32 barangays, with a land area of approximately 18,964 hectares supporting a density of about 420 persons per square kilometer.[1] The local economy is predominantly agricultural, centered on rice, corn, cassava, sugarcane, and vegetable production, bolstered by irrigation from the Dumuloc Dam, alongside aquaculture in 240 hectares of fishponds yielding bangus and tilapia.[2] Notable sites include the Mt. Zion Pilgrim Site, drawing religious visitors, and heritage structures reflecting the town's historical roots dating to its founding as Salasa in the early 18th century.[2]History
Founding and Early Settlement
The region encompassing modern Bugallon, originally designated as Salasa, featured pre-colonial indigenous settlements primarily by Pangasinense communities and possibly Aeta groups, attracted by the area's expansive fertile alluvial plains ideal for wet-rice agriculture along riverine corridors. These settlements emerged as part of broader Austronesian migration patterns in northern Luzon, where empirical evidence from ethnographic and archaeological records indicates that agricultural viability—driven by seasonal flooding and loamy soils—causally spurred population clustering for communal farming and resource management.[3][4] Spanish colonial expansion into Pangasinan, initiated with the province's conquest in 1571, gradually extended missionary influence inland, though Salasa's formal establishment occurred later under Dominican auspices. Father Antonio Pérez, an Order of Preachers friar, founded the Salasa Parish between 1714 and 1717, constructing an initial church edifice from 1720 to 1733 that anchored the mission station and facilitated Christianization efforts among local inhabitants. This ecclesiastical initiative, typical of reducciones policies, consolidated scattered indigenous populations into a structured pueblo, officially recognized on January 24, 1719, with the parish elevated to vicariate status under Dominican oversight.[5][6][7] Early economic sustenance derived from subsistence agriculture, leveraging natural irrigation from tributaries of the Agno River system to cultivate rice as the staple, supplemented by root crops, corn (post-introduction from the Americas), cassava, and vegetables in cleared lowlands. This agrarian base, empirically tied to the terrain's high productivity—yielding reliable harvests amid monsoon cycles—underpinned settlement stability, with communal labor systems adapting pre-colonial swidden practices to permanent fields under colonial oversight.[4]Naming and José Torres Bugallón's Legacy
The municipality of Salasa, Pangasinan, was officially renamed Bugallon on an unspecified date in 1921 through legislation sponsored by Congressman Mauro Navarro, a representative from the province's first district, to commemorate José Torres Bugallón, a native son born there on August 28, 1873.[8] [2] Bugallón, son of José Asas Bugallón from Bulacan and a local mother, received early education in San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, before pursuing military training in Spain, graduating from the Academia Militar in 1896 as a second lieutenant and joining the Spanish Army's 70th Infantry Regiment upon his return to the Philippines.[9] His initial service aligned with Spanish colonial forces during the 1896 Philippine Revolution, where he engaged Filipino insurgents seeking independence, reflecting the divided allegiances among educated elites trained under colonial systems.[10] Following the 1898 Treaty of Paris, which transferred Philippine sovereignty from Spain to the United States without Filipino consent, Bugallón transitioned to the Philippine Revolutionary Army, leveraging his Spanish-acquired tactical knowledge to aid forces under General Antonio Luna against American invaders.[11] On February 4, 1899, during the Battle of La Loma in Caloocan, he commanded frontline defenses that temporarily halted the U.S. advance under General Arthur MacArthur Jr., sustaining a severe thigh wound while leading a surrounded Filipino contingent; he succumbed the next day in Luna's arms from blood loss, an action credited with delaying American forces and buying time for reinforcements.[8] [12] Military records portray his maneuvers as disciplined and effective in a numerically inferior engagement, prioritizing defensive positioning over disorganized charges common in revolutionary forces, though romanticized accounts in nationalist historiography emphasize heroism over strategic assessment.[11] The 1921 renaming, enacted via the Philippine Legislature under U.S. colonial oversight but driven by local Filipino initiative, honored Bugallón's anti-American exploits as a symbol of regional valor, despite his prior opposition to the independence movement against Spain—a duality that independence purists might interpret as initial disloyalty, while colonial-era authorities and later commemorators valued his demonstrated martial competence and sacrifice in maintaining order against foreign aggression.[8] This decision aligned with broader efforts to recognize provincial figures who embodied resilience amid imperial transitions, evidenced by subsequent tributes like the José Torres Bugallón association founded by Antonio S. Canullas and a monument in the town plaza.[13]Colonial and Revolutionary Period
During the Spanish colonial era, the area known as Salasa (later Bugallon) served as a rural settlement focused on agriculture, with its town center established by Spanish authorities in the early 18th century to administer local populations and facilitate tribute collection.[13] Founded formally on January 24, 1719, it remained under direct Spanish governance, emphasizing rice cultivation and basic hacienda systems that sustained economic stability despite periodic floods and labor demands.[14] Loyalist structures, including local elites aligned with colonial officials, prioritized order and agricultural output over nascent independence sentiments, reflecting a causal preference for continuity amid broader imperial control.[15] The Philippine Revolution of 1896–1898 introduced tensions in Pangasinan, where Salasa resident José Torres Bugallón, upon graduating from Spanish military academy, was commissioned as a second lieutenant and deployed to suppress Katipunan-led uprisings in the province.[16] This role exemplified local loyalist efforts to maintain stability, as revolutionary activities disrupted rural supply lines and recruitment strained farming labor, though specific casualty figures for Salasa remain undocumented, suggesting limited direct combat compared to central Luzon theaters.[8] Pro-revolutionary narratives framed such suppressions as tyrannical resistance to self-rule, while loyalists viewed them as essential to averting anarchy and preserving agrarian productivity, with empirical continuity in rice yields post-skirmishes indicating resilience over claimed liberatory gains.[17] The Spanish-American War's 1898 outcome shifted control, leading to American occupation; Salasa was declared an independent municipality on April 7, 1900, with Obaldo Abing as the first presidente municipal, formalizing administrative boundaries amid Filipino-American hostilities.[16] U.S. forces emphasized infrastructure for efficient governance and trade, constructing roads that connected Salasa to regional markets, though initial impositions like taxation sparked minor local frictions without widespread revolt.[14] Agricultural continuity persisted, as political transitions minimally altered farming practices, debunking uniform narratives of revolutionary progress; recovery focused on export-oriented enhancements under American oversight, with order restored by 1902 despite dual viewpoints of occupation as stabilization versus renewed subjugation.[15]20th Century Developments
In the years following Philippine independence on July 4, 1946, Bugallon adapted to greater municipal autonomy, focusing on agricultural recovery amid postwar reconstruction. The local economy, centered on rice cultivation, benefited from national efforts to stabilize rural production, including early land tenure adjustments under Republic Act No. 1199 (Agricultural Tenancy Act of 1954), which aimed to protect tenant farmers but had limited implementation impact. Population figures reflected this stabilization and gradual expansion, with the 1948 census recording 18,687 residents, rising to 24,698 by 1960—a 32% increase driven by sustained food availability and reduced wartime disruptions.[1] Mid-century advancements in irrigation and crop technology further propelled growth, as the National Irrigation Administration (established 1963) expanded systems across Pangasinan, including repairs and enhancements to local structures like the old Dumuloc Dam, which supplemented water for rice fields in Bugallon's lowlands. This enabled farmers to adopt high-yield rice varieties from the International Rice Research Institute, introduced nationwide starting in 1966, which increased average yields from around 1.5 metric tons per hectare pre-1960s to over 2.5 tons by the 1970s through better water control and fertilizer use. Population continued to climb, reaching approximately 35,000 by 1975, tied to these productivity gains that supported family farming expansions without large-scale mechanization.[18][19] Agricultural diversification emerged as farmers responded to market demands, shifting portions of arable land toward sugar cane and vegetables while maintaining rice as the dominant crop. Soil surveys indicate that irrigated lowlands in the area supported profitable rotations of rice, sugar cane, mung beans, and vegetables, with sugar cane providing cash crop income amid national mills' procurement. By the late 20th century, these adaptations contributed to Bugallon's role in Pangasinan's rice output, though specific harvest volumes remained modest compared to centralized estates, emphasizing smallholder-driven responses over state-directed quotas.[19][1]Recent Historical Events
Bugallon experienced significant impacts from tropical cyclones in the early 21st century, with declarations of state of calamity reflecting damage to agriculture and infrastructure. In July 2018, the municipality joined several Pangasinan localities in proclaiming a state of calamity due to flooding induced by monsoon rains and multiple typhoons, which submerged farmlands and disrupted rice production central to the local economy.[20] [21] In 2025, Typhoon Emong (international name Co-may), which made landfall on July 25 as the strongest tropical cyclone to strike Pangasinan on record, brought torrential rains and winds to Bugallon, contributing to provincial infrastructure damages estimated at ₱481 million, including compromised river monitoring systems in the municipality.[22] [23] Agricultural losses across Pangasinan from Emong and preceding storms exceeded ₱1.27 billion, primarily in crops like rice and livestock, prompting localized recovery efforts focused on seed distribution and debris clearance rather than prolonged external dependencies.[24] Local responses have prioritized self-reliant disaster risk management, with assessments highlighting effective stakeholder coordination in preparedness and post-event rehabilitation, enabling quicker agricultural replanting cycles despite recurrent vulnerabilities.[25] Such measures underscore empirical resilience, as evidenced by Pangasinan's broader recovery from 2018 disasters through targeted provincial aid that restored over 32,000 hectares of palay fields within planting seasons.[26]Geography
Location and Physical Features
Bugallon is a landlocked municipality located in the western portion of Pangasinan province, Ilocos Region, Philippines, approximately 8 kilometers southeast of Lingayen, the provincial capital.[27] Its central geographic coordinates are approximately 15°57′N 120°11′E, placing it within the central Luzon plain.[1] The municipality encompasses a total land area of 189.64 square kilometers (18,964 hectares), consisting predominantly of flat alluvial plains formed by sediments from the nearby Agno River.[1][27] The topography features low elevations averaging 15 meters above sea level, with minimal variation across the landscape, facilitating agricultural expansion but exposing the area to flood risks.[1] Bugallon is bounded to the north by Labrador, to the west by Lingayen, to the south by San Carlos City, and to the east by the Agno River and portions of San Carlos City.[28] The Agno River's alluvial deposits contribute to the soil's fertility, characterized by recent sedimentary layers typical of Pangasinan's central plain, which support intensive rice cultivation.[19][29] This low-lying terrain and riverine proximity heighten vulnerability to seasonal flooding, as evidenced by recurrent inundations and the implementation of mitigation structures, such as those in Barangay Pantal completed in 2022 to protect local communities.[30][31] The flat physiography, devoid of significant hills or mountains, underscores the municipality's reliance on river-based irrigation and drainage systems for land use patterns.[19]Administrative Divisions
Bugallon is politically subdivided into 24 barangays, each governed by an elected barangay captain and council responsible for local administration, community services, and policy implementation at the grassroots level.[1][2] Poblacion serves as the primary administrative center, concentrating municipal offices, the town hall, and essential services, with zoning primarily designated for residential and commercial use as indicated by higher zonal values for properties along key streets.[32] The remaining barangays are predominantly zoned for agricultural activities, functioning as hubs for rice farming and crop distribution, with resource allocation from the municipal government prioritizing irrigation and basic infrastructure like roads and electrification, though remote areas exhibit disparities in access to advanced utilities.[33] The following table enumerates the barangays with their 2020 populations from census data:| Barangay | Population (2020) |
|---|---|
| Angarian | 1,874 |
| Asinan | 2,063 |
| Bacabac | 2,330 |
| Banaga | 2,149 |
| Bolaoen | 2,535 |
| Buenlag | 1,695 |
| Cabayaoasan | 2,281 |
| Cayanga | 3,088 |
| Gueset | 2,583 |
| Hacienda | 4,200 |
| Laguit Centro | 2,051 |
| Laguit Padilla | 3,689 |
| Magtaking | 6,354 |
| Pangascasan | 2,046 |
| Pantal | 2,195 |
| Poblacion | 11,015 |
| Polong | 3,364 |
| Portic | 2,632 |
| Salasa | 3,082 |
| Salomague Norte | 1,413 |
| Salomague Sur | 3,325 |
| Samat | 1,818 |
| San Francisco | 1,557 |
| Umanday | 5,623 |
Climate and Natural Resources
Bugallon experiences a tropical monsoon climate characterized by distinct wet and dry seasons, with high temperatures and humidity throughout the year. The average annual temperature ranges from 25.6°C to 34.7°C, with minimal seasonal variation due to the maritime influence of the nearby Lingayen Gulf.[34] The wet season spans June to November, driven by the southwest monsoon, while the dry season occurs from December to May under the influence of the northeast monsoon and trade winds; annual rainfall averages approximately 1,960 mm, concentrated in the wet months with peaks exceeding 300 mm in August.[35] These patterns align with broader Philippine climatology, where mean temperatures hover around 26.6°C and precipitation is modulated by typhoons, which can deliver erratic heavy rains but also pose risks to stability.[36] Natural resources in Bugallon are dominated by fertile alluvial soils supporting extensive farmlands, primarily for rice paddy cultivation, alongside groundwater aquifers that serve as supplemental water sources amid seasonal aridity. The municipality's proximity to the Agno River basin provides surface water for irrigation, enhanced by national initiatives like the National Irrigation Administration's distribution of water pumps and solar-powered systems to counter rainfall deficits during events such as El Niño.[37] These resources underpin agricultural resilience, as irrigation infrastructure mitigates yield fluctuations from rainfall variability; for instance, expanded canal networks and reservoirs in Pangasinan have historically boosted rice productivity by storing wet-season excess for dry-period use, reducing dependence on unpredictable monsoons.[38] Empirical data from regional projects indicate that irrigated areas achieve higher and more stable crop returns compared to rain-fed lands, with groundwater regulation efforts in Pangasinan aimed at preventing over-extraction to sustain long-term soil fertility and output.[39]Demographics
Population Statistics
According to the 2020 Census of Population and Housing conducted by the Philippine Statistics Authority, Bugallon had a total population of 74,962 persons.[1][40] This figure reflects a 2.3% average annual population growth rate from 2015 to 2020.[40] Historical census data indicate steady growth, driven primarily by natural increase and internal migration patterns associated with agricultural opportunities in the region. The population has expanded as follows:| Census Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 2000 | 47,412 |
| 2007 | 57,445 |
| 2010 | 64,253 |
| 2015 | 67,348 |
| 2020 | 74,962 |
Ethnic and Linguistic Composition
The ethnic composition of Bugallon is dominated by Pangasinenses, the indigenous people of the province, alongside Ilocanos who settled through migrations from northern Luzon regions during the 19th and 20th centuries. This mix stems from historical patterns where Ilocanos moved southward for agricultural opportunities, integrating into central Pangasinan communities without significantly altering the core Pangasinense identity in areas like Bugallon.[42] Linguistically, Pangasinan serves as the primary language in central municipalities such as Bugallon, with Ilocano widely spoken as a secondary tongue due to intermarriage and community interactions. Tagalog functions as a minority language, mainly in interactions with outsiders or national contexts, while English appears in official documents. Provincial surveys indicate that these languages reinforce local dialects without substantial foreign influences, maintaining over 90% regional linguistic coverage in rural settings.[42][43] This dual linguistic predominance supports ethnic cohesion, as shared Austronesian roots between Pangasinan and Ilocano speakers facilitate mutual intelligibility and preserve extended kinship networks typical of Ilocano-Pangasinense settlements.[42]Socioeconomic Indicators
In 2021, the poverty incidence among the population of Bugallon was 19.45 percent, a substantial reduction from 48.68 percent recorded in 2000, reflecting gains tied to sustained agricultural output in rice and other crops that buffer against economic downturns without heavy reliance on external aid. This trend aligns with provincial patterns in Pangasinan, where family poverty incidence fell to 18.6 percent in the first semester of 2021 from higher prior levels, driven by farm-based self-sufficiency amid cyclical harvests that mitigate vulnerability during off-seasons.[44] Employment in Bugallon remains predominantly agrarian, with labor force participation shaped by planting and harvest periods; provincial unemployment in Pangasinan hovered at 3.9 percent as of April 2025, indicative of low joblessness sustained by local farming opportunities rather than urban migration or subsidies.[45] Average household incomes derive chiefly from crop yields, contributing to resilience, though specific municipal figures mirror Pangasinan's broader rural earnings profile where agricultural cycles influence annual variability.[46] Health metrics show improved sanitation access through community-managed systems, supporting outcomes like national life expectancy trends applicable to rural areas such as Bugallon, which reached 71.79 years in 2024 amid better water and hygiene practices linked to farm household stability.[47] Empirical data from recent Community-Based Monitoring System validations in Bugallon underscore these self-reliant advancements in basic health infrastructure, reducing dependency on centralized welfare for essential services.[48]Economy
Agricultural Sector
Agriculture constitutes the primary economic activity in Bugallon, with rice cultivation dominating due to the municipality's fertile plains. Principal crops include rice, corn, cassava, sugarcane, and vegetables, supporting local food security and market supply.[27] [49] Irrigation infrastructure, notably the Dumoloc Small Reservoir Irrigation Project in Barangay Cayanga, stores wet-season runoff to enable dry-season farming across approximately 1,825 hectares. Groundbreaking occurred on November 19, 2021, with the 40-meter zoned earthfill dam designed to boost water availability and crop productivity for rice and other staples. By early 2024, progress reached 48%, with full completion targeted for 2025 to address seasonal water shortages.[38] [50] [37] Farming techniques have driven productivity gains, including adoption of corporate farming models in Pangasinan that consolidate lands for mechanized planting and hybrid seeds, achieving yields of 5.10 metric tons per hectare in the 2023-2024 dry season across 418 hectares. Such methods enhance efficiency and responsiveness to market demands for higher-output rice varieties.[51] Pest challenges, such as rice black bug infestations that reduced yields by up to 70% in affected Pangasinan fields in 2017, have been mitigated through integrated pest management via farmers' field schools. These programs promote biological controls and reduced chemical use, yielding 20% higher outputs compared to conventional practices.[52] [53]Energy Developments
Bugallon has seen significant private-sector investment in solar photovoltaic projects, contributing to expanded renewable energy capacity in Pangasinan province. The 550 MWdc Bugallon Solar Power Project, developed by Vena Energy in partnership with MGreen (a subsidiary of Meralco), reached financial close in January 2025 with a total investment of approximately P18.3 billion.[54][55] Construction began prior to financial close, with commercial operations targeted for the fourth quarter of 2025, positioning it as one of the largest solar facilities in the Philippines upon completion.[56] The project is expected to create around 7,000 jobs during its construction phase, primarily drawing from local labor in Pangasinan.[57] An earlier operational asset is the 94.7 MWdc Cayanga-Bugallon Solar Power Plant, managed by Aboitiz Renewables Inc. and commissioned in October 2023.[58] Built on 182 hectares of non-arable sloping terrain, the facility generates approximately 146 GWh of electricity annually, feeding into the Luzon grid and supporting baseload renewable supply.[59][60] In November 2024, the Department of Energy designated the 25 MWdc Bugallon Solar Power Project (BSPP) by Bugallon Green Energy Corp.—an affiliate of the Yuchengco Group—as a project of national significance, facilitating expedited permitting and infrastructure support.[61][62] Located in Barangay Salomague Sur, the BSPP utilizes 35,000 solar PV modules supplied by Trina Solar and is slated for commissioning in late 2024 or early 2025, enhancing localized grid reliability through private development.[63][64] These initiatives reflect market-driven expansion in solar infrastructure, with cumulative capacities exceeding 669 MWdc once fully operational, bolstering energy diversification without relying on subsidized mechanisms. Job opportunities and direct investments underscore the economic multipliers from such deployments, though long-term grid integration depends on transmission upgrades managed by the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines.[65][66]Trade and Other Economic Activities
Bugallon's trade activities primarily revolve around its public market, which serves as a central hub for the exchange of locally sourced goods, including processed agricultural items and basic consumer products, with some volume directed toward nearby commercial centers like Lingayen for broader distribution. The market facilitates daily transactions among residents and small vendors, contributing to informal commerce that supports household-level entrepreneurship, though specific trade volume data remains limited in official records.[67] Emerging non-agricultural economic activities are bolstered by renewable energy developments, particularly the Cayanga-Bugallon Solar Power Project, a 94-megawatt peak ground-mounted facility that achieved commercial operations in 2023 under AboitizPower. This project has generated employment in specialized services, including engineering, safety oversight, and maintenance roles, with ongoing hiring for positions such as mechanical engineers and laborers at rates of PHP 650–800 per day for contract work. Additional solar initiatives, like the 25 MWdc Bugallon Solar Power Project by Bugallon Green Energy Corp., further expand opportunities in technical and operational services, diversifying local income beyond traditional sectors.[68][59][69] Remittances from overseas Filipino workers significantly influence household consumption in Pangasinan municipalities like Bugallon, funding expenditures on durable goods, education, and local services as per national family income and expenditure surveys. In 2018, remittance-financed household spending across the Philippines reached PHP 742.2 billion, with patterns indicating boosts to retail trade and personal services; regional data from nearby areas underscore similar reliance, where families use inflows for consumption rather than investment, heightening vulnerability to global labor market fluctuations.[70][71][72]Government and Administration
Local Governance Structure
Bugallon's local governance adheres to the framework outlined in the Local Government Code of 1991 (Republic Act No. 7160), which decentralizes authority to promote accountability through separation of executive and legislative functions. The mayor holds executive power, tasked with enforcing ordinances, directing administrative services, preparing the annual budget, and exercising supervision over component barangays to ensure compliance with municipal policies.[73] This structure limits unilateral action by requiring legislative approval for key decisions, such as budget execution and major projects.[74] The vice-mayor presides over the Sangguniang Bayan, the municipal legislative council composed of eight elected members alongside ex-officio representatives from the barangay captains' federation and youth organizations. The Sangguniang Bayan legislates through ordinances and resolutions, reviews executive proposals, and conducts oversight to check potential abuses, including the power to override mayoral vetoes by a two-thirds vote.[74] This body approves the annual appropriations act, fostering fiscal discipline and alignment with local priorities.[73] At the grassroots level, Bugallon comprises 24 barangays, each with autonomous governance via an elected punong barangay and seven-member council responsible for basic services, peacekeeping, and revenue collection within their jurisdiction.[1] Barangays receive direct shares from the municipal Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) based on population and land area criteria, enabling localized decision-making while the mayor provides general supervision to maintain uniformity.[73] This tiered autonomy balances central municipal control with peripheral initiative, with revenue mechanisms including local taxes, fees, and national transfers designed to incentivize efficient resource use. Municipal fiscal responsibilities emphasize transparency and accountability, with the 2024 annual budget totaling ₱310,945,521, primarily funded by the IRA (approximately 70-80% for similar municipalities), real property taxes, and business permits.[75] The Sangguniang Bayan must approve this budget post-public hearings, incorporating checks like Commission on Audit reviews to prevent mismanagement and ensure funds support essential services such as infrastructure and health.[73] Such provisions in the Code aim to curb corruption by mandating competitive bidding for expenditures exceeding thresholds and regular financial reporting.[74]Key Officials and Elections
William K. Dy of the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC) serves as the incumbent mayor of Bugallon, having been elected on May 12, 2025, with 24,188 votes, equivalent to 45.78% of the total votes cast, and assuming office on June 30, 2025, for a term ending June 30, 2028.[76] His victory came in a closely contested race against Jumel Anthony Espino of Asenso Pangilinan Inc. (API), who received 22,903 votes or 43.35%.[76] Benjie Madriguera (API) was elected vice mayor with 25,590 votes, comprising 48.43% of the votes.[76] The Sangguniang Bayan is composed of the following eight councilors, elected based on vote rankings:| Rank | Name | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jovanni Tandoc | NPC | 23,140 | 43.80% |
| 2 | Jinky Cantor | NP | 19,603 | 37.10% |
| 3 | Clifford Tiangson | NPC | 19,579 | 37.06% |
| 4 | Marcos Mamaril | NPC | 18,622 | 35.24% |
| 5 | Christian De Vera | API | 17,965 | 34.00% |
| 6 | Tirso Toledo | NPC | 17,862 | 33.81% |
| 7 | Edren Llanillo | IND | 17,039 | 32.25% |
| 8 | Manuel Orduña | NPC | 15,916 | 30.12% |