Romeo Acop

Romeo Macusi Acop (born March 11, 1947) is a Filipino former police officer and politician who served as Representative for Antipolo's 2nd District from 2010 to 2019, and again in 2022.

Romeo Acop
Member of the Philippine House of Representatives from Antipolo's 2nd congressional district
Assumed office
June 30, 2022
Preceded byResurreccion M. Acop
In office
June 30, 2010  June 30, 2019
Preceded byAngelito Gatlabayan
Succeeded byResurreccion M. Acop
Personal details
Born
Romeo Macusi Acop

(1947-03-11) March 11, 1947
Sudipen, La Union, Philippines
Political partyNUP (2021present)
Other political
affiliations
PDP–Laban (20172021)
Liberal (2012–2017)
Independent (20092012)
SpouseResurreccion Acop
Children3, including Philip Marrero Acop
Alma materPhilippine Military Academy (BS)
ProfessionPolitician
Military service
Branch/servicePhilippine Constabulary
Years of service1970–1991
Police career
AllegiancePhilippines Philippines
DepartmentPhilippine National Police
Service years1991–2001
RankPolice Chief Superintendent

Early life and career at the PNP

He attended the Philippine Military Academy, graduating in the 1970 Magiting batch with Hermogenes E. Ebdane, Jr., a Governor of Zambales. He then studied law at the José Rizal University, graduating cum laude in 1986.[1] Acop then served in the Philippine National Police as Chief Superintendent, which was equivalent to a brigadier general, during the Ramos government. In response to the resignation of Panfilo Lacson as PNP Chief in January 2001, Acop, with two other prominent police officers, resigned their posts.[2]

Electoral performance

Philippine general elections, 2010

In 2010, the elections were held for seats in the House of Representatives.[3] The 2nd District of Antipolo was contested by eight competitors, including former Rizal Vice-Governor Jestoni Alarcon. Still, Acop triumphed the race with 32,281 votes (31.36% of the vote) with Lorenzo Sumulong III following with 24,907 votes (24.20%). Alarcon was third with 20,159 votes (19.59%).[3]

Philippine general elections, 2013

In 2013, the elections were held for seats in the House of Representatives.[3] The Second District of Antipolo was contested by three competitors, including former Antipolo Councilor Lorenzo Sumulong III, who also contested the position three years back. Acop won a fresh term with 74,109 votes (61.79% of the vote) with Lorenzo Sumulong III following with 44,612 votes (37.20%). Bulanon was third with 1,217 votes (1.01%).[3]

Philippine general elections, 2016

In 2016, the elections were held for seats in the House of Representatives.[3] Acop ran unopposed for the 2nd District of Antipolo. Acop easily gained his third and final constitutional term with 128,309 votes.[3]

Philippine general elections, 2019

In 2019, the elections were held for the seats in the House of Representatives. Acop was term-limited, and therefore could not run for a fourth term. His wife, Resurreccion Marrero Acop, ran in his stead, unopposed. She garnered 127,695 votes, and took office on June 30 that same year.[4]

Philippine general elections, 2022

Acop was elected to his fourth term as representative in 2022, unopposed.

Career as Representative

Acop served his third three-year term as representative from 2016 to 2019. Acop was a member of eleven committees in the Philippine Congress, namely: Public Order and Safety (as Chairman), Appropriations, Health, Higher and Technical Education, Local Government, National Cultural Communities, Public Works and Highways, Southern Tagalog Development, Transportation, Veterans Affairs and Welfare and West Philippine Sea.[5] Acop authored or co-authored 63 House bills to date.[5]

Acop and Representative Angelo Palmones had filed a resolution to conduct an inquiry concerning the acquisition of 59,904 9-millimeter pistols for the Philippine National Police, which would cost around 1.2 billion.[6] He was one of the 56 representatives in the 16th Congress of the Philippines (out of 290 members) with a perfect attendance record.[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.