Background
Abad was born on July 13, 1954 in Sampaloc, Manila to a political family based in Batanes province.
politician university professor
Abad was born on July 13, 1954 in Sampaloc, Manila to a political family based in Batanes province.
He spent his elementary years at Lourdes School Quezon City. He finished his High School and Bachelor of Science in Business Management and Bachelor of Laws at the Ateneo de Manila University. He passed the Bar Examination in 1985.
He completed his studies with Masters in Public Administration at the John F. Kennedy School of Government in Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts as a student of the Edward Mason Program in Public Policy and Management.
Having held many cabinet-level ranks in the past, he is the current Secretary of the Philippine Department of Budget and Management. Abad held various cabinet-level positions in the past, particularly as Secretary of the Department of Education and Secretary of the Department of Agrarian Reform. Early career and entry to politics Abad had been a trade unionist of the Federation of Free Workers and Ateneo Workers College from 1976 to 1979 and was research director of Ateneo Center for Social Policy and Public Affairs.
When the Congress of the Philippines was restored in 1987, Abad launched his successful congressional bid to represent the Lone District of Batanes where he became a staunch advocate of agrarian reform in the national legislature.
He held the position until his appointment to his brief stint as Secretary of the Department of Agrarian Reform and ran again for Congress in 1995, completing his third and final term in 2004. On July 2004, then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo appointed Abad as Secretary of the Department of Education.
The removal of "culture" and "sports" from the Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS) was his proposal, in line with the thinking that the Department"s focus should solely be on basic education. To streamline operations, he championed the institutionalization of three agencies for the different educational levels: DepEd for elementary and secondary education, the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) for tertiary education, and the Technology Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) for technical and vocational education.
Amid calls for the resignation of Arroyo due to her links to the Hello Garci scandal in 2004, Abad resigned his post and became a critic of the former president
Aquino appointed him Budget Secretary when the former assumed the presidency in June 30, 2010.
National politics
He served as the campaign manager of the Liberal Party in the 2010 presidential elections, where the party standard-bearer Benigno Aquino III, then a senator, won the race.