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Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Constitutional officer of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Flag of Pennsylvania
Incumbent
Austin Davis
since January 17, 2023
ResidencePrivate
State House (1971–2019)
Term lengthFour years, renewable once consecutively
Inaugural holderJohn Latta
Formation1873
SuccessionFirst
Salary$157,765 (2014)[1]
WebsiteOfficial website

Thelieutenant governor of Pennsylvania is a constitutional officer of theCommonwealth ofPennsylvania. The lieutenant governor is elected for a four-year term in the same year as thegovernor. Each party picks a candidate for lieutenant governor independently of the gubernatorial primary. The winners of the party primaries are then teamed together as a single ticket for the fall general election.[2] The lieutenant governor presides in thePennsylvania State Senate and isfirst in the line of succession to the governor; in the event the governor dies, resigns, or otherwise leaves office, the lieutenant governor becomes governor.[3][4] The lieutenant governor casts tie breaking votes in the State Senate.

The office of lieutenant governor was created by the Constitution of 1873. As with the governor's position, the Constitution of 1968 made lieutenant governors eligible to succeed themselves for one additional four-year term.[5] The position's only official duties are serving as president of the State Senate and chairing the Board of Pardons and the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Council. Lieutenant governors often work on additional projects and have a full schedule of community and speaking events.[6]

Until 2019, Pennsylvania was the only state that provided an official residence,State House atFort Indiantown Gap, for its lieutenant governor.[6] Constructed in 1940 and previously the governor's "summer residence", it became available for Pennsylvania's lieutenant governor in 1968 when the current governor's residence was completed in Harrisburg.[5] It was transferred to the state'sDepartment of Military and Veterans Affairs after legislation to do so passed in 2019.[7][8]

The current lieutenant governor isAustin Davis, who took office on January 17, 2023.

List of lieutenant governors

[edit]
Parties

  Democratic (11)  Republican (24)

#ImageNameTermGovernor(s) served underParty
1John Latta1875–1879John F. HartranftDemocratic
2Charles Warren Stone1879–1883Henry M. HoytRepublican
3Chauncey Forward Black1883–1887Robert E. PattisonDemocratic
4William T. Davies1887–1891James A. BeaverRepublican
5Louis Arthur Watres1891–1895Robert E. PattisonRepublican
6Walter Lyon1895–1899Daniel H. HastingsRepublican
7John P. S. Gobin1899–1903William A. StoneRepublican
8William M. Brown1903–1907Samuel W. PennypackerRepublican
9Robert S. Murphy1907–1911Edwin Sydney StuartRepublican
10John M. Reynolds1911–1915John K. TenerRepublican
11Frank B. McClain1915–1919Martin Grove BrumbaughRepublican
12Edward E. Beidleman1919–1923William Cameron SproulRepublican
13David J. Davis1923–1927Gifford PinchotRepublican
14Arthur H. James1927–1931John Stuchell FisherRepublican
15Edward C. Shannon1931–1935Gifford PinchotRepublican
16Thomas Kennedy1935–1939George Howard Earle IIIDemocratic
17Samuel S. Lewis1939–1943Arthur JamesRepublican
18John Cromwell Bell Jr.1943–1947Edward MartinRepublican
19Daniel B. Strickler1947–1951James H. DuffRepublican
20Lloyd H. Wood1951–1955John S. FineRepublican
21Roy E. Furman1955–1959George M. LeaderDemocratic
22John Morgan Davis1959–1963David L. LawrenceDemocratic
23Raymond P. Shafer1963–1967William ScrantonRepublican
24Raymond J. Broderick1967–1971Raymond P. ShaferRepublican
25Ernest P. Kline1971–1979Milton ShappDemocratic
26William Scranton III1979–1987Dick ThornburghRepublican
27Mark Singel1987–1995Robert P. CaseyDemocratic
28Mark S. Schweiker1995–2001Tom RidgeRepublican
29Robert C. Jubelirer2001–2003Mark S. SchweikerRepublican
30Catherine Baker Knoll2003–2008Ed RendellDemocratic
31Joseph B. Scarnati III2008–2011Ed RendellRepublican
32Jim Cawley2011–2015Tom CorbettRepublican
33Mike Stack2015–2019Tom WolfDemocratic
34John Fetterman2019–2023Tom WolfDemocratic
35Austin Davis2023–presentJosh ShapiroDemocratic

List of acting lieutenant governors

[edit]
  • Jake Corman – From May 17, 2022, to May 23, 2022, Corman served as acting lieutenant governor while lieutenant governor John Fetterman had apacemaker implanted and recovered.[9][10]
  • Kim Ward – John Fetterman resigned as lieutenant governor to serve in theUnited States Senate on January 3, 2023, Ward served as acting lieutenant governor until January 17, 2023, when lieutenant governor-elect Austin Davis was sworn in.[11]

Vice-presidents of Pennsylvania

[edit]

From 1777 to 1790 the executive branch of Pennsylvania's state government was headed by aSupreme Executive Council consisting of a representative of each county and of the City ofPhiladelphia. Thevice president of the Council—also known asthe vice-president of Pennsylvania—held a position analogous to the modern office of lieutenant governor. Presidents and vice-presidents were elected to one-year terms and could serve up to three years—the full length of their regular term ascounsellor. Ten men served as vice-president during the time of the Council's existence.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Dawson, Mike (February 20, 2014)."Jay Paterno seeking election as Pa. lieutenant governor".Centre Daily Times. RetrievedApril 24, 2017.
  2. ^"Pennsylvania Election Process".The Morning Call. January 21, 2005. RetrievedApril 24, 2017.
  3. ^"The Constitution of Pennsylvania: Article IV §13 — When Lieutenant Governor to act as Governor".Pennsylvania General Assembly. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019.
  4. ^"The Constitution of Pennsylvania: Article IV §14 — Vacancy in office of Lieutenant Governor".Pennsylvania General Assembly. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019.
  5. ^ab"RG-64, Records of the Office of the Lieutenant Governor, Agency History". Pennsylvania State Archives. Archived fromthe original on November 22, 2002. RetrievedApril 24, 2014.
  6. ^abWalmer, Daniel (April 21, 2017)."Pa. has US's only Lt. Gov. mansion. Is it worth the cost?".Lebanon Daily News. Gannett. RetrievedApril 24, 2017.
  7. ^Murphy, Jan (December 18, 2019)."Pa. lawmakers are looking to change the picking and the perks of future lieutenant governors".The Patriot-News. RetrievedMarch 15, 2023.
  8. ^White, Jaxon (December 30, 2023)."Shapiro purchased automatic dog door, massage sofa and big-screen TVs for Governor's Residence".LNP. RetrievedMarch 15, 2024 – viaWESA.in 2019 the General Assembly gave the property at Fort Indiantown Gap to the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs
  9. ^"Lt. Gov. Fetterman Submits Written Declaration to General Assembly"(Press Release).Commonwealth of Pennsylvania • The Governor. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. May 17, 2022. RetrievedMay 18, 2022.
  10. ^Vigna, Paul (May 18, 2022)."Jake Corman to temporarily take over as acting lieutenant governor".PennLive Patriot-News. Advanced Local Media LLC. RetrievedMay 18, 2022.
  11. ^Micek, John L. (January 3, 2023)."The Pa. Legislature returns: Three storylines to follow today | Tuesday Morning Coffee".Pennsylvania Capital-Star. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2023.
Harrisburg (capital)
Topics
Society
Metro areas
Regions
Counties
Vice-presidents
(1777–1790)
Lieutenant governors
(since 1875)
Fontes (D)1
Rutledge (R)
Gay (D)
Collins (R)
Jones (R)
Luke (D)
Bedke (R)
Stratton (D)
Beckwith (R)
Toland (D)
Coleman (D)
Daughtry (D)2
Miller (D)
Driscoll (D)
Flanagan (DFL)
Hosemann (R)
Wasinger (R)
Juras (R)
Kelly (R)
Anthony (R)
Carson (R)2
Caldwell (D)
Morales (D)
Delgado (D)
Hunt (D)
Strinden (R)
Tressel (R)
Pinnell (R)
Read (D)1
Davis (D)
Matos (D)
Evette (R)
McNally (R)2
Patrick (R)
Rodgers (R)
Hashmi (D)
Heck (D)
Smith (R)2
Gray (R)1
Federal districts:
Mendelson (D)3
Territories:
Ae (R)
Tenorio (D)
Mendiola (R)
Rivera (PNP/D)1
Roach (D)
An asterisk indicates an Acting Lt. Governor

Italics indicate next-in-line of succession for states and territories without a directly electedlieutenant governor or whose lieutenant governor office is vacant:

Political party affiliation
Topics
Elections
Districts
Pennsylvania statewide elected officials
States
Insular areas
Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, Wyoming, and Puerto Rico do not have lieutenant governors.
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