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Lieutenant Governor (state executive office)

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In the United States, the office oflieutenant governor is the second-highest executive office in a state and is nominally subordinate to the governor. In the U.S., the main duty of the lieutenant governor is to act asgovernor should the governor be temporarily absent from the office. In addition, the lieutenant governor generally succeeds a governor who dies, resigns or is removed in trial by the legislative branch. In most states, the lieutenant governor then becomes governor, with the title and its associated salary, office, and privileges. In a few states, likeMassachusetts, the lieutenant governor instead becomes "acting governor" until the next election.

Other than this primary constitutional duty, most state constitutions do not prescribe the duties of the lieutenant governor in detail.

InHawaii, the lieutenant governor serves concurrently as thesecretary of state. InTennessee andWest Virginia, thepresident of the Senate also serves as lieutenant governor and is elected from within the legislature.

Four states do not have a lieutenant governor position. Those states areMaine,New Hampshire,Oregon, andWyoming.

Arizona is holding its first election for lieutenant governor in 2026 after the office was created when voters approvedArizona Proposition 131 in 2022.

Political parties

The chart below shows the party affiliations of U.S. lieutenant governors. For other state executive offices,click here.

OfficeDemocratic Party DemocraticRepublican Party RepublicanGrey.png IndependentVacantTotal seats
State Lieutenant Governors20250045
Counts current as of November 2025 This count excludes territories.
If you see an error, pleaseemail us

Current officeholders

List of current lieutenant governors


OfficeNamePartyDate assumed office
Lieutenant Governor of AlabamaWill AinsworthRepublicanJanuary 14, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of AlaskaNancy DahlstromRepublicanDecember 5, 2022
Lieutenant Governor of American SamoaPulu Ae AeNonpartisanJanuary 3, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of ArkansasLeslie RutledgeRepublicanJanuary 10, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of CaliforniaEleni KounalakisDemocratic2019
Lieutenant Governor of ColoradoDianne PrimaveraDemocraticJanuary 8, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of ConnecticutSusan BysiewiczDemocraticJanuary 9, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of DelawareKyle Evans GayDemocraticJanuary 21, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of FloridaJay CollinsRepublicanAugust 12, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of GeorgiaBurt JonesRepublicanJanuary 9, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of GuamJosh TenorioDemocraticJanuary 7, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of HawaiiSylvia LukeDemocraticDecember 5, 2022
Lieutenant Governor of IdahoScott BedkeRepublicanJanuary 2, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of IllinoisJuliana StrattonDemocraticJanuary 14, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of IndianaMicah BeckwithRepublicanJanuary 13, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of IowaChris CournoyerRepublicanDecember 16, 2024
Lieutenant Governor of KansasDavid TolandDemocraticJanuary 4, 2021
Lieutenant Governor of KentuckyJacqueline ColemanDemocraticDecember 10, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of LouisianaBilly NungesserRepublicanJanuary 11, 2016
Lieutenant Governor of MarylandAruna MillerDemocraticJanuary 18, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of MassachusettsKim DriscollDemocraticJanuary 5, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of MichiganGarlin Gilchrist IIDemocraticJanuary 1, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of MinnesotaPeggy FlanaganDemocraticJanuary 7, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of MississippiDelbert HosemannRepublicanJanuary 9, 2020
Lieutenant Governor of MissouriDavid WasingerRepublicanJanuary 13, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of MontanaKristen JurasRepublicanJanuary 4, 2021
Lieutenant Governor of NebraskaJoe KellyRepublicanJanuary 5, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of NevadaStavros AnthonyRepublicanJanuary 2, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of New JerseyTahesha WayDemocraticSeptember 8, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of New MexicoHowie MoralesDemocraticJanuary 1, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of New YorkAntonio DelgadoDemocraticMay 25, 2022
Lieutenant Governor of North CarolinaRachel HuntDemocraticJanuary 1, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of North DakotaMichelle StrindenRepublicanDecember 15, 2024
Lieutenant Governor of OhioJim TresselRepublicanFebruary 14, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of OklahomaMatt PinnellRepublicanJanuary 14, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of PennsylvaniaAustin DavisDemocraticJanuary 17, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode IslandSabina MatosDemocraticApril 14, 2021
Lieutenant Governor of South CarolinaPamela EvetteRepublicanJanuary 9, 2019
Lieutenant Governor of South DakotaTony VenhuizenRepublicanJanuary 30, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of TennesseeRandy McNallyRepublicanJanuary 10, 2017
Lieutenant Governor of TexasDan PatrickRepublican2015
Lieutenant Governor of UtahDeidre HendersonRepublicanJanuary 4, 2021
Lieutenant Governor of VermontJohn RodgersRepublicanJanuary 9, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of VirginiaWinsome Earle-SearsRepublicanJanuary 15, 2022
Lieutenant Governor of WashingtonDenny HeckDemocraticJanuary 11, 2021
Lieutenant Governor of West VirginiaRandy E. SmithRepublicanJanuary 8, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of WisconsinSara RodriguezDemocraticJanuary 2, 2023
Lieutenant Governor of the Northern Mariana IslandsDennis C. MendiolaRepublicanJuly 24, 2025
Lieutenant Governor of the U.S. Virgin IslandsTregenza RoachDemocraticJanuary 7, 2019


Note: In Hawaii, the lieutenant governor serves concurrently as the secretary of state. In Tennessee and West Virginia, the president of the Senate also serves as lieutenant governor and is elected from within the legislature.

Four states do not have a lieutenant governor position. Those states are: Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Wyoming. Arizona is holding its first election for lieutenant governor in 2026 after the office was created when voters approvedArizona Proposition 131 in 2022.


Comparison across states

Selection process
Partisan affiliation
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Gubernatorial delegation
Acting governor
Term limits
Historical elections

In 27 states, the lieutenant governor is selected on a ticket with the governor, meaning that lieutenant gubernatorial candidates serve as running mates to gubernatorial candidates, with the winning gubernatorial candidate's running mate becoming lieutenant governor. In seven of these states, there are separate primaries for governor and lieutenant governor, with the winning candidate in each primary appearing on the general election ticket. In the remaining 20 states, gubernatorial candidates may pick their own running mates in a similar fashion to presidential candidates. In 17 states, the lieutenant governor is elected separately from the governor. InTennessee andWest Virginia, the title of lieutenant governor is given to the president of the state Senate.[1]

  • Lt. gov. nominated in separate primary and elected in separate general election (17): Alabama, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington
  • Lt. gov. nominated in separate primary but runs on a single ticket with gubernatorial nominee in general election (7): Connecticut, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
  • Lt. gov. chosen by gubernatorial candidate before primary and runs on a single ticket with gubernatorial candidate in both the primary and general election (9): Alaska, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Utah
  • Lt. gov. chosen by gubernatorial nominee after primary and runs on a single ticket with gubernatorial nominee in the general election (11): Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Nebraska, New Jersey, South Carolina, South Dakota
  • Lt. gov. is a member of the legislature (2): Tennessee, West Virginia
  • Lt. gov. office does not exist in state (4): Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, Wyoming

Election history

2025

See also:Lieutenant gubernatorial elections, 2025

Two states held elections for lieutenant governor in 2025:

2024

See also:Lieutenant gubernatorial elections, 2024

Nine states held elections for lieutenant governor in 2024:

2023

See also:Lieutenant gubernatorial elections, 2023

Three states held elections for lieutenant governor in 2023:

2022

See also:Lieutenant gubernatorial elections, 2022

Thirty states held elections for lieutenant governor in 2022:

Click here for a list of past elections (click to expand)


Success running for governor

An April 2013Governing article looked at how lieutenant governors have performed in gubernatorial elections in recent history. According to the article, lieutenant governors made 55 attempts on the governor's office since the early 1990s. Of these 55 attempts, 17 won and 38 lost—a success rate of 31 percent.[3]

Governing's research covered about 25 years of electoral history. In that timeframe,Democratic lieutenant governors ran 37 times andRepublican lieutenant governors ran 17 times, while only one independent lieutenant governor made a bid. Democratic lieutenant governors performed slightly better than their Republican counterparts overall, winning 35 percent of their gubernatorial contests, compared with 24 percent of Republicans. Those who ran unsuccessfully for governor often had difficulty recovering afterward. As the article notes, most of the losing lieutenant governors never won high office again.[3]

Virginia's lieutenant governors stood out for their relatively strong record of success. Since 1977, incumbent lieutenant governors in Virginia sought the governorship nine times and won four of them. In Virginia, governors are not allowed to serve two consecutive terms in office. This provides lieutenant governors with an advantage. University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato explained the situation, stating, "It's a part-time, poorly paid post whose occupants mainly spend their time running for governor." And due to Virginia's system, Sabato added, "being seen as in the wings is a big plus."[3]

See also

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External links

Footnotes

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