List of governors of Texas: Difference between revisions
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--[[Special:Contributions/216.194.184.3|216.194.184.3]] ([[User talk:216.194.184.3|talk]]) 20:51, 31 January 2008 (UTC){{Texas History}}<(*_*)><(*_*)> |
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In politics, '''Governor of klkjlj';'klkjlTexas''' is the title given to the [[chief executive]] of the skljkljtate of [[Texas]]. As is the trend in many Southern states, [[Louisiana]] excepted, the Governor's power is quite limited. When the office was created by the [[Texas Constitution]] of 1876, the authors dispersed much of the power traditionally given to the office of the governor to independently elected officials, creating what some refer to as a "plural executive." <ref>[http://student-voices.org/texas/governor/]</ref> With the exception of the Secretary of State, the remaining members of the Governor's cabinet are also elected by popular vote. In addition, because the Lieutenant Governor runs on a separate ticket, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor can be (and have been) from different political parties. |
In politics, '''Governor of klkjlj';'klkjlTexas''' is the title given to the [[chief executive]] of the skljkljtate of [[Texas]]. As is the trend in many Southern states, [[Louisiana]] excepted, the Governor's power is quite limited. When the office was created by the [[Texas Constitution]] of 1876, the authors dispersed much of the power traditionally given to the office of the governor to independently elected officials, creating what some refer to as a "plural executive." <ref>[http://student-voices.org/texas/governor/]</ref> With the exception of the Secretary of State, the remaining members of the Governor's cabinet are also elected by popular vote. In addition, because the Lieutenant Governor runs on a separate ticket, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor can be (and have been) from different political parties. |
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Revision as of 20:53, 31 January 2008
--216.194.184.3 (talk) 20:51, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
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<(*_*)><(*_*)>
In politics, Governor of klkjlj';'klkjlTexas is the title given to the chief executive of the skljkljtate of Texas. As is the trend in many Southern states, Louisiana excepted, the Governor's power is quite limited. When the office was created by the Texas Constitution of 1876, the authors dispersed much of the power traditionally given to the office of the governor to independently elected officials, creating what some refer to as a "plural executive." [1] With the exception of the Secretary of State, the remaining members of the Governor's cabinet are also elected by popular vote. In addition, because the Lieutenant Governor runs on a separate ticket, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor can be (and have been) from different political parties.
In Texas, gubernatorial elections are held in the same year as mid-term elections (when Congressional, but not Presidential, elections are held, i.e. 2002, 2006, 2010,...). As is the case in most states, Texas governors are elected to four-year terms (prior to 1974 they were elected to two-year terms). There are no term limits on the office; current Governor Rick Perry was re-elected to a second full term in 2006 and has not declared whether or not he will run again in 2010 (at the end of his current term, he will be Texas' longest-serving governor, with roughly ten consecutive years in office).
A significant limitation on gubernatorial power involves the commutation of prisoner sentences, an issue which arises whenever a death penalty sentence is to be carried out. The Governor can only overturn a death sentence upon the positive recommendation of the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole, the Governor can choose to ignore the Board's clemency recommendation and carry out the execution, but the opposite is not true—the Governor cannot commute or overturn a sentence if the Board does not recommend such. The only unilateral option the Governor has is to issue one 30-day stay of execution.
The governor does have one key power that the Texas Legislature does not have—the governor can call the Legislature into special session for 30 days, as many times as the governor desires (the Legislature cannot call itself into session). These special sessions can only address issues located on the governor's "call", which can be changed at any time by the governor.
Leaders before being part of the United States
Governors of the Republic of Texas | |
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Name | Term |
Henry Smith | 14 November 1835 - 11 January 1836 |
James W. Robinson (acting) | 11 January 1836 - 1 March 1836 |
Presidents of the Republic of Texas | ||||
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Name | Vice-President | Term | ||
David G. Burnet[2] (interim) | Lorenzo de Zavala[2] (interim) | 16 March - 22 October 1836 | ||
Sam Houston (1st time) | Mirabeau B. Lamar | 22 October 1836 - 10 December 1838 | ||
Mirabeau B. Lamar | David G. Burnet | 10 December 1838 - 13 December 1841 | ||
Sam Houston (2nd time) | Edward Burleson | 13 December 1841 - 9 December 1844 | ||
Anson Jones | Kenneth Anderson | 9 December 1844 - 29 December 1846 |
Governors of the State of Texas
Notes
- ^ [1]
- ^ a b Elected by Convention of 1836 delegates
- ^ Resigned to occupy vacant U.S. Congress seat.
- ^ Resigned due to state's secession from Union.
- ^ Resigned to serve in Confederate Army.
- ^ Resigned.
- ^ Resigned to enter U.S. Senate.
- ^ Impeached.
- ^ Resigned to become U.S. Senator.
- ^ Died in office.
- ^ Succeeded upon Jester's death. Elected in 1950, re-elected in 1952 and 1954.
- ^ Re-elected in 1998. Resigned 12/21/2000.
- ^ Sworn in after Bush resignation. Elected in 2002, re-elected in 2006.
Living former governors
As of November 2007, four former governors were alive, the oldest being Bill Clements (1979–1983, 1987–1991, born 1917). The most recent governor to die was Ann Richards (1991–1995), on September 13 2006.
Name | Gubernatorial term | Date of birth |
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Dolph Briscoe | 1973–1979 | April 23 1923 |
Bill Clements | 1979–1983, 1987–1991 | April 17 1917 |
Mark White | 1983–1987 | March 17 1940 |
George W. Bush | 1995–2000 | July 6 1946 |
See also
- History of Texas
- List of Presidents of the Republic of Texas
- Texas
- Governor
- State Government
- U.S. Politics
- Government of the United States
- Category:Governors of Texas
- List of Texas county name etymologies