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Washington State Treasurer

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State Treasurer of Washington
File:Seal of the Washington State Treasurer.gif
Seal of the Washington State Treasurer
=
since January 10, 2017
StyleThe Honorable
Term lengthfour years, no limit
FormationConstitution of Washington
WebsiteState Treasurer's Office

The Washington State Treasurer is an elected official in the US state of Washington whose office is established by the Washington State Constitution. Duane Davidson is the current Washington State Treasurer, a Republican who began his term in January 2017.[1] He is charged with a variety of responsibilities related to the fiscal management of state government.[2]

Duties and compensation

The Washington State Treasurer is responsible for managing the state's cash assets and local government investments which, as of 2008, totaled $11 billion. He is also responsible for servicing the state's $13 billion debt, through the issuance of state bonds. As one of 15 members of the Washington State Investment Board, the Treasurer helps oversee the investment of state pension and retirement funds.[3] The Treasurer is third (behind the Lieutenant Governor and Secretary of State, respectively) in the line of succession to the office of Governor of Washington. [4]

The Washington State Treasurer's office is located in the Washington State Capitol.

Most of the Treasurer's specific responsibilities are set-forth in the Revised Code of Washington. Though the office was established by the Washington constitution, that document only provides that "the treasurer shall perform such duties as shall be prescribed by law," a provision similar to the earlier enacted constitution of the neighboring state of Oregon. The constitution originally directed that the Treasurer would be paid a salary of $2,000, though constitutional limits on officeholder salaries have since been repealed by amendment and are now set by statute. [5] The Treasurer currently receives an annual salary of $125,000.[6]

Election and office

The Treasurer is elected every four years on a partisan ballot; any registered voter in the state of Washington is eligible to stand for election. The Washington State Constitution requires that, upon assuming office, the Treasurer establish residence in the state's capital city of Olympia. State law further requires he post a surety bond of $500,000, approved by both the Washington Secretary of State and the Chief Justice of the Washington Supreme Court.[7]

The Treasurer's office is located in the Washington State Capitol. [8]

List of Washington Treasurers

The State of Washington has had a total of 21 Treasurers, 2 of whom (Otto A. Case and Tom Martin) served non-consecutive terms.[9][10] Otto A. Case also served as Commissioner of Public Lands from 1945–1949 and 1953–1957.[10]

# Name Term Party
1 Addison Alexander Lindsley 1889–1893 Republican
2 Orzo A. Bowen 1893–1897 Republican
3 Cyrus Wilber Young 1897–1901 Populist
4 Charles Warren Maynard 1901–1905 Republican
5 George Grant Mills 1905–1909 Republican
6 John G. Lewis 1909–1913 Republican
7 Edward Meath 1913–1917 Republican
8 Walter W. Sherman 1917–1921 Republican
9 Clifford L. Babcock 1921–1925 Republican
10 William George Potts 1925–1929 Republican
11 Charles W. Hinton 1929–1933 Republican
12 Otto A. Case 1933–1937; 1941–1945 Democratic
13 Phil Henry Gallagher 1937–1941 Democratic
14 Russell Harrison Fluent 1945–1949 Democratic
15 Tom Martin 1949–1953; 1957–1965 Democratic
16 Charles R. Maybury 1953–1957 Republican
17 Robert S. O'Brien 1965–1989 Democratic
18 Daniel K. Grimm 1989–1997 Democratic
19 Michael J. Murphy 1997–2009 Democratic
20 James McIntire 2009–2016 Democratic
21 Duane Davidson 2017– Republican

See also

References

  1. ^ "Subscribe | The Seattle Times". www.seattletimes.com. Retrieved August 9, 2017.
  2. ^ "What We Do". tre.wa.gov. Office of the Washington State Treasurer. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  3. ^ Gilmore, Susan (6 August 2008). "3 running to fill state treasurer's job". Seattle Times. Seattle. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  4. ^ "Washington State Constitution". Washington State Legislature. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  5. ^ Utter, Robert (2011). The Washington State Constitution (Oxford Commentaries on the State Constitutions of the United States). Oxford University Press. p. 99. ISBN 0199779279.
  6. ^ "Ballot access requirements for political candidates in Washington". ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  7. ^ "RCW 43.08.020 ... Residence — Bond — Oath". app.leg.wa.gov. Washington State Legislature. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  8. ^ Ferguson, Margaret (2006). The Executive Branch of State Government: People, Process, and Politics. ABC-CLIO. p. 99. ISBN 1851097716.
  9. ^ "Washington State Treasurers: A Historical Gallery".
  10. ^ a b Washington State Yearbook: The Evergreen State Government Directory. Washington Roll Call. 2017. p. 260.