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Secretary of Guam

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Secretary of Guam
Coat of arms of Guam
PrecursorNone
FormationSeptember 17, 1949
First holderRandall Herman
Final holderKurt Moylan
AbolishedJanuary 4, 1971
SuccessionNone

The secretary of Guam was the equivalent of the lieutenant governor when the governorship was still appointed by the president of the United States.[1] The office became the lieutenant governor of Guam when island residents began electing the position, along with the governor, rather than having them appointed.[2]

Duties

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Public Law 90-497 illustrated most of the Secretary of Guam's duties and powers.[3] The Guam Organic Act of 1950 established that the Secretary of Guam would be "a lesser official . . . who would perform the functions of Lieutenant Governor as well as other administrative duties."[4] The Elective Governor Act of 1968 replaced the office with that of an official, elected Lieutenant Governor, which went into effect one year later.[5]

Public law 9-69, passed on July 7, 1967, mandated that all administrative regulations must be filed with the Secretary of Guam for compilation and publishing. These rules did not become effective until such filing. These duties were transferred to the Legislature of Guam by P.L. 12-41 on September 17, 1973.[6]

List of secretaries of Guam

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In total, there were seven secretaries of Guam, three of which, William Corbett, Marcellus Boss, and Manuel Flores Leon Guerrero, went on to become Governors of Guam. Kurt Moylan also served as the first elected Lieutenant Governor of Guam.[7]

Assistant Secretary of Guam

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Richard Barrett Lowe originated the position of Assistant Secretary of Guam early in his term, naming Manuel Flores Leon Guerrero to the position.[8][9]

References

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  1. ^ Babauta (2009).
  2. ^ a b National Association of Secretaries of State, 59.
  3. ^ Office of the Law Revision Counsel, 105.
  4. ^ Supreme Court of Guam (2004), 12.
  5. ^ Supreme Court of Guam (2004), 14.
  6. ^ Unified Courts of Guam, 1.
  7. ^ Taitano, Zita Y. (2010-08-26). "Moylan patriarch passes away". Marianas Variety News & Views. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  8. ^ Rogers (1995), 235.
  9. ^ Cunningham and Beaty (2001), 298.

Additional sources

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