Lieutenant Governor of Virginia

The Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia is a constitutional officer of the Commonwealth of Virginia. The lieutenant governor is elected every four years along with the governor and attorney general.

Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia
Seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia
Incumbent
Winsome Earle Sears
since January 15, 2022
StyleThe Honorable
Term lengthFour years
Inaugural holderShelton Leake
Formation1852
Websitewww.ltgov.virginia.gov/

The office is currently held by Winsome Earle Sears, who was elected in 2021 and is the first woman of color to hold this position. The governor and lieutenant governor are elected separately and thus may be of different political parties. The lieutenant governor serves as the President of the Senate of Virginia and is first in the line of succession to the governorship; if the governor dies, resigns, or otherwise leaves office, the lieutenant governor becomes governor. In Virginia, the governor is not permitted to serve consecutive terms, but the lieutenant governor may do so, and has no term limit.

History

Beginning in the 1630s, the British Crown appointed several officials to aide the governors of the Colony of Virginia in the execution of their duties, collectively known as the Governor's Council or the Council of State. One member of this body was designated as the governor's deputy, or lieutenant governor, and exercised the governor's authority when they were absent.[1][2] The Virginia Constitution of 1776 abolished the council.[1]

The Virginia Constitution of 1851 created the modern office of the lieutenant governor.[2] It provided for the popular election of the officer and designated them ex officio president of the Virginia Senate.[3] In this capacity they replaced the Speaker of the Senate, which had been chosen by the body's own members as their presiding officer from 1776 until 1852. During the American Civil War, Virginia had two different governments and accordingly different sets of lieutenant governors. From 1865 until 1870, the lieutenant governors were appointed by the commanding general of the First Military District. In 1870, Virginia was readmitted to the federal union and, from then on, the officers were chosen by popular election.[2] That year, the state adopted a new constitution which gave the lieutenant governor the power to cast tie-breaking votes in the Senate.[3]

Douglas Wilder, sworn-in in 1986, was Virginia's first black lieutenant governor.[4] Winsome Sears, sworn in on January 15, 2022,[5] is the first woman to have held the office.[6]

Election

Along with the governor and attorney general, the lieutenant governor is one of three popularly elected executive offices in the state of Virginia.[7] The lieutenant governor is elected on their own ticket separate from the governor. They serve without term limits.[8] If the governor-elect does not assume their office, the lieutenant governor-elect becomes governor.[9]

Powers, duties, and structure

Article V of the Constitution of Virginia designates the lieutenant governor as the president of the Senate.[8] If absent, its president pro tempore serves as its presiding officer.[10] The lieutenant governor is allowed to vote in the Senate only to break ties.[3] While this power has been interpreted to apply to most generic legislation, it has been disputed by state officials as to whether the tie-breaking power applies to votes on matters such as constitutional amendments or on the Senate's concurrence with an executive appointment. Such questions are yet to be resolved by litigation in state courts.[11] The constitution additionally stipulates that the lieutenant governor succeeds the governor in their office should it become vacant due to death, disqualification, or resignation. State law empowers the lieutenant governor to serve on several state boards and commissions.[8] The lieutenant governor can be impeached and removed from office by the Virginia General Assembly.[12]

The lieutenant governor's office is located in the Oliver Hill Building in Richmond, Virginia.[13][14] Their salary is set by legislation and cannot be altered during a given term to which they were elected.[3] As of 2021, the annual salary is $36,321.[15] As the role is a part-time position, most incumbents—unless already wealthy or retired by the time of their tenure—have held additional occupations.[16]

List of elected lieutenant governors of Virginia

Parties

  No party/Conservative (3 lieutenant governors)  Democrat (28 lieutenant governors)  Whig (2 lieutenant governors)  Republican (9 lieutenant governors)

#ImageNamePartyTermGovernorNotesSource
1Shelton LeakeDemocratic1852–1856Joseph Johnson[2]
2Elisha W. McComasDemocratic1856–1857Henry A. Wise[2]
3 William Lowther JacksonDemocratic1857–1860Henry A. Wise[2]
4Robert Latane MontagueDemocratic1860–1864John LetcherRichmond (Confederate) Government[2]
5 Samuel PriceDemocratic1864–1865William SmithRichmond (Confederate) Government[2]
6 Daniel PolsleyUnionist1861–1863John LetcherRestored (Unionist) Government[2]
7Leopold Copeland Parker CowperUnionist1863–1865John LetcherRestored (Unionist) Government[2]
81865–1869William Smith
Francis Harrison Pierpont
Henry H. Wells
Gilbert Carlton Walker
[2]
9 John F. LewisRepublican1869–1870Gilbert Carlton Walker[2]
10 John Lawrence Marye, Jr.Conservative1870–1874Gilbert Carlton Walker[2]
11 Robert E. WithersDemocratic1874–1875James L. Kemper[2]
12 Henry Wirtz ThomasRepublican1875–1878James L. Kemper[2]
13 James A. WalkerDemocratic1878–1882Frederick W. M. Holliday[2]
14 John F. LewisRepublican1882–1886William E. Cameron[2]
15 John E. MasseyDemocratic1886–1890Fitzhugh Lee[2]
16 James Hoge TylerDemocratic1890–1894Philip W. McKinney[2]
17 Robert Craig KentDemocratic1894–1898Charles Triplett O'Ferrall[2]
18 Edward EcholsDemocratic1898–1902James H. Tyler[2]
19 Joseph Edward WillardDemocratic1902–1906Andrew J. Montague[2]
20 James Taylor EllysonDemocratic1906–1918Claude A. Swanson
William Hodges Mann
Henry Carter Stuart
[2]
21 Benjamin Franklin BuchananDemocratic1918–1922Westmoreland Davis[2]
22 Junius Edgar WestDemocratic1922–1930Elbert L. Trinkle
Harry F. Byrd
[2]
23 James H. PriceDemocratic1930–1938John Garland Pollard
George C. Peery
[2]
24 Saxon Winston HoltDemocratic1938–1940James H. Pricedied in office[2]
25 William M. TuckDemocratic1942–1946Colgate Darden[2]
26Lewis Preston Collins IIDemocratic1946–1952William M. Tuckdied in office[2]
27Allie Edward Stokes StephensDemocratic1952–1962John S. Battlefilled Collins's term[2]
28 Mills E. Godwin, Jr.Democratic1962–1966Albertis Harrison[2]
29 Fred G. PollardDemocratic1966–1970Mills Godwin[2]
30 J. Sargeant ReynoldsDemocratic1970–1971Linwood Holtondied in office[2]
31 Henry HowellDemocratic1971–1974Linwood Holtonfilled Reynolds's term[2]
32 John N. DaltonRepublican1974–1978Mills Godwin[2]
33 Chuck RobbDemocratic1978–1982John N. Dalton[2]
34 Dick DavisDemocratic1982–1986Chuck Robb[2]
35 Douglas WilderDemocratic1986–1990Gerald Baliles[2]
36 Don BeyerDemocratic1990–1998Douglas Wilder
George Allen
[2]
37 John H. HagerRepublican1998–2002Jim Gilmore[2]
38 Tim KaineDemocratic2002–2006Mark Warner[2]
39 Bill BollingRepublican2006–2014Tim Kaine
Bob McDonnell
[2]
40 Ralph NorthamDemocratic2014–2018Terry McAuliffe[2]
41 Justin FairfaxDemocratic2018–2022Ralph Northam[2]
42 Winsome SearsRepublican2022–presentGlenn Youngkin[2]

References

Works cited

External links