- Governor of Vermont
The Governor of Vermont is the
governor (chief executive ,head of government ) of theU.S. state ofVermont . The governor is elected biennially in even numbered years by direct voting for a term of two years; Vermont and borderingNew Hampshire are the only states to hold gubernatorial elections every two years, instead of every four.The incumbent governor is
Jim Douglas . He is eightieth governor of the State of Vermont. (Two others,Thomas Chittenden andMoses Robinson , served as governor of theVermont Republic before Vermont's admission to the Union in 1791.)The governor's working offices are located in The Pavilion in the
state capital ofMontpelier, Vermont . The governor's ceremonial office, used during thelegislative session of the General Assembly, is located in theVermont State House , also in Montpelier.The
Constitution of Vermont details the powers of the governor:
*To commission or appoint all officers ("except where provision is, or shall be, otherwise made by law or this Frame of Government")
*To fill all vacancies in office until the office can be filled in the manner directed bystate constitution or bystate law
*To correspond with other States
*To "transact business with officers of government, civil and military"
*To "prepare such business as may appear necessary, to lay before the General Assembly.
*To grantpardon s and remitfine s, except for cases oftreason , in which the Governor may only grantreprieve s until the end of the next session of the General Assembly, and for cases ofimpeachment , in which the Governor cannot grant either reprieves or pardons
*To "take care that the laws be faithfully executed" and "expedite the execution of such measures as may be resolved upon by the General Assembly"
*To "draw upon theTreasury for such sums as may be appropriated by the General Assembly"
*To "layembargo es, or prohibit theexport ation of anycommodity " for up to 30 days during a recess of the General Assembly
*To "grant such licenses as shall be directed by law"
*To callspecial session s of the General Assembly when necessary
*To be the "Captain-General and Commander-in-Chief" of the "forces of the State" (theVermont State Guard andVermont National Guard ), although the Governor cannot "command in person, in time of war, orinsurrection , unless by theadvice and consent of the Senate, and no longer than they shall approve thereof"There is a separately-elected Lieutenant Governor of Vermont, who assumes the powers of the Governor in case there is a vacancy in the office of Governor or the Governor was unable to serve. The Lieutenant Governor is also the Lieutenant-General of the "forces of the State."
References
* Doyle, William T. "The Vermont Political Tradition and Those Who Helped Make It." Doyle Publisher: 1987. ISBN 0-9615486-1-4.
* Duffy, John J., et al. "The Vermont Encyclopedia." University Press of New England: 2003. ISBN 1-58465-086-9.
* Potash, P. Jeffrey, et al. "Freedom and Unity: A History of Vermont." Vermont Historical Society: 2004. ISBN 0-934720-49-5.ee also
*
List of Governors of Vermont External links
* [http://www.vermont.gov/governor/ Official website of the Governor of Vermont]
* [http://www.snellingcenter.org/constitutionalamendment/publicopinion/ Snelling Center for Government study and poll on the length of term of Vermont governors]
* [http://vermont.gov/index.shtml Government of Vermont portal]
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