- Lieutenant Governor of Virginia
The Lieutenant Governor is a constitutional officer of the Commonwealth of
Virginia . TheLieutenant Governor is elected every four years along with the Governor and Attorney General. The office is currently held by Republican William T. Bolling. The governor and lieutenant governor are elected separately and thus may be of different political parties. The lieutenant governor's office is located in the Finance Building onCapitol Square inRichmond, Virginia . The lieutenant governor serves as the President of theSenate of Virginia and is first in the line of succession to the governor; in the event the governor dies, resigns, or otherwise leaves office, the lieutenant governor becomes governor.Since the late 1920s, the lieutenant governor has been one of only three officials elected statewide in Virginia (along with the governor and attorney general). Since the governor can't succeed himself, whoever is elected lieutenant governor is almost always considered a leading candidate for governor. This is especially the case if the lieutenant governor and the attorney general come from different parties. For example, after Democrat
Tim Kaine was elected lieutenant governor and Republican Jerry Kilgore was elected attorney general in2001 , it was virtually taken for granted that they would face each other in the 2005 election.The office of Lieutenant Governor is of colonial origin and can be traced to the Virginia Council of London. The Council was appointed by the King, and in turn, the Council appointed the Lieutenant Governor or deputy. When the English crown forbade colonial Governor's absence from the colonies without leave in
1680 , it became the Council’s duty to designate or send a deputy who could exercise all the powers of the Governor under the written instructions of both the crown and the Governor. Virginia’s first Constitution, adopted in1776 , provided a Council of State from which a President was annually selected from its members. The President acted as Lieutenant Governor in the case of the death, inability, or necessary absence of the Governor from the government. The Virginia Constitution of1851 abolished the Governor’s Council of State and provided for the popular election of the Lieutenant Governor.Shelton Farrar Leake , fromAlbemarle County , was the first elected Lieutenant Governor, serving from1852 -1856 .Constitutionally, the Lieutenant Governor is president of the
Senate of Virginia , as is the case with many other lieutenant governors in the United States. Unlike most of his counterparts, however, the lieutenant governor usually presides over the chamber.List of Lieutenant Governors of Virginia
External links
* [http://www.ltgov.virginia.gov/ Lieutenant Governor of Virginia's website]
* [http://www.ltgov.virginia.gov/NEWLtGov/pastltgov.cfm List of past Lieutenant Governors]
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