lieutenant Governor of Georgia

{{Short description|Position}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}

{{Infobox Political post

| post = Lieutenant Governor

| insignia = Seal_of_Georgia.svg

| insigniasize = 100px

| insigniacaption = Great Seal of the State of Georgia

| image = File:Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones 2023 (cropped 2).jpg

| imagesize = 180px

| incumbent = Burt Jones

| incumbentsince = January 9, 2023

| style =

| residence =

| department = Government of Georgia

| appointer = Elected by popular vote

| termlength = 4-years, no term limit

| formation = August 13, 1945

| succession = First

| inaugural = Melvin E. Thompson

| website = {{URL|http://ltgov.georgia.gov|Official website}}

| salary = $54,920 (2023) {{cite web |url=https://open.ga.gov/openga/salaryTravel/index |title=Find salaries and travel reimbursements paid to employees of the State of Georgia and employees of local boards of education. |publisher=Open Georgia |date=November 6, 2024 |access-date=November 6, 2024 }}

}}

The lieutenant governor of Georgia is a constitutional officer of the State of Georgia, elected to a four-year term by popular vote. Unlike in some other U.S. states, the lieutenant governor is elected on a separate ticket from the governor of Georgia.

Constitutionally, the lieutenant governor's primary job is to serve as president of Georgia's Senate. In the case of incapacity of the governor, the lieutenant governor assumes their duties and power (but not the title). Should the governor die or otherwise leave office, the lieutenant governor assumes the office for the remainder of the term.

The office of Lieutenant Governor was created by a state constitutional revision in 1945. Prior to that time, Georgia did not have such an office. Elected in 1946 (for a term to begin in 1947) Georgia's first lieutenant governor, Melvin E. Thompson became involved in the three governors controversy.

The current lieutenant governor of Georgia is Republican Burt Jones.

History

The office of lieutenant governor in Georgia was created by an amendment to the state constitution in 1945. The primary purpose of the office was for its incumbent to serve as a successor in the event the governorship became vacant. Melvin E. Thompson became the first person elected to the office in 1946. Due to the outcome of the three governors controversy, he served only two months (January to March 1947) in the office, succeeding to the governorship in March 1947, pending a special election in 1948. That year, Marvin Griffin was elected to the lieutenant governorship. Griffin establish several informal precedents during his tenure, namely by assuming an active leadership role in the State Senate and by naming chairs of the body's committees with the governor's assent. In 2003, the Senate altered its rules and granted the power of appointing committee chairs to the Senate president pro tempore. In November 2010, the Republican majority voted to change the Senate rules, stripping the Lieutenant Governor's ability to appoint the membership of Senate committees.{{cite web|last=Tharpe|first=Jim|title= Georgia Senate leaders claim "power sharing" with lieutenant governor|url=http://www.politifact.com/georgia/statements/2010/nov/17/republican-state-senators/georgia-senate-leaders-claim-power-sharing-lieuten/|website=PolitiFact|date=November 17, 2010|access-date=11 October 2013}}

Election

All candidates for the office of lieutenant governor must also have been a citizen of the United States for at least 15 years and a resident of Georgia for at least six years preceding election. The lieutenant governor is elected on their own ticket separate from the governor. They serve without term limits.{{cite web| url = https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/government-politics/lieutenant-governor/| title = Lieutenant Governor| last = Buchanan| first = Scott E.| date = March 11, 2003| website = New Georgia Encyclopedia| publisher = Georgia Humanities, University of Georgia Press| access-date = June 26, 2023}}

Powers, duties, and structure

File:The office of lieutenant governor inside the Georgia Capitol Building.jpg

The lieutenant governor's formal duties are limited by the Georgia State Constitution to serving as the President of the Senate and the successor of the governor whenever the governorship becomes vacant due to the governor's death or a determination by the State Supreme Court that they are incapable of discharging their duties. The lieutenant governor assumes the gubernatorial powers and duties pending the next general election in the state.

As President of the Senate the lieutenant governor presides over debate in the Senate. As he is not a member of the Senate, the lieutenant governor is barred from sponsoring legislation.{{cite web| url = http://www.dca.state.ga.us/CountySnapshotsNet/stateSnapshot.aspx?stype=4| title = State of Georgia| date = 2006| website = Georgia County Snapshots| publisher = Georgia Department of Community Affairs| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070429155135/http://www.dca.state.ga.us/CountySnapshotsNet/stateSnapshot.aspx?stype=4|archive-date=April 29, 2007| access-date = June 27, 2023}} The Rules of the Georgia State Senate assign the president of the Senate to appoint two senators to the Committee on Assignments and to serve as the Chair of the committee, but the Chair may only vote in case of a tie. Additionally, the president is a member of and appoints three other members to the Committee on Administrative Affairs. Under the supervision of the State Senate, the President "shall as a matter of course and without debate, report the reference of bills to the proper committee." Senate pages are supervised by the president who "shall establish a program of familiarization with state government, its procedures and those duties and responsibilities which will be required of pages."{{cite web|title=Rules of the Georgia State Senate {{!}} 2013 - 2013 Term|url=http://www.senate.ga.gov/sos/Documents/senaterules2013.pdf|publisher=Secretary of the Senate's Office|access-date=11 October 2013}} As the Senate's presiding officer, the lieutenant governor can exercise influence over state legislation, though the Senate can disregard their wishes at its discretion.{{cite web| url = https://www.axios.com/local/atlanta/2023/01/11/exclusive-georgias-new-lieutenant-governor-burt-jones-priorities| title = Exclusive: Georgia's new lieutenant governor's priorities| last = Hurt| first = Emma| date = January 11, 2023| website = Axios Atlanta| publisher = Axios Media| access-date = June 26, 2023}}

List of lieutenant governors of Georgia

=Parties=

{{legend2|#3333FF|Democratic (10)|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}}

{{legend2|#E81B23|Republican (3)|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}}

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"

! data-sort-type="number"|{{abbr|No.|Number}}

! colspan=3 | Lt. Governor

! Term in office

! Party

! Election

! colspan=2 | Governor

style="height:2em;"

| 1

| 75px

| bgcolor={{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}}|

! {{sortname|Melvin E.|Thompson}}

| {{dts|January 14, 1947}}

March 18, 1947

| Democratic

| rowspan=2 | 1946

| rowspan=16 bgcolor={{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}}|

| Herman Talmadge

style="height:2em;"

!scope="row"|—

| colspan="4" style="background:#EEEEEE;" |Office vacant from March 18, 1947 - November 17, 1948

| —

| Melvin E. Thompson

style="height:2em;"

| rowspan=2 | 2

| rowspan=2 | 75px

| rowspan=15 bgcolor={{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}}|

! rowspan=2 | {{sortname|Marvin|Griffin}}

| rowspan=2 | {{dts|November 17, 1948}}

January 11, 1955

| rowspan=2 | Democratic

| 1948
{{small|(special)}}

| rowspan=2 | Herman Talmadge

style="height:2em;"

| 1950

style="height:2em;"

| 3

| 75px

! {{sortname|Ernest|Vandiver}}

| {{dts|January 11, 1955}}

January 13, 1959

| Democratic

| 1954

| Marvin Griffin

style="height:2em;"

| 4

| 75px

! {{sortname|Garland T.|Byrd}}

| {{dts|January 13, 1959}}

January 15, 1963

| Democratic

| 1958

| Ernest Vandiver

style="height:2em;"

| 5

| 75px

! {{sortname|Peter Zack|Geer}}

| {{dts|January 15, 1963}}

January 11, 1967

| Democratic

| 1962

| Carl Sanders

style="height:2em;"

| 6

| 75px

! {{sortname|George T.|Smith}}

| {{dts|January 11, 1967}}

January 12, 1971

| Democratic

| 1966

| Lester Maddox

style="height:2em;"

| 7

| 75px

! {{sortname|Lester|Maddox}}

| {{dts|January 12, 1971}}

January 14, 1975

| Democratic

| 1970

| Jimmy Carter

style="height:2em;"

| rowspan=4 | 8

| rowspan=4 | 75px

! rowspan=4 | {{sortname|Zell|Miller}}

| rowspan=4 | {{dts|January 14, 1975}}

January 13, 1991

| rowspan=4 | Democratic

| 1974

| rowspan=2 | George Busbee

style="height:2em;"

| 1978

style="height:2em;"

| 1982

| rowspan=2 | Joe Frank Harris

style="height:2em;"

| 1986

style="height:2em;"

| rowspan=2 | 9

| rowspan=2 | 75px

! rowspan=2 | {{sortname|Pierre|Howard}}

| rowspan=2 | {{dts|January 13, 1991}}

January 11, 1999

| rowspan=2 | Democratic

| 1990

| rowspan=2 | Zell Miller

style="height:2em;"

| 1994

style="height:2em;"

| rowspan=2 | 10

| rowspan=2 | 75px

! rowspan=2 | {{sortname|Mark|Taylor|Mark Taylor (American politician)}}

| rowspan=2 | {{dts|January 11, 1999}}

January 8, 2007

| rowspan=2 | Democratic

| 1998

| Roy Barnes

style="height:2em;"

| 2002

| rowspan=6 bgcolor={{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}|

| rowspan=2 | Sonny Perdue

style="height:2em;"

| rowspan=3 | 11

| rowspan=3 | 75px

| rowspan=5 bgcolor={{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}|

! rowspan=3 | {{sortname|Casey|Cagle}}

| rowspan=3 | {{dts|January 8, 2007}}

January 14, 2019

| rowspan=3 | Republican

| 2006

style="height:2em;"

| 2010

| rowspan=2 | Nathan Deal

style="height:2em;"

| 2014

style="height:2em;"

| 12

| 75px

! {{sortname|Geoff|Duncan}}

| {{dts|January 14, 2019}}

January 9, 2023

| Republican

| 2018

| rowspan=2 | Brian Kemp

style="height:2em;"

| 13

| 75px

! {{sortname|Burt|Jones}}

| {{dts|January 9, 2023}}

Incumbent

| Republican

| 2022

See also

References

{{reflist}}