Governor of Michigan
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox official post The governor of Michigan is the head of government of the U.S. state of Michigan. The current governor is Gretchen Whitmer, a member of the Democratic Party, who was inaugurated on January 1, 2019, as the state's 49th governor. She was re-elected to serve a second term in 2022.[1] The governor is elected to a four-year term and is limited to two terms.
Qualifications
Governors of Michigan, as well as their lieutenant governors, must be United States citizens who have been qualified electors in Michigan for the four years preceding election and must be at least 30 years of age.[2] A constitutional amendment adopted at the 2010 general election provides that a person is ineligible for any elected office, including governor and lieutenant governor, if convicted of a felony involving dishonesty, deceit, fraud, or a breach of the public trust, and if the conviction were related to the person's official capacity while holding any elective office or position of employment in local, state, or federal government.[3]
Elections and term of office
From statehood until the election of 1966, governors were elected to two-year terms. Elections are held in November, and the governor assumes office the following January, except in the case of death or resignation. From statehood until 1851, elections were held in odd-numbered years. A new state constitution was drafted in 1850 and took effect in 1851. As part of the process bringing the constitution into effect, there was a single one-year term of governor in 1851. Thereafter elections were held in even years.
The constitution adopted in 1963 changed the governor's term to four years, starting in 1967. Since then, gubernatorial elections have been offset by two years between the U.S. presidential elections (e.g., presidential elections were in 2008 and 2012, while gubernatorial elections in that time period were in 2010 and 2014). Gubernatorial elections are held concurrently with state Senate elections. The winner of the gubernatorial election takes office at noon on January 1 of the year following the election.
Before 1992, governors could serve an unlimited number of terms. In 1992, an amendment to the Michigan constitution imposed a limit of two four-year terms for the office of governor, whether successive or separated. However, only those terms served after the amendment took effect counted toward the two-term limit. Thus, John Engler, the governor at the time, served three terms as his first term occurred before the restriction. Engler was reelected in 1994 and 1998, but was required to leave office for good in 2002.
Powers and duties
The governor has responsibilities to:
- sign or veto laws passed by the legislature;[4] including a line item veto
- reorganize state executive government agencies and departments;[4]
- appoint, with advice and consent of the Senate, and oversee most department heads;[4]
- appoint judges, subject to ratification by the electorate;
- appoint members of boards and commissions;[4]
- propose a state budget;[4]
- give the annual State of the State address;[4]
- sue other executives to comply with the law;
- command the state militia; and
- grant pardons for any crime, except cases involving impeachment by the legislature.
The governor appoints the members of the governing boards of 10 of the state's 13 public universities[lower-alpha 1] and department commissions.
History of the office
Forty-seven people have been governor of the state over forty-nine distinct periods, with two, John S. Barry and Frank Fitzgerald, serving non-consecutive terms. Before statehood, there were five governors of the Michigan Territory. Stevens T. Mason, Michigan's first governor, also served as a territorial governor. He was elected governor at age 23 as a member of the Democratic Party in 1835 and served until 1840. Mason was the youngest state governor in United States history.
Jennifer Granholm became the first female governor of Michigan on January 1, 2003, when she succeeded Engler; she served for 8 years, until January 1, 2011.
Timeline
| Timeline of Michigan governors |
|
<timeline>
ImageSize = width:1500 height:auto barincrement:18 PlotArea = top:10 bottom:20 right:130 left:10 AlignBars = late DateFormat = x.y Period = from:1804.90 till:2027 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:1810 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1805 Define $now = 2026 Colors = id:5year value:rgb(0.8, 0.8, 0.8) id:0year value:rgb(0.6, 0.6, 0.6) id:noparty value:rgb(0.7, 0.7, 0.7) id:dem value:rgb(0.2, 0.2, 1) id:whig value:rgb(0.94, 0.78, 0.34) id:rep value:rgb(0.91, 0.11, 0.14) id:seat1 value:rgb(0.60, 0.10, 0.10) id:blank value:white BarData = barset:GovernorLine barset:Governors #barset:blankline PlotData= width:1 align:right fontsize:S shift:(-3,-4) anchor:from fontsize:8 color:black barset:GovernorLine from:1820 till:end text:Governors width:6 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till fontsize:10 barset:Governors from:1805.16 till:1813.83 color:noparty text:"William Hull" from:1813.83 till:1831.58 color:noparty text:"Lewis Cass" from:1831.6 till:1834.51 color:noparty text:"George Bryan Porter" from:1835.84 till:1840.02 color:dem text:"Stevens T. Mason" from:1835.72 till:1836.51 color:noparty text:"John S. Horner" from:1840.02 till:1841.15 color:whig text:"William Woodbridge" from:1841.15 till:1842.01 color:whig text:"James Wright Gordon" from:1850.02 till:1852 color:dem text:"John S. Barry" from:1846.01 till:1847.17 color:dem text:"Alpheus Felch" from:1847.17 till:1848.01 color:dem text:"William L. Greenly" from:1848.01 till:1850.02 color:dem text:"Epaphroditus Ransom" from:1852 till:1853.18 color:dem text:"Robert McClelland" from:1853.18 till:1855.01 color:dem text:"Andrew Parsons" from:1855.01 till:1859.01 color:rep text:"Kinsley S. Bingham" from:1859.01 till:1861.01 color:rep text:"Moses Wisner" from:1861.01 till:1865.01 color:rep text:"Austin Blair" from:1865.01 till:1869 color:rep text:"Henry H. Crapo" from:1869 till:1873 color:rep text:"Henry P. Baldwin" from:1873 till:1877.01 color:rep text:"John J. Bagley" from:1877.01 till:1881 color:rep text:"Charles Croswell" from:1881 till:1883 color:rep text:"David Jerome" from:1883 till:1885 color:dem text:"Josiah Begole" from:1885 till:1887 color:rep text:"Russell A. Alger" from:1887 till:1891 color:rep text:"Cyrus G. Luce" from:1891 till:1893 color:dem text:"Edwin B. Winans" from:1893 till:1897 color:rep text:"John Treadway Rich" from:1897 till:1901 color:rep text:"Hazen S. Pingree" from:1901 till:1905.01 color:rep text:"Aaron T. Bliss" from:1905.01 till:1911 color:rep text:"Fred M. Warner" from:1911 till:1913 color:rep text:"Chase Osborn" from:1913 till:1917 color:dem text:"Woodbridge N. Ferris" from:1917 till:1921 color:rep text:"Albert Sleeper" from:1921 till:1927 color:rep text:"Alex J. Groesbeck" from:1927 till:1931 color:rep text:"Fred W. Green" from:1931 till:1933 color:rep text:"Wilber M. Brucker" from:1933 till:1935 color:dem text:"William Comstock" from:1939 till:1939.21 color:rep text:"Frank Fitzgerald" from:1937 till:1939 color:dem text:"Frank Murphy" from:1939.21 till:1941 color:rep text:"Luren Dickinson" from:1941 till:1943 color:dem text:"Murray Van Wagoner" from:1943 till:1947 color:rep text:"Harry Kelly" from:1947 till:1949 color:rep text:"Kim Sigler" from:1949 till:1961 color:dem text:"G. Mennen Williams" from:1961 till:1963 color:dem text:"John Swainson" from:1963 till:1969.06 color:rep text:"George W. Romney" from:1969.06 till:1983 color:rep text:"William Milliken" from:1983 till:1991 color:dem text:"James J. Blanchard" from:1991 till:2003 color:rep text:"John Engler" from:2003 till:2011 color:dem text:"Jennifer Granholm" from:2011 till:2019 color:rep text:"Rick Snyder" from:2019 till:$now color:dem text:"Gretchen Whitmer" LineData= from:1834.51 till:1835.72 atpos:864 color:noparty width:6 # STM 1st term from:1842.01 till:1846.01 atpos:793 color:dem width:6 # JSB 1st term from:1935 till:1937 atpos:281 color:rep width:6 # FF 1st term layer:back # This section creates the vertical lines. at:1805.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1810.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1815.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1820.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1825.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1830.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1835.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1840.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1845.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1850.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1855.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1860.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1865.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1870.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1875.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1880.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1885.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1890.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1895.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1900.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1905.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1910.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1915.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1920.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1925.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1930.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1935.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1940.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1945.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1950.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1955.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1960.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1965.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1970.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1975.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1980.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1985.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:1990.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:1995.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:2000.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:2005.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:2010.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:2015.00 width:0.1 color:5year at:2020.00 width:0.1 color:0year at:2025.00 width:0.1 color:5year</timeline> |
See also
Notes
References
Template:US Chief Executives Template:U.S. Governors Template:Michigan statewide elected officials
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Michigan Constitution: Article V, Sec. 22—Governor and lieutenant governor, qualifications
- ↑ Michigan Constitution: Article XI, Sec. 8 Convictions for certain felonies; eligibility for elective office or certain positions of public employment
- ↑ a b c d e f Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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