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Governor of Maryland

The governor of the State of Maryland is the head of government of Maryland, and is the commander-in-chief of the state's National Guard units. The governor is the highest-ranking official in the state and has a broad range of appointive powers in both the state and local governments, as specified by the Maryland Constitution (1867, and revisions/amendments). Because of the extent of these constitutional powers, the governor of Maryland has been ranked as being among the most powerful governors in the United States.[2]

Governor of the
State of Maryland
Incumbent
Wes Moore
since January 18, 2023
Style
Status
ResidenceGovernment House
SeatAnnapolis, Maryland
Term lengthFour years, renewable once consecutively
Constituting instrumentMaryland Constitution of 1776
Inaugural holderThomas Johnson
FormationMarch 21, 1777
(245 years ago)
 (1777-03-21)
DeputyLieutenant Governor of Maryland
Salary$180,000 (2018)[1]
Websitegovernor.maryland.gov

The current governor is Wes Moore, who has been in office since 2023.[3]

Selection and qualifications

Like most state chief executives in the United States, the governor is elected by the citizens of Maryland to serve a four-year term. Under the Constitution of Maryland, the governor can run any number of times, but not more than twice in a row.[4] This makes it possible for a two-term governor to run for the office again after remaining out of office for at least one term. An eligible candidate for Governor must be at least 30 years old, and also a resident of and a registered voter in Maryland for the five years preceding the election.[4] Candidates meeting this minimum requirement must file his or her candidacy with the Maryland State Board of Elections, pay a filing fee, file a financial disclosure, and create a legal campaign financial body.[5] The governor, like all statewide officials in Maryland, is elected in the even-numbered years in which the election for president of the United States does not occur.[4]

Functions and responsibilities

As the chief executive of the State of Maryland, the governor heads the executive branch of government, which includes all state executive departments and agencies, as well as advisory boards, commissions, committees, and task forces. The main constitutional responsibility of the governor of Maryland, and any other state's chief executive, is to carry out the business of the state and to enforce the laws passed by the legislature. The governor also has some say in these laws, since the governor has the ability to veto any bill sent to his or her desk by the Maryland General Assembly, though the assembly may override that veto. The governor is also given a number of more specific powers as relates to appropriations of state funds, the appointment of state officials, and also a variety of less prominent and less commonly utilized powers.[4]

Appropriations

Every year, the governor must present a proposed budget to the Maryland General Assembly. After receiving the proposed budget, the assembly is then allowed to decrease any portion of the budget for the executive branch, but it may never increase it or transfer funds between executive departments. The assembly may, however, increase funds for the legislative and judicial branches of government.[6] The governor has the power to veto any law that is passed by the General Assembly, including a "line item veto", which can be used to strike certain portions of appropriations bills. The legislature then has the power to override a Governor's veto by vote of three-fifths (60%) of the number of members in each house.[4]

The governor also sits on the board of public works, whose other two members are the comptroller and the treasurer. This board has broad powers in overseeing and approving the spending of state funds. They must approve state expenditures of all general funds and capital improvement funds, excluding expenditures for the construction of state roads, bridges, and highways. It has the power to solicit loans on its own accord either to meet a deficit or in anticipation of other revenues, in addition to approving expenditures of funds from loans authorized by the General Assembly.[7]

Appointment powers

The governor appoints almost all military and civil officers of the state government, subject to advice and consent of the Maryland State Senate. The governor also appoints certain boards and commissions in each of the 24 counties and in Baltimore City, such as local Boards of Elections, commissions notaries public, and appoints officers to fill vacancies in the elected offices of attorney general and comptroller.[4] Should a vacancy arise in either of the two houses of the General Assembly, the Governor also fills that vacancy, though the governor must choose from among the recommendations of the local party organization to which the person leaving the vacancy belonged.[8] Any officer appointed by the governor, except a member of the General Assembly, is removable by him or her, if there is a legitimate cause for removal. Among the most prominent of the governor's appointees are the 24 secretaries and heads of departments that currently make up the governor's Cabinet, also known as the executive council.[4]

Executive council

The governor of Maryland is the chairman of the governor's executive council (or Cabinet) which coordinates all state government functions. This is composed of the following members, all of whom, except the lieutenant governor, are appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the Maryland State Senate as heads of executive departments:[9]

  • Lieutenant governor – Aruna Miller
  • Secretary of State – Susan C. Lee
  • Secretary of Aging – Carmel Roques
  • Secretary of Agriculture – Kevin Atticks
  • Secretary of Budget and Management – Helene Grady
  • Secretary of Commerce – Kevin Anderson
  • Secretary of Disabilities – Carol Beatty
  • State Superintendent of Schools (appointed by the State Board of Education to direct the Maryland State Department of Education) – Mohammed Choudhury
  • Secretary of Environment – Serena McIlwain
  • Secretary of General Services – Atif Chaudhry
  • Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene – Laura Herrera Scott
  • Secretary of Housing and Community Development – Jacob R. Day
  • Secretary of Human Resources – Rafael López
  • Secretary of Information Technology – Katie Savage
  • Secretary of Juvenile Services – Vincent Schiraldi
  • Secretary of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation – Portia Wu
  • Secretary of Natural Resources – Josh Kurtz
  • Secretary of Planning – Rebecca Flora
  • Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services – Carolyn Scruggs
  • Secretary of State Police (commanding officer of the Maryland State Police) – Vacant
  • Secretary of Transportation – Paul J. Wiedefeld
  • Secretary of Veterans Affairs – Anthony Woods
  • Secretary of Higher Education (head of the Maryland Higher Education Commission) – Vacant
  • Adjutant General (head of the Maryland Military Department) – Vacant

Other members of the governor's staff may be invited to Cabinet meetings as "attendees".[9]

The governor also oversees several sub-cabinets that coordinate the activities of a certain function of state government that involves several state departments or agencies. Currently, these are the Base Realignment and Closure Subcabinet, BayStat Subcabinet, Chesapeake Bay cabinet, Children's Cabinet, Governor's Subcabinet for International Affairs, Smart Growth Subcabinet, and Workforce Creation Subcabinet.[10]

Other powers and responsibilities

The governor is the commander-in-chief of the military forces of the state: the Maryland Army National Guard and Air National Guard and the Maryland Defense Force, except when these forces have been called into federal service, which the federal government under the president of the United States now has the authority to do. In times of public emergency, the governor may exercise emergency powers, including the mobilization of these military forces. In the area of criminal justice, the governor may grant pardons to criminals, commute the sentences of prisoners, or remit fines and forfeitures imposed on people who have been convicted, jailed, or fined for violations of state laws.

In both these areas, and a variety of others, the governor sits on state and interstate boards and commissions with varying powers. The governor is also obligated to report on the conditions of the state at any time during the year, though this traditionally happens in a "State of the State" address each January at the beginning of the annual General Assembly session.[4]

The Governor's staff

In addition to the various departments and agencies under gubernatorial control, the governor has an executive administrative staff that assist in coordinating the executive duties. This staff is led by a chief of staff, and includes five offices: Intergovernmental Relations, Legal Counsel, Legislative and Policy, Press, and the Governor's Office in Washington, D.C. The chief of staff has a number of deputies to assist in running these departments. The governor's staff is appointed and therefore largely exempt from state civil service laws.[4]

History and evolution of the office

1600s–1800s

 
Thomas Johnson, the first Governor of Maryland after independence. He served from 1777 to 1779.

During the colonial period, Maryland's proprietors, the Barons and Lords of Baltimore, who generally remained in the Kingdom of England, chose who would serve as the proprietary governor of Maryland on their behalf. Leonard Calvert (1606–1647), youngest brother of the second Lord Baltimore, Cecilius Calvert (1605–1675), and the first lord proprietor, came with the first settlers in March 1634 to serve as the first Governor of the colonial Province of Maryland until his death in 1647. Between 1692, when the Baltimores lost control, and 1715, Maryland was a direct royal colony, and the Governor was appointed by the British monarch. The Lords of Baltimore regained their royal charter in 1715, under the British monarchs of the House of Hanover, and then under the fifth and sixth Lord Baltimores, they resumed choosing the Governors until the beginning of the American Revolution (1775–1783).[4] The first Governor of an independent state chosen to break this chain of colonial Governors was Thomas Johnson (1732–1819) of Frederick County, who took office on March 21, 1777.[11][12]

Under the first Maryland Constitution of 1776 for the independent state, the Governor was chosen for one-year terms by both houses of the General Assembly. An 1838 constitutional amendment allowed voters to elect the Governor to a three-year term from one of three rotating gubernatorial districts: eastern, southern, and western parts of the state. At each election, only voters from a single gubernatorial election district selected the Governor. A four-year term was established by the second Maryland Constitution of 1851, and geographic requirements were removed by the third Constitution of 1864 during the American Civil War.[13] The fourth and current constitution was ratified by the people after the war in 1867. An amendment in 1922, added article XVII, title "Quadrennial Elections", to the 1867 state constitution and set the next election year to be 1926 and every four years thereafter,[14] thereby shifting from the historical off-year cycle (...1915, 1919, 1923) to the present mid-term election cycle.

From 1777 to 1870, the Governor resided in the Jennings House in Annapolis. Located on the site of the future expanded campus of the adjacent United States Naval Academy (founded 1845), the house was later sold to the academy in 1869 after it returned from its northern hiatus in Rhode Island during the American Civil War (1861–1865). It was razed in 1901 for additional USNA buildings. Since 1870, the Governor of the Old Line State has resided in the Government House, originally a Victorian style architecture red brick mansion (later rebuilt/renovated in the 1930s into a Georgian-styled mansion to match other colonial/Georgian-Federal era styled architecture state buildings and residences in the historic city). It is located on State Circle adjacent to the colonial era Maryland State House built 1772–1797. In addition to being the residence of the Governor and his family, Government House has a number of public rooms that are used by the Governor on official occasions.[15]

1900s–present

 
Former Maryland governor and U.S. vice president Spiro Agnew

Spiro Agnew, who was the 55th Governor of Maryland from 1967 to 1969, later served as the 39th vice president of the United States under President Richard M. Nixon. Agnew is, thus far, the highest-ranking Marylander (along with 19th-century chief justice Roger B. Taney) in public service in the history of the United States.[16] He resigned after pleading "no contest" to federal legal charges of corruption during his terms as Baltimore County executive, Maryland Governor and vice president. In 1979, his gubernatorial portrait was removed from the Maryland State House Governor's Reception Room. In 1995, then-Governor Parris Glendening re-included the portrait, stating that it was not up to anyone to alter history, whether for good or bad, citing the famous novel by George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four. [17]

As of 2023, Maryland has not yet had a female Governor.[16] However, women were the runners-up in four gubernatorial elections (in 1974, 1994, 1998, and 2002), three Republicans and one Democrat.[18] In addition, two women has been the Lieutenant Governor; Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, under Democratic Governor Parris Glendening from 1995 to 2003; and Aruna Miller, under Democratic Governor Wes Moore since 2023.[16] Another woman, Kristen Cox, who was the Secretary of Disabilities, unsuccessfully ran for Lieutenant Governor as the running mate of then incumbent Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich, when the Lieutenant Governor at that time, Michael Steele, left office to run for the U.S. Senate. Cox was a unique person to run for that office, not only because she is a woman, but also because she is legally blind.[19]

Lieutenant Governor

In 1971, the office of Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, which had existed for only a few years in the 1860s, was re-instituted by an amendment to the Maryland Constitution. The Lieutenant Governor is a weak office compared to other counterparts (in other states including Texas, the Lieutenant Governor is the president of the state's Senate, while in California the Lieutenant Governor assumes all of the Governor's powers when the sitting Governor is out of the state), as it only possesses the powers and duties that the Governor assigns to him or her. The Lieutenant Governor is elected on the same ballot with the Governor, and to the same term of office as the Governor. The Lieutenant Governor succeeds to the Governorship only if there is a vacancy in that office.[20]

Despite the Governor and Lieutenant Governor being elected on the same party ticket, very often there have been public rifts between the two; for instance Gov. Marvin Mandel and Lt. Gov. Blair Lee III; Gov. Harry R. Hughes and Lt. Gov. Samuel W. Bogley III; Gov. Schaefer and Lt. Gov. Melvin A. Steinberg., and Gov. Parris Glendening and Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend. [21] No Lieutenant Governor of Maryland has yet been elected as the Governor in future elections, or permanently succeeded to the Governor's office due to a vacancy (which would be created by the resignation, death, or removal of the sitting Governor), although Blair Lee III served as acting Governor from June 4, 1977, until January 15, 1979, while Governor Marvin Mandel was serving a sentence for mail fraud and racketeering (consequently, in a modern example of Damnatio memoriae, Mandel's official gubernatorial portrait was not hung in the Maryland State House Governor's Reception Room until 1993).[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Governor's Salary Commission". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  2. ^ Prah, Pamela (March 9, 2007). . Stateline. Archived from the original on April 12, 2012. Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  3. ^ Cox, Erin; Wiggins, Ovetta (January 18, 2023). "Wes Moore to be sworn in, making history as Md.'s first Black governor". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Maryland Governor: Origins and Functions". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  5. ^ "Requirements for Filing Candidacy". Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  6. ^ . Department of Legislative Services. June 15, 2007. Archived from the original on June 15, 2007. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  7. ^ "Maryland Board of Public Works: Origin and Functions". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  8. ^ Tallman, Douglas (October 26, 2005). . Gazette.net. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  9. ^ a b "Governor's Executive Council (Cabinet)". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  10. ^ "Subcabinets & Cabinet Councils". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  11. ^ "Thomas Johnson (1732-1819)". Archives of Maryland (Biographical Series). Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  12. ^ . National Governors Association. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
  13. ^ "Archives of Maryland, Historical List, Gubernatorial Elections in Maryland 1838–2014". Maryland State Archives. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  14. ^ . Archives of Maryland Online. Archived from the original on May 11, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  15. ^ "Government House: Maryland Treasure". Maryland State Archives. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d "Archives of Maryland, Historical List, Governors of Maryland, 1634--". Maryland State Archives. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  17. ^ Governor Glendening (April 13, 1995). [Governor Glendening's Press Conference on the opening of the Exhibit of Governors' Portraits in the Governor's Reception Room, Maryland State House, Annapolis, 10 a.m., April 13, 1995] (Speech). Maryland State Archives. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  18. ^ "Elections by Year". State Board of Elections. Retrieved March 15, 2022. and Duggan, Paul (October 7, 2005), "Louise Gore, Force in Md. GOP, Dies", Washington Post, retrieved February 19, 2012
  19. ^ Otto, Mary; Aratani, Lori (June 30, 2006). "Ehrlich Picks Cabinet Member Cox for Ticket". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  20. ^ "Lieutenant Governor: Origins and Functions". Maryland Manual On-Line. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  21. ^ Koenig, Sarah (November 26, 2002). . The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2011.

External links

Official
  • Official website  
General information

governor, maryland, list, list, governors, maryland, governor, state, maryland, head, government, maryland, commander, chief, state, national, guard, units, governor, highest, ranking, official, state, broad, range, appointive, powers, both, state, local, gove. For a list see List of governors of Maryland The governor of the State of Maryland is the head of government of Maryland and is the commander in chief of the state s National Guard units The governor is the highest ranking official in the state and has a broad range of appointive powers in both the state and local governments as specified by the Maryland Constitution 1867 and revisions amendments Because of the extent of these constitutional powers the governor of Maryland has been ranked as being among the most powerful governors in the United States 2 Governor of theState of MarylandGreat Seal of the State of MarylandFlag of the State of MarylandIncumbentWes Mooresince January 18 2023StyleGovernor informal The Honorable formal StatusHead of stateHead of governmentResidenceGovernment HouseSeatAnnapolis MarylandTerm lengthFour years renewable once consecutivelyConstituting instrumentMaryland Constitution of 1776Inaugural holderThomas JohnsonFormationMarch 21 1777 245 years ago 1777 03 21 DeputyLieutenant Governor of MarylandSalary 180 000 2018 1 Websitegovernor wbr maryland wbr govThe current governor is Wes Moore who has been in office since 2023 3 Contents 1 Selection and qualifications 2 Functions and responsibilities 2 1 Appropriations 2 2 Appointment powers 2 3 Executive council 2 4 Other powers and responsibilities 2 5 The Governor s staff 3 History and evolution of the office 3 1 1600s 1800s 3 2 1900s present 4 Lieutenant Governor 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksSelection and qualifications EditLike most state chief executives in the United States the governor is elected by the citizens of Maryland to serve a four year term Under the Constitution of Maryland the governor can run any number of times but not more than twice in a row 4 This makes it possible for a two term governor to run for the office again after remaining out of office for at least one term An eligible candidate for Governor must be at least 30 years old and also a resident of and a registered voter in Maryland for the five years preceding the election 4 Candidates meeting this minimum requirement must file his or her candidacy with the Maryland State Board of Elections pay a filing fee file a financial disclosure and create a legal campaign financial body 5 The governor like all statewide officials in Maryland is elected in the even numbered years in which the election for president of the United States does not occur 4 Functions and responsibilities EditAs the chief executive of the State of Maryland the governor heads the executive branch of government which includes all state executive departments and agencies as well as advisory boards commissions committees and task forces The main constitutional responsibility of the governor of Maryland and any other state s chief executive is to carry out the business of the state and to enforce the laws passed by the legislature The governor also has some say in these laws since the governor has the ability to veto any bill sent to his or her desk by the Maryland General Assembly though the assembly may override that veto The governor is also given a number of more specific powers as relates to appropriations of state funds the appointment of state officials and also a variety of less prominent and less commonly utilized powers 4 Appropriations Edit Every year the governor must present a proposed budget to the Maryland General Assembly After receiving the proposed budget the assembly is then allowed to decrease any portion of the budget for the executive branch but it may never increase it or transfer funds between executive departments The assembly may however increase funds for the legislative and judicial branches of government 6 The governor has the power to veto any law that is passed by the General Assembly including a line item veto which can be used to strike certain portions of appropriations bills The legislature then has the power to override a Governor s veto by vote of three fifths 60 of the number of members in each house 4 The governor also sits on the board of public works whose other two members are the comptroller and the treasurer This board has broad powers in overseeing and approving the spending of state funds They must approve state expenditures of all general funds and capital improvement funds excluding expenditures for the construction of state roads bridges and highways It has the power to solicit loans on its own accord either to meet a deficit or in anticipation of other revenues in addition to approving expenditures of funds from loans authorized by the General Assembly 7 Appointment powers Edit The governor appoints almost all military and civil officers of the state government subject to advice and consent of the Maryland State Senate The governor also appoints certain boards and commissions in each of the 24 counties and in Baltimore City such as local Boards of Elections commissions notaries public and appoints officers to fill vacancies in the elected offices of attorney general and comptroller 4 Should a vacancy arise in either of the two houses of the General Assembly the Governor also fills that vacancy though the governor must choose from among the recommendations of the local party organization to which the person leaving the vacancy belonged 8 Any officer appointed by the governor except a member of the General Assembly is removable by him or her if there is a legitimate cause for removal Among the most prominent of the governor s appointees are the 24 secretaries and heads of departments that currently make up the governor s Cabinet also known as the executive council 4 Executive council Edit The governor of Maryland is the chairman of the governor s executive council or Cabinet which coordinates all state government functions This is composed of the following members all of whom except the lieutenant governor are appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the Maryland State Senate as heads of executive departments 9 Lieutenant governor Aruna Miller Secretary of State Susan C Lee Secretary of Aging Carmel Roques Secretary of Agriculture Kevin Atticks Secretary of Budget and Management Helene Grady Secretary of Commerce Kevin Anderson Secretary of Disabilities Carol Beatty State Superintendent of Schools appointed by the State Board of Education to direct the Maryland State Department of Education Mohammed Choudhury Secretary of Environment Serena McIlwain Secretary of General Services Atif Chaudhry Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene Laura Herrera Scott Secretary of Housing and Community Development Jacob R Day Secretary of Human Resources Rafael Lopez Secretary of Information Technology Katie Savage Secretary of Juvenile Services Vincent Schiraldi Secretary of Labor Licensing and Regulation Portia Wu Secretary of Natural Resources Josh Kurtz Secretary of Planning Rebecca Flora Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services Carolyn Scruggs Secretary of State Police commanding officer of the Maryland State Police Vacant Secretary of Transportation Paul J Wiedefeld Secretary of Veterans Affairs Anthony Woods Secretary of Higher Education head of the Maryland Higher Education Commission Vacant Adjutant General head of the Maryland Military Department VacantOther members of the governor s staff may be invited to Cabinet meetings as attendees 9 The governor also oversees several sub cabinets that coordinate the activities of a certain function of state government that involves several state departments or agencies Currently these are the Base Realignment and Closure Subcabinet BayStat Subcabinet Chesapeake Bay cabinet Children s Cabinet Governor s Subcabinet for International Affairs Smart Growth Subcabinet and Workforce Creation Subcabinet 10 Other powers and responsibilities Edit The governor is the commander in chief of the military forces of the state the Maryland Army National Guard and Air National Guard and the Maryland Defense Force except when these forces have been called into federal service which the federal government under the president of the United States now has the authority to do In times of public emergency the governor may exercise emergency powers including the mobilization of these military forces In the area of criminal justice the governor may grant pardons to criminals commute the sentences of prisoners or remit fines and forfeitures imposed on people who have been convicted jailed or fined for violations of state laws In both these areas and a variety of others the governor sits on state and interstate boards and commissions with varying powers The governor is also obligated to report on the conditions of the state at any time during the year though this traditionally happens in a State of the State address each January at the beginning of the annual General Assembly session 4 The Governor s staff Edit In addition to the various departments and agencies under gubernatorial control the governor has an executive administrative staff that assist in coordinating the executive duties This staff is led by a chief of staff and includes five offices Intergovernmental Relations Legal Counsel Legislative and Policy Press and the Governor s Office in Washington D C The chief of staff has a number of deputies to assist in running these departments The governor s staff is appointed and therefore largely exempt from state civil service laws 4 History and evolution of the office Edit1600s 1800s Edit Thomas Johnson the first Governor of Maryland after independence He served from 1777 to 1779 During the colonial period Maryland s proprietors the Barons and Lords of Baltimore who generally remained in the Kingdom of England chose who would serve as the proprietary governor of Maryland on their behalf Leonard Calvert 1606 1647 youngest brother of the second Lord Baltimore Cecilius Calvert 1605 1675 and the first lord proprietor came with the first settlers in March 1634 to serve as the first Governor of the colonial Province of Maryland until his death in 1647 Between 1692 when the Baltimores lost control and 1715 Maryland was a direct royal colony and the Governor was appointed by the British monarch The Lords of Baltimore regained their royal charter in 1715 under the British monarchs of the House of Hanover and then under the fifth and sixth Lord Baltimores they resumed choosing the Governors until the beginning of the American Revolution 1775 1783 4 The first Governor of an independent state chosen to break this chain of colonial Governors was Thomas Johnson 1732 1819 of Frederick County who took office on March 21 1777 11 12 Under the first Maryland Constitution of 1776 for the independent state the Governor was chosen for one year terms by both houses of the General Assembly An 1838 constitutional amendment allowed voters to elect the Governor to a three year term from one of three rotating gubernatorial districts eastern southern and western parts of the state At each election only voters from a single gubernatorial election district selected the Governor A four year term was established by the second Maryland Constitution of 1851 and geographic requirements were removed by the third Constitution of 1864 during the American Civil War 13 The fourth and current constitution was ratified by the people after the war in 1867 An amendment in 1922 added article XVII title Quadrennial Elections to the 1867 state constitution and set the next election year to be 1926 and every four years thereafter 14 thereby shifting from the historical off year cycle 1915 1919 1923 to the present mid term election cycle From 1777 to 1870 the Governor resided in the Jennings House in Annapolis Located on the site of the future expanded campus of the adjacent United States Naval Academy founded 1845 the house was later sold to the academy in 1869 after it returned from its northern hiatus in Rhode Island during the American Civil War 1861 1865 It was razed in 1901 for additional USNA buildings Since 1870 the Governor of the Old Line State has resided in the Government House originally a Victorian style architecture red brick mansion later rebuilt renovated in the 1930s into a Georgian styled mansion to match other colonial Georgian Federal era styled architecture state buildings and residences in the historic city It is located on State Circle adjacent to the colonial era Maryland State House built 1772 1797 In addition to being the residence of the Governor and his family Government House has a number of public rooms that are used by the Governor on official occasions 15 1900s present Edit Former Maryland governor and U S vice president Spiro Agnew Spiro Agnew who was the 55th Governor of Maryland from 1967 to 1969 later served as the 39th vice president of the United States under President Richard M Nixon Agnew is thus far the highest ranking Marylander along with 19th century chief justice Roger B Taney in public service in the history of the United States 16 He resigned after pleading no contest to federal legal charges of corruption during his terms as Baltimore County executive Maryland Governor and vice president In 1979 his gubernatorial portrait was removed from the Maryland State House Governor s Reception Room In 1995 then Governor Parris Glendening re included the portrait stating that it was not up to anyone to alter history whether for good or bad citing the famous novel by George Orwell Nineteen Eighty Four 17 As of 2023 Maryland has not yet had a female Governor 16 However women were the runners up in four gubernatorial elections in 1974 1994 1998 and 2002 three Republicans and one Democrat 18 In addition two women has been the Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend under Democratic Governor Parris Glendening from 1995 to 2003 and Aruna Miller under Democratic Governor Wes Moore since 2023 16 Another woman Kristen Cox who was the Secretary of Disabilities unsuccessfully ran for Lieutenant Governor as the running mate of then incumbent Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich when the Lieutenant Governor at that time Michael Steele left office to run for the U S Senate Cox was a unique person to run for that office not only because she is a woman but also because she is legally blind 19 Lieutenant Governor EditMain article Lieutenant Governor of Maryland In 1971 the office of Lieutenant Governor of Maryland which had existed for only a few years in the 1860s was re instituted by an amendment to the Maryland Constitution The Lieutenant Governor is a weak office compared to other counterparts in other states including Texas the Lieutenant Governor is the president of the state s Senate while in California the Lieutenant Governor assumes all of the Governor s powers when the sitting Governor is out of the state as it only possesses the powers and duties that the Governor assigns to him or her The Lieutenant Governor is elected on the same ballot with the Governor and to the same term of office as the Governor The Lieutenant Governor succeeds to the Governorship only if there is a vacancy in that office 20 Despite the Governor and Lieutenant Governor being elected on the same party ticket very often there have been public rifts between the two for instance Gov Marvin Mandel and Lt Gov Blair Lee III Gov Harry R Hughes and Lt Gov Samuel W Bogley III Gov Schaefer and Lt Gov Melvin A Steinberg and Gov Parris Glendening and Lt Gov Kathleen Kennedy Townsend 21 No Lieutenant Governor of Maryland has yet been elected as the Governor in future elections or permanently succeeded to the Governor s office due to a vacancy which would be created by the resignation death or removal of the sitting Governor although Blair Lee III served as acting Governor from June 4 1977 until January 15 1979 while Governor Marvin Mandel was serving a sentence for mail fraud and racketeering consequently in a modern example of Damnatio memoriae Mandel s official gubernatorial portrait was not hung in the Maryland State House Governor s Reception Room until 1993 16 See also EditGovernment of Maryland Lieutenant Governor of Maryland Maryland gubernatorial elections List of Colonial Governors of MarylandReferences Edit Governor s Salary Commission Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Prah Pamela March 9 2007 Massachusetts Gov Rated Most Powerful Stateline Archived from the original on April 12 2012 Retrieved June 25 2007 Cox Erin Wiggins Ovetta January 18 2023 Wes Moore to be sworn in making history as Md s first Black governor The Washington Post Retrieved January 18 2023 a b c d e f g h i j Maryland Governor Origins and Functions Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Requirements for Filing Candidacy Maryland State Board of Elections Retrieved March 15 2022 Budget and Fiscal Policy Department of Legislative Services June 15 2007 Archived from the original on June 15 2007 Retrieved July 11 2007 Maryland Board of Public Works Origin and Functions Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Tallman Douglas October 26 2005 Lawton Appointed to District 18 Seat Gazette net Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved June 27 2007 a b Governor s Executive Council Cabinet Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Subcabinets amp Cabinet Councils Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Thomas Johnson 1732 1819 Archives of Maryland Biographical Series Retrieved March 15 2022 Governor Thomas Johnson National Governors Association Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 25 2017 Archives of Maryland Historical List Gubernatorial Elections in Maryland 1838 2014 Maryland State Archives Retrieved March 15 2022 Amendments to Maryland Constitutions Archives of Maryland Online Archived from the original on May 11 2018 Retrieved May 10 2018 Government House Maryland Treasure Maryland State Archives Retrieved March 15 2022 a b c d Archives of Maryland Historical List Governors of Maryland 1634 Maryland State Archives Retrieved March 15 2022 Governor Glendening April 13 1995 Governor Glendening s Press Conference on the opening of the Exhibit of Governors Portraits in the Governor s Reception Room Maryland State House Annapolis 10 a m April 13 1995 Speech Maryland State Archives Retrieved March 15 2022 Elections by Year State Board of Elections Retrieved March 15 2022 and Duggan Paul October 7 2005 Louise Gore Force in Md GOP Dies Washington Post retrieved February 19 2012 Otto Mary Aratani Lori June 30 2006 Ehrlich Picks Cabinet Member Cox for Ticket The Washington Post Retrieved June 27 2007 Lieutenant Governor Origins and Functions Maryland Manual On Line Retrieved March 15 2022 Koenig Sarah November 26 2002 For This Pair the Talking Is Over The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on May 22 2011 Retrieved April 19 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Governors of Maryland OfficialOfficial website General informationGovernor of Maryland at Ballotpedia Works by or about Governors of Maryland at Internet Archive Works by or about Governor of Maryland in libraries WorldCat catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Governor of Maryland amp oldid 1135670511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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