Wikipedia states the following information;
"Currently, 25 states elect a lieutenant governor on a ticket with the governor, while 18 states elect a lieutenant governor separately. In West Virginia, the state Senate chooses. In Tennessee, the senators elect a Speaker of the Senate who also serves as Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee. Five states have no lieutenant governor. There are currently 25 Democrats and 25 Republicans serving as lieutenant governors or serving as the first in the line of succession in the United States."
What is a Lt. governor, some are elected by separate elections and some are appointed by the governor as a president would appoint a vice president. In some instance you could actually have a Democratic governor with a Republican Lt. Governor or vice verse.
It's confusing since every state has it's own laws concerning the Lt governor, in fact six states do not even have a Lt.governor.
Those states are Arizona and Illinois where the state attorney general acts in absence of the Governor, Main and New Hampshire where the Senate president acts in absence of the Governor and Oregon and Wyoming where the Secretary of state acts as Governor in the absence.
Hawaii has a separate election for Lt. Governor, it's really quite a confusing job.
In Hawaii the Lt. Governor could be of a different party than the governor, which would make for some fun politics.
Remember though that the Lt. Governor is basically just there in case the governor dies is sick or missing in action.
I think the Lt. Governor should run on the same ticket as the governor and be appointed as a vice president is appointed by the president before a general election.
It makes no sense that the second in command could be of a different party affiliation and not even like the governors political stands.
The Lt. Governor is one position that needs to be standard in every state. I make a motion to dismantle the name Lt. Governor and start calling them vice Governors.
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