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Hawthorne, New Jersey - New Jersey Endodontics njrootcanal.com | LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR BOLLING NAMED CO-CHAIR OF ATTORNEY GENERAL'S patientadvocate.org |
The Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey will take office for the first time in January 2010 following conjoint election with the Governor of New Jersey. The position was created as the result of a Constitutional amendment to the New Jersey State Constitution passed by the voters on November 8, 2005. While the amendment itself took effect as of January 17, 2006, and made some interim changes to the succession to the governorship, the first lieutenant governor was not elected until November 3, 2009, when Republican Kim Guadagno was chosen by the voters as the running-mate of Governor-elect Chris Christie.
[edit] BackgroundThe Governor of New Jersey is currently the only state-wide (non-federal) elected office in the state. Thus, unlike many other states that have elections for cabinet-level positions, the New Jersey State Constitution allows the governor to appoint them. In the event of a gubernatorial vacancy, the New Jersey Constitution had specified that the President of the New Jersey Senate (followed by the Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly) would assume the role of Acting Governor and retain their powerful role in the Senate (or Assembly). An Acting Governor would then assume the powerful governorship while retaining the reins of power in their house of the legislature.[citation needed] This situation has occurred twice in recent years: when Christine Todd Whitman stepped down in 2001 to assume the position of administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency; and when James E. McGreevey resigned on November 15, 2004. At both occasions, New Jersey's constitution (along with Arizona, Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wyoming) had no position of Lieutenant Governor. After Whitman's resignation, Donald DiFrancesco, then John Bennett, and finally Richard Codey became Acting Governors. In McGreevey's case, Codey again became the Acting Governor. In each of these situations, the Acting Governor concurrently served as President of the State Senate.[citation needed] While concerns had long been raised[by whom?] regarding the succession in the event of a vacancy, these two resignations in a span of a few years raised greater public attention to the issue. Justifications for the creation of a Lieutenant Governor position focused on three primary issues:[citation needed]
[edit] Lieutenant Governor amendmentWith these concerns in mind, on Election Day, November 8, 2005, the voters passed an amendment to the New Jersey State Constitution that creates the position of Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey effective with the 2009 elections. The amendment also provides that in the event of a permanent vacancy in the office of Governor after January 17, 2006 and before the first Lieutenant Governor takes office in 2010, the President of the Senate, followed by the Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly, would become Governor but will then vacate his or her Senate (or Assembly) seat by the action of assuming the office. The amendment provides a new order of succession:
The amendment also provides:
[edit] First election, 2009During the week before the July 27, 2009 deadline for the gubernatorial candidates to designate their running mates,[1] Republican candidate Chris Christie selected Monmouth County Sheriff Kim Guadagno,[2] while Democratic incumbent Governor Jon Corzine chose State Senator Loretta Weinberg.[3] On July 27, independent gubernatorial candidate Chris Daggett selected as his running mate Frank J. Esposito, a Kean University history professor who once served as interim president of the university.[4] On November 3, 2009 Kimberly Guadagno was elected to become New Jersey's first Lieutenant Governor when her running mate Christoper Christie became Governor-elect.
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