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Alaska House of Representatives

Lower house in the Alaska Legislature


Lower house in the Alaska Legislature

FieldValue
background_color
nameAlaska House of Representatives
legislatureAlaska State Legislature
coa_picSeal of the State of Alaska.svg
session_roomAlaska State Capitol, House of Representatives chamber 2024-08-15.jpg
house_typeLower house
term_limitsNone
new_sessionJanuary 21, 2025
leader1_typeSpeaker
leader1Bryce Edgmon (I-C)
election1January 21, 2025
leader2_typeMajority Leader
leader2Chuck Kopp (R-C)
election2January 21, 2025
leader3_typeMinority Leader
leader3DeLena Johnson (R)
election3November 29, 2025
term_length2 years
authorityArticle 2, Alaska Constitution
salary$50,400/year + per diem
members40
structure1
structure1_res250px
voting_system1Nonpartisan blanket primary / Instant-runoff voting
last_election1November 5, 2024
next_election1November 3, 2026
redistrictingAlaska Redistricting Board
;Majority coalition caucus (21) {{Color box#00ffffborderdarkgray}}
* {{Color box#3700FFborderdarkgray}} Democratic (14)
* {{Color box#cac8ffborderdarkgray}} Independent (5)
* {{Color box#f75381borderdarkgray}} Republican (2)
;Minority (19) {{Color box#ff00ffborderdarkgray}}
* {{Color box#FF0000borderdarkgray}} Republican (19)
meeting_placeHouse of Representatives chamber
Alaska State Capitol
Juneau, Alaska
websiteAlaska House of Representatives
rulesAlaska State Legislature Uniform Rules

;Majority coalition caucus (21)

  • Democratic (14)
  • Independent (5)
  • Republican (2) ;Minority (19)
  • Republican (19) Alaska State Capitol Juneau, Alaska The Alaska House of Representatives is the lower house in the Alaska State Legislature, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Alaska. The House is composed of 40 members, each of whom represents a district of approximately 17,756 people per 2010 census figures. Members serve two-year terms without term limits. With 40 representatives, the Alaska House is the smallest state legislative lower chamber in the United States. The House convenes at the State Capitol in Juneau.

Powers and process

Members of the Alaska House of Representatives are responsible for a portion of the process of making and amending state law. The first step of the legislative process is filing a bill by giving it to the chief clerk of the Alaska House of Representatives. The chief clerk will then assign bills a number.

Bills are introduced and read the first time with the number, sponsor or sponsors, and the title of the bill and then referred to a committee(s). Committee chairs can choose whether or not hear a bill and committees can vote to approve a bill in its original form or make modifications through a committee substitute. Once bills or substitutes are approved, the legislation is referred to the next committee of assignment or to the Rules Committee, which can further amend the bill or assign it to the daily floor calendar.

Once a bill is scheduled on the floor, it appears on the calendar in Second Reading. The bill is again read by number, sponsor or sponsors, and title along with the standing committee reports. A motion is made on the floor to adopt any committee substitutes. Amendments can also be offered and voted on. Third Reading is where the motion is made to vote on the bill.

Senate action

After final passage in the Alaska House of Representatives, a bill is engrossed and sent to the Alaska Senate to go through the same process of introduction, committee referral and three readings. Likewise, bills that have been approved on Third Reading in the Alaska Senate are engrossed and sent to the Alaska House of Representatives.

Enrollment or conference

When a bill is not modified in the second house, it can be sent to the governor on Third Reading, through enrollment. If the bill is modified, the house of origin must vote to accept or reject amendments by the opposite house. A Fourth Reading, in the case of acceptance, will send the bill to the governor, through enrollment. If amendments are rejected, the bill can be sent to conference, where members of the Senate and House hash out a final version and send it to a Fourth Reading in both houses.

Governor and veto override

The governor can choose to sign or veto the legislation. In the case of the veto, a two-thirds majority of a joint session can override the veto. An appropriations bill requires a three-fourths majority vote in a joint session to override a veto. If signed or approved by a veto override, the legislation becomes law.

Membership

Terms and qualifications

State representatives must be a qualified voter and resident of Alaska for no less than three years, and a resident of the district from which elected for one year immediately preceding filing for office. A state representative must be 21 years of age at the time the oath of office is taken. The Alaska House of Representatives may expel a member with the concurrence of two-thirds of the membership of the house.

Legislative terms begin on the second Monday in January following a presidential election year and on the third Tuesday in January following a gubernatorial election. State representatives serve for terms of two years.

Leadership

The Speaker of the House presides over the House of Representatives. The Speaker is elected by the majority party caucus followed by confirmation of the full House through the passage of a House Resolution. In addition to presiding over the body, the Speaker is also the chief leadership position, and controls the flow of legislation and committee assignments. Other House leaders, such as the majority and minority leaders, are elected by their respective party caucuses relative to their party's strength in the chamber.

PositionRepresentativeCaucusPartyResidenceDistrict
Speaker of the HouseBryce EdgmonDem-CoalitionIndDillingham37
Majority LeaderChuck KoppDem-CoalitionRepAnchorage10
Majority WhipZack FieldsDem-CoalitionDemAnchorage19
Minority LeaderDeLena JohnsonRepRepPalmer25
Minority WhipJustin RuffridgeRepRepSoldotna7

Current composition

The 21-member majority caucus consists of all 14 Democrats, all 5 Independents and 2 Republicans. The 19-member minority caucus consists of 19 Republicans.

RepublicanRIDemocratic
AffiliationParty (Shading indicates majority caucus)TotalRepublicanIndependentDemocraticVacantEnd of 28th Legislature40Begin 29th Legislature (2015)40End of 29th (2016)30th Legislature (2017–2018)40Begin 31st Legislature (2019)40End 31st (2020)3932nd Legislature (2021–2022)40Begin 33rd Legislature (2023)40End 33rd (2024)Begin 34th Legislature (2025)40Latest voting share
Republican Party (United States)}}"Independent}}"Democratic Party (United States)}}"
2604100
2314120
122
1832170
1582150
16151
17224150
1911242110
201
1925140

Past partisan compositions can be found on Political party strength in Alaska.

Committees

Current committees include:

  • Judiciary
  • Resources
  • State Affairs
  • Economic Development, Trade, Tourism, and the Arctic
  • Fisheries
  • Committee on Committees
  • Task Force on Sustainable Education
  • Community & Regional Affairs
  • Education
  • Energy
  • Military & Veterans' Affairs
  • Health & Social Services
  • Labor & Commerce
  • Transportation
  • Rules
  • Finance
    • Education & Early Development
    • Governor
    • Labor & Workforce Development
    • Health & Social Services
    • Legislature
    • Military & Veterans' Affairs
    • Natural Resources
    • Public Safety
    • Revenue
    • Transportation & Public Facilities
    • University Of Alaska
    • Administration
    • Commerce, Community & Economic Dev
    • Corrections
    • Court System
    • Environmental Conservation
    • Fish & Game
    • Law
    • Fiscal Policy

Current members (34th Alaska State Legislature)

Districts

DistrictNamePartyCoalitionResidenceAssumed
office
1RepMinorityKetchikan2025
2IndMajoritySitka2023
3DemMajorityJuneau2019
4DemMajorityJuneau2019
5RepMajorityKodiak2015
6RepMinorityHomer2019
7RepMinoritySoldotna2023
8RepMinorityNikiski2025
9IndMajorityAnchorage2025
10RepMajorityAnchorage2025
(2017–2023)
11RepMinorityAnchorage2023
12IndMajorityAnchorage2021
13DemMajorityAnchorage2013
14IndMajorityAnchorage2023
15RepMinorityAnchorage2025
(2011-2015)
16DemMajorityAnchorage2025
17DemMajorityAnchorage2019
18RepMinorityAnchorage2025
(2021-2023)
19DemMajorityAnchorage2023
20DemMajorityAnchorage2023
21DemMajorityAnchorage2023
22DemMajorityAnchorage2025
23RepMinorityEagle River2023
24RepMinorityEagle River2023
(2011–2019)
25RepMinorityPalmer2017
26RepMinorityWasilla2025
27RepMinorityWasilla2025
28RepMinorityWasilla2025
29RepMinoritySutton2025
30RepMinorityBig Lake2021
31DemMajorityFairbanks2023
32RepMinorityFairbanks2023
33RepMinorityNorth Pole2019
34RepMinorityFairbanks2023
35DemMajorityFairbanks2023
36RepMinorityGlennallen2025
37IndMajorityDillingham2007
38DemMajorityToksook Bay2025
39DemMajorityNome2009
40DemMajorityUtqiagvik2025

Past composition of the House of Representatives

Main article: Political party strength in Alaska

Notes

References

References

  1. [http://w3.legis.state.ak.us/docs/pdf/legprocess.pdf Legislative Process] {{Webarchive. link. (December 22, 2019 , Alaska Legislature (accessed April 27, 2013))
  2. [http://w3.legis.state.ak.us/docs/pdf/handbook.pdf Alaska Handbook to State Government] {{Webarchive. link. (December 22, 2019 (accessed April 25, 2013))
  3. [https://web.archive.org/web/20101222032055/http://ltgov.alaska.gov/treadwell/services/alaska-constitution/article-ii-96A0the-legislature.html Article 2 of the Alaska Constitution], Lieutenant Governor's Office (accessed April 26, 2013)
  4. (January 21, 2025). "Alaska Legislature convenes session with aligned bipartisan majorities in the House and Senate". [[Anchorage Daily News]].
  5. (2014-04-09). "Alaska House Committees". [[Sunlight Foundation]].
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