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Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky

Elected US official

Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky

Summary

Elected US official

FieldValue
postLieutenant Governor
bodyKentucky
insigniaSeal of Kentucky.svg
insigniasize110px
insigniacaptionCommonwealth seal
imageJacqueline Coleman speaks to an audience from the Capitol steps in Frankfort (cropped).jpg
imagesize200px
incumbentJacqueline Coleman
incumbentsinceDecember 10, 2019
styleThe Honorable
departmentGovernment of Kentucky
termlengthFour years, renewable once consecutively
residence
salary$139,724.88
formationKentucky Constitution
successionFirst
inauguralAlexander Scott Bullitt (1800)
websitehttp://ltgovernor.ky.gov

The lieutenant governor of Kentucky was created under the state's second constitution, which was ratified in 1799. The inaugural officeholder was Alexander Scott Bullitt, who took office in 1800 following his election to serve under James Garrard in 1799. The lieutenant governor becomes governor of Kentucky under circumstances similar to those under which the vice president of the United States assumes the presidency. The current lieutenant governor is Democrat Jacqueline Coleman, who has been office since December 10, 2019.

Duties of the Kentucky lieutenant governor

As specified in Kentucky Revised Statute 11.400, it states:

11.400 Duties of Lieutenant Governor. (1) In addition to the duties prescribed for the office by the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, the duties of the Lieutenant Governor shall be as follows: (a) To serve as vice chairman of the State Property and Buildings Commission as prescribed by KRS 56.450; (b) To serve as vice chairman of the Kentucky Turnpike Authority as prescribed in KRS 175.430; (c) To serve as a member of the Kentucky Council on Agriculture in accordance with KRS 247.417; (d) To appoint one (1) member of the Public Officials' Compensation Commission as provided in KRS 64.742; (e) To serve as a member of the Board of the Kentucky Housing Corporation in accordance with KRS 198A.030; and (f) To serve as a member of Kentucky delegations on the following interstate compact commissions or boards:

  1. The Southern Growth Policies Board as prescribed by KRS 147.585;
  2. The Breaks Interstate Park Commission as provided in KRS 148.225;
  3. The Falls of the Ohio Interstate Park Commission pursuant to KRS 148.242;
  4. The Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway Development Authority pursuant to KRS 182.305;
  5. The Interstate Water Sanitation Control Commissions as prescribed by KRS 224.18-710; and
  6. The Kentucky Mining Advisory Council for the Interstate Mining Compact as provided by KRS 350.310. (2) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the Governor and Lieutenant Governor from agreeing upon additional duties within the executive branch of the state government to be performed by the Lieutenant Governor. Effective: June 26, 2007

Changes by 1992 amendment

The role and powers of the lieutenant governor of Kentucky were altered by a 1992 amendment to the Constitution of Kentucky. Prior to that 1992 amendment to the Constitution of Kentucky the lieutenant governor became acting governor at any time that the governor was outside of the commonwealth. Lieutenant governors Thelma Stovall (1975–1979) and Happy Chandler (1931–1935) engaged in high-profile use of their powers as acting governor when the elected governor was out of the commonwealth.

Kentucky's first governor's mansion served as the lieutenant governor's official residence for many years.

Also prior to the 1992 amendment of the Constitution of Kentucky, the lieutenant governor of Kentucky presided over the Kentucky Senate, casting a vote only in the event of a tie. The 1992 constitutional amendment supplanted the office of President pro tempore of the Kentucky Senate with the new office of President of the Kentucky Senate as presiding officer and abolished the lieutenant governor's duties involving the Senate. As a result, the lieutenant governor has no ongoing constitutional duties, and his or her traditional use of the Old Governor's Mansion as an official residence has been phased out.

Candidates for governor and lieutenant governor in Kentucky run together on party slates. This is the result of the same 1992 constitutional amendment; prior to that the candidates for both offices ran separately and, as a result, sometimes the two elected to those offices were not allies and did not work together. This was famously highlighted when then-Lt. Gov. A. B. "Happy" Chandler in 1935 and then-Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall in 1978 called the Kentucky General Assembly into session to enact legislation that was not advocated by the governors at the time (Ruby Laffoon and Julian Carroll, respectively). In 1967 a Republican, Louie Nunn, was elected governor and a Democrat, Wendell H. Ford, was elected lieutenant governor; they served together in that way for four years.

List of lieutenant governors==

#ImageNamePolitical partyTermGovernor(s) served under
1Alexander Scott Bullitt1800–1804James Garrard
2John Caldwell1804Christopher Greenup
3[[File:Thomas Posey Portrait.jpg60px]]Thomas PoseyDemocratic-Republican1806–1808Christopher Greenup
4[[File:Gabriel Slaughter.jpg60px]]Gabriel SlaughterDemocratic-Republican1808–1812Charles Scott
5Richard Hickman1812–1816Isaac Shelby
6[[File:Gabriel Slaughter.jpg60px]]Gabriel SlaughterDemocratic-Republican1816George Madison
Office vacant from October 4, 1816 - August 29, 1820Gabriel Slaughter
7[[File:WBarry.jpg60px]]William T. BarryDemocratic-Republican1820-1824George Madison
8[[File:Robert-B.-McAfee.jpg60px]]Robert B. McAfeeDemocratic-Republican1824–1828Joseph Desha
9[[File:John Breathitt.jpg60px]]John BreathittDemocratic1828–1832Thomas Metcalfe
10[[File:JTMorehead-crop.jpg60px]]James T. MoreheadNational Republican, Whig1832–1834John Breathitt
Office vacant from September 2, 1834 - August 31, 1836James T. Morehead
11[[File:Charles-A.-Wickliffe.jpg60px]]Charles A. WickliffeWhig1836–1839James Clark
12Manlius Valerius Thomson1840–1844Robert P. Letcher
13[[File:Archibald Dixon crop.jpg60px]]Archibald DixonWhig1844–1848William Owsley
14[[File:John larue Helm.jpg60px]]John LaRue HelmWhig1848–1850John J. Crittenden
Office vacant from July 31, 1850 - September 2, 1851John L. Helm
15[[File:John Burton Thompson cropped.jpg60px]]John Burton ThompsonWhig, Know Nothing1851–1853Lazarus W. Powell
16[[File:JamesGreenHardy.jpg60px]]James Greene HardyKnow Nothing1855–1856Charles S. Morehead
Office vacant from July 16, 1856 - 1859
17[[File:LinnBoyd.jpg60px]]Linn BoydDemocratic1859Beriah Magoffin
18[[File:Col. Richard Taylor Jacob.png60px]]Richard Taylor JacobDemocratic1863–1864Thomas E. Bramlette
Office vacant from 1864 - September 3, 1867Thomas E. Bramlette
19[[File:John Stevenson.jpg60px]]John W. StevensonDemocratic1867John L. Helm
Office vacant from September 3, 1867 - September 5, 1871
20[[File:John G. Carlisle (10507004143) (1).jpg60px]]John G. CarlisleDemocratic1871–1875Preston H. Leslie
21[[File:John Cox Underwood.jpg60px]]John C. UnderwoodDemocratic1875–1879James B. McCreary
22James E. CantrillDemocratic1879–1883Luke P. Blackburn
23[[File:James-R.-Hindman.jpg60px]]James R. HindmanDemocratic1883–1887J. Proctor Knott
24[[File:James Bryan cropped.jpg60px]]James W. BryanDemocratic1887–1891Simon Bolivar Buckner
25[[File:Lt. Governor Mitchell Cary Alford.png60px]]Mitchell C. AlfordDemocratic1891–1895John Young Brown
26[[File:William-Jackson-Worthington.jpg60px]]William J. WorthingtonRepublican1895–1899William O. Bradley
27[[File:LtGov-John-Marshall.jpg60px]]John MarshallRepublican1899–1900William S. Taylor
28[[File:BECKHAM, J.C.W. SENATOR LCCN2016858952 (cropped).jpg60px]]J. C. W. BeckhamDemocratic1900William Goebel
[[File:Newton Willard Utley.jpg60px]]Newton Willard Utley (Acting)1902–1903J. C. W. Beckham
29[[File:William Pryor Thorne.png60px]]William P. ThorneDemocratic1903–1907J. C. W. Beckham
30[[File:William-H.-Cox-oval.jpg60px]]William H. CoxRepublican1907–1911Augustus E. Willson
31[[File:Edward-J.-McDermott.jpg60px]]Edward J. McDermottDemocratic1911–1915James B. McCreary
32[[File:James-Dixon-Black.jpg60px]]James D. BlackDemocratic1915–1919Augustus O. Stanley
33[[File:Lt. Governor of Kentucky Samuel Thruston Ballard (cropped).png60px]]S. Thruston BallardRepublican1919–1923James D. Black
Edwin P. Morrow
34[[File:HenryDenhardt.jpg60px]]Henry DenhardtDemocratic1923–1927William J. Fields
35[[File:James Breathitt Jr.png60px]]James Breathitt, Jr.Democratic1927–1931Flem D. Sampson
36[[File:Albert B. Chandler Sr. (KY).jpg60px]]Happy ChandlerDemocratic1931–1935Ruby Laffoon
37[[File:Keen Johnson.jpg60px]]Keen JohnsonDemocratic1935–1939Happy Chandler
38[[File:Lt. Governor Rodes Kirby Myers.jpg60px]]Rodes K. MyersDemocratic1939–1943Keen Johnson
39[[File:Kenneth-Tuggle.jpg60px]]Kenneth H. TuggleRepublican1943–1947Simeon Willis
40[[File:Lawrence-Wetherby (cropped).jpg60px]]Lawrence W. WetherbyDemocratic1947–1950Earle Clements
41[[File:Emerson Beauchamp, Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky, State Treasurer, and Commissioner of Agriculture.png60px]]Emerson BeauchampDemocratic1951–1955Lawrence W. Wetherby
vacant
42[[File:Harry Lee Waterfield.jpg60px]]Harry Lee WaterfieldDemocratic1955–1959Happy Chandler
43[[File:Wilson W. Wyatt 1946.jpg60px]]Wilson W. WyattDemocratic1959–1963Bert Combs
44[[File:Harry Lee Waterfield.jpg60px]]Harry Lee WaterfieldDemocratic1963–1967Ned Breathitt
45[[File:Sen Wendell Ford.jpg60px]]Wendell FordDemocratic1967–1971Louie Nunn
46[[File:Julian-Carroll.jpg60px]]Julian CarrollDemocratic1971–1974Wendell Ford
Office vacant from December 28, 1974 - December 9, 1975
47[[File:Stovall-KDLA-undated-BW.jpg60px]]Thelma StovallDemocratic1975–1979Julian Carroll
48[[File:Lt. Governor Martha Layne Collins (cropped).jpg60px]]Martha Layne CollinsDemocratic1979–1983John Y. Brown Jr.
49[[File:Steve Beshear (cropped).jpg60px]]Steve BeshearDemocratic1983–1987Martha Layne Collins
50[[File:Nate Morris Gov Jones (cropped).jpg60px]]Brereton C. JonesDemocratic1987–1991Wallace Wilkinson
51[[File:Paul E. Patton 2013 (cropped).jpg60px]]Paul E. PattonDemocratic1991–1995Brereton C. Jones
52Steve HenryDemocratic1995–2003Paul E. Patton
53Steve PenceRepublican2003–2007Ernie Fletcher
54[[File:Daniel Mongiardo by Gage Skidmore.jpg60px]]Daniel MongiardoDemocratic2007–2011Steve Beshear
55[[File:Jerry E. Abramson (cropped).jpg60px]]Jerry AbramsonDemocratic2011–2014Steve Beshear
56[[File:Crit Luallen.jpg60px]]Crit LuallenDemocratic2014–2015Steve Beshear
57[[File:Women for Lt. Governor Jenean Hampton.jpg60px]]Jenean HamptonRepublican2015–2019Matt Bevin
58[[File:Jacqueline Coleman.png60px]]Jacqueline ColemanDemocratic2019–presentAndy Beshear

Some accounts also indicate that Kentucky's Confederate government had one lieutenant governor, Horatio F. Simrall, who was elected at the Russellville Convention in 1861. Simrall fled to Mississippi shortly thereafter.

References

References

  1. (May 25, 2023). "Transparency.ky.gov - Salary Search".
  2. Kentucky Revised Statute 11.400
  3. Powell, Robert A.. (1976). "''Kentucky Governors''". Kentucky Images.
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