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National Lieutenant Governors Association


The National Lieutenant Governors Association (NLGA) is the non-profit, nonpartisan professional association for elected or appointed officials who are first in line of succession to the governors in the 50 U.S. states and the five organized territories. The first official in the line of succession is generally established in the state or territorial constitution.

Lieutenant governors

Main article: List of current United States lieutenant governors

In 43 states and four territories, this official is a statewide elected lieutenant governor (In 2010 New Jersey elected its first lieutenant governor). In three states and one territory, this official is the state secretary of state. In four states, the president of the state senate (the upper house of the state legislature) is first in line of succession; two of these officials (Tennessee and West Virginia) may statutorily use the title lieutenant governor.

Of the elected lieutenant governors, 26 are elected on a ticket in the general election with the gubernatorial candidate as a running mate. Most states allow the governor to designate his or her running mate, but in some states, the governor and lieutenant governor run separately in the primary election and are "paired" for the general election. In 17 other states, the lieutenant governor and the governor are elected separately and as a result may be of different political parties. Lieutenant governors typically are acting governor when the governor is out of state. Thirty lieutenant governor are presidents of the state Senate, and of these half may cast tie-breaking votes (mirroring the Federal government of the United States, in which the Vice President of the United States is the president of the United States Senate).

History

The NLGA was founded in 1962, as the National Conference of Lieutenant Governors (NCLG). The organization's first meeting was on December 4, 1962. In 1966, NCLG affiliated with the Council of State Governments (CSG) and was staffed through CSG from 1983 to 1988 with Edward Feigenbaum as director. In 1988, NCLG became financially independent. Gail Manning ran the organization's operations and was named director in 1991; she served until 2002.

In 2002, Julia Hurst became executive director. The same year, the organization adopted its current name and a new logo and launched its website.

The Association was incorporated in Kentucky in January 2013 and assumed independent corporate status and operations July 1, 2013.

Functions

NLGA provides members the opportunity to network, meet, foster interstate cooperation, gain policy knowledge, hone professional skills, share policy work, and promote the effectiveness of the office of lieutenant governor. NLGA does adopt national policy resolutions on subjects of importance to the membership. NLGA Articles provide for the Chairmanship to rotate annually between a Democrat and Republican. The Chair Elect is of the opposite party to the chair and assumes the role of Chair the following year.

The association office is located in Covington, Kentucky. The full membership meets twice a year, annually in Washington, DC for its Federal-State Relations meeting and annually in the summer in a select host state.

In 2007, NLGA was given the prestigious 'Associations Advance America' recognition by the American Society of Association Executives (ASAE). NLGA was determined to have one of the six best association programs in the nation for 'Ending Cervical Cancer in our Lifetime,' a nationwide health care campaign. NLGA has also been recognized for work by Women in Government, the American Cardiology Association, and the American Iron and Steel Institute.

List of chairs of the NLGA

#OfficeholderStateTermParty1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th10th11th12th13th14th15th16th17th18th19th20th21st22nd23rd24th25th26th27th28th29th30th31st32nd33rd34th35th36th37th38th39th40th41st42nd43rd44th45th46th47th48th49th50th51st52nd53rd54th55th56th57th58th59th60th61st62nd63rd64th65th66th
1962–1963Samuel H. ShapiroIllinoisDemocratic
1963–1964Harold H. ChaseKansasRepublican
1964–1965Robert Evander McNairSouth CarolinaDemocratic
1965–1966John William BrownOhioRepublican
1966–1967Harry Lee WaterfieldKentuckyDemocratic
1967–1968Malcolm WilsonNew YorkRepublican
1968–1969John CherbergWashingtonDemocratic
1969–1970Raymond J. BroderickPennsylvaniaRepublican
1970–1971George NighOklahomaDemocratic
1971–1972Roger W. JepsenIowaRepublican
1972Thomas Lee JudgeMontanaDemocratic
1972–1973Martin J. SchreiberWisconsin
1973–1974Edwin ReineckeCaliforniaRepublican
1974–1975Julian CarrollKentuckyDemocratic
1975Blair Lee IIIMaryland
1975–1976Eugene BookhammerDelawareRepublican
1976–1977William P. Hobby Jr.TexasDemocratic
1977–1978Robert D. OrrIndianaRepublican
1978–1979Thomas P. O'Neill IIIMassachusettsDemocratic
1979–1980William C. PhelpsMissouriRepublican
1980–1981Charles S. RobbVirginiaDemocratic
1981–1982Mike CurbCaliforniaRepublican
1982–1983Martha Layne CollinsKentuckyDemocratic
1983–1984William W. Scranton IIIPennsylvaniaRepublican
1984–1985Zell MillerGeorgiaDemocratic
1985–1986John MutzIndianaRepublican
1986–1987Winston BryantArkansasDemocratic
1987–1988George RyanIllinoisRepublican
1988–1989Steve McAlpineAlaskaDemocratic
1989–1990Bobby BrantleyFloridaRepublican
1990–1991Jim Folsom Jr.AlabamaDemocratic
1991–1992Scott McCallumWisconsinRepublican
1992–1993Frank O'BannonIndianaDemocratic
1993–1994Joanell DyrstadMinnesotaRepublican
1994–1995Melinda SchwegmannLouisianaDemocratic
1995–1996Joy CorningIowaRepublican
1996–1997Kim RobakNebraskaDemocratic
1997–1998Mary FallinOklahomaRepublican
1998–1999Ronnie MusgroveMississippiDemocratic
1999–2000Olene WalkerUtahRepublican
2000–2001Steve HenryKentuckyDemocratic
2001–2002Gary SherrerKansasRepublican
2002–2003Charles FogartyRhode IslandDemocratic
2003–2004Karl OhsMontanaRepublican
2004–2005John CarneyDelawareDemocratic
2005–2006Jane E. NortonColoradoRepublican
2006–2007John D. CherryMichiganDemocratic
2007–2008Jack DalrympleNorth DakotaRepublican
2008–2009Barbara LawtonWisconsinDemocratic
2009–2010Bill BollingVirginiaRepublican
2010–2011Anthony BrownMarylandDemocratic
2011–2012Rick SheehyNebraskaRepublican
2012–2013Tim MurrayMassachusettsDemocratic
2013–2014Todd LambOklahomaRepublican
2014–2015Nancy WymanConnecticutDemocratic
2015–2016Kim ReynoldsIowaRepublican
2016–2017Dan McKeeRhode IslandDemocratic
2017–2018Matt MichelsSouth DakotaRepublican
2018–2019Mike CooneyMontanaDemocratic
2019–2020Billy NungesserLouisianaRepublican
2020–2021Bethany Hall-LongDelawareDemocratic
2021–2022Mike FoleyNebraskaRepublican
2022–2023Juliana StrattonIllinoisDemocratic
2023–2024Adam GreggIowaRepublican
2024–2025Garlin GilchristMichiganDemocratic
title=NLGA Officers & Executive Committeeurl=https://nlga.us/about-nlga/officers-exec-committee-operational-committees/website=National Lieutenant Governors Associationaccess-date=November 10, 2025}}Pamela EvetteSouth CarolinaRepublican
chair-electJacqueline ColemanKentuckyDemocratic

References

References

  1. Weinstein, Ethan. (2025-07-29). "Vermont’s lieutenant governor appointed to leadership board of nationwide peers".
  2. "National Lieutenant Governors Association {{!}} Organization {{!}} C-SPAN.org".
  3. Clabes, Jacob. (2025-08-14). "Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman named chair-elect of National Lieutenant Governors Association".
  4. (2009-08-19). "MN Lieutenant Governor re-elected Midwest Regional Chair of National Lieutenant Governors".
  5. "About NLGA".
  6. "National Lieutenant Governors Association - Homepage".
  7. "2007 Summit Award Winning Programs".
  8. "Women in Government Honors Significant Efforts to Help Eliminate Cervical Cancer".
  9. "Chairs of NLGA".
  10. (July 28, 2017). "Matt Michels Elected As National Lieutenant Governors Association Chair - News".
  11. (July 25, 2022). "Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton makes history again". NewsChannel20.com.
  12. (August 18, 2023). "Lt. Gov. Adam Gregg Named Chair of National Lieutenant Governors Association {{!}} Governor Kim Reynolds".
  13. (August 1, 2024). "Lt Governor Gilchrist Named Chair of Bipartisan National Lieutenant Governors Association".
  14. "NLGA Officers & Executive Committee".
  15. (2025-12-06). "Timely Topics Discussed at Lt. Governors Association’s Winter Meeting".
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