Civil Government of Virginia eBook

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This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Civil Government of Virginia.

Civil Government of Virginia eBook

xc
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Civil Government of Virginia.

A delegate is a person appointed or elected by others to do business for them as their representative.  The members of the House of Delegates are elected by the people of the State to represent and act for them in the business of making laws.

The Senate.

Number.  There are forty Senators, from thirty-nine senatorial districts.  The Lieutenant-Governor is the presiding officer.

Elected.  By the people; one-half being chosen every two years until the general election in 1907.  At that time, and every four years thereafter, the entire senate will be chosen at one time for a term of four years.

Qualifications.  A Senator must be an actual resident of the district for which he is elected; must be legally qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly; must hold no salaried office under the State government.

Powers.  Shall select its own officers; choose from its own body, in the absence of the Lieutenant-Governor, or when he exercises the office of Governor, a president pro tempore; confirms or rejects nominations; has sole power to try impeachment.

Senatorial districts are the districts into which a State is divided for the election of senators.  There are thirty-nine districts in Virginia, and each of them elects one senator, except the district formed of Richmond and the County of Henrico, which elects two.  Presiding officer is a person who presides or acts as president or chairman in any assembly or meeting.

A candidate for the Senate must be legally qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly.  This means that he must be a citizen of the United States, a resident of Virginia for two years, and have the other legal qualifications of voters as required by the Constitution.

Pro tempore is a Latin phrase meaning for the time—­that is, for a short time or temporarily.  The Senate elects one of its own members to preside pro tempore if the lieutenant-governor happen to be absent, or when he is called upon to act as governor. (See under Powers and Duties of governor, page 28.) The Senate has the power to confirm or reject nominations.  Many public officers of the State are appointed by the governor, but when he nominates or names a person for a public office he sends the nomination to the Senate, and it may confirm—­that is, approve of—­the nomination, or it may reject it.  If it should reject the nomination, the person nominated is not appointed.

Impeachment means a charge of dishonesty or serious neglect of duty made against a public official.  In an impeachment it is the House of Delegates which must make the charge and act as prosecutor, but it is the Senate which must try the case and pass sentence on the accused, if proved guilty.

House of Delegates.

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Civil Government of Virginia from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.