自訂搜尋
Issue: 1169 Date: 1/17/2013
Become A Fan, Like St. Louis Chinese American News
Follow SCANews on Twitter Find SCANews on Facebook

Nixon Says He Has Authority To Appoint Mo. Lt. Governor If Office Becomes Vacant

請您關注和惠顧聖路易時報的廣告客戶,並向朋友推薦聖路易時報,感謝您的支持!
Mo. Gov. Jay Nixon.
        Aside from Medicaid expansion, the most talked-about issue so far during the just-begun Missouri legislative session is whether Governor Jay Nixon (D) has the authority to appoint a new Lt. Governor if Peter Kinder succeeds fellow Republican Jo Ann Emerson in Congress.

        Following his annual Prayer Breakfast earlier today January 10, 2013, Governor Nixon told reporters he believes he has the authority to appoint a new Lt. Governor if the office suddenly becomes vacant.

        "The two times in recent history where that position has become open for (different) reasons, the Governor has appointed a Lt. Governor and those folks served," Nixon said. "I think history would say that that authority lies there, yeah.?

        In 2000, Missouri Governor Roger Wilson (D) appointed Joe Maxwell (D) to begin serving immediately as Lt. Governor less than two months before his elected term was set to begin. At the time, Wilson had just taken over as Governor following the plane crash that took the life of Governor Mel Carnahan (D).

        House Speaker Pro-tem Jason Smith (R, Salem) disagrees with Nixon's opinion. He says current law requires a special election for Lt. Governor, but admits it's unclear as to how it's to be carried out.

        "State Rep(resentative), State Senate, Lt. Governor...the Recorder of Deeds (for) St. Louis, and (county) sheriffs," Smith said. "That's what the law provides, but it does not provide on how to enforce those special elections (for Lt. Governor), unlike those other sections.?

        Smith is sponsoring legislation that would allow special elections for all vacated statewide offices, but would schedule them in November to coincide with other races in order to save money. Smith is also seeking to replace Emerson in Congress, along with Kinder, fellow State Representative Todd Richardson (R, Poplar Bluff), Missouri GOP Executive Director Lloyd Smith, former State Treasurer Sarah Steelman, former Congressman Wendell Bailey, and former State Senator Jason Crowell (R, Cape Girardeau).

        U.S. Rep. Jo Ann Emerson announced that her service in the House of Representatives will end in February 2013. In February, Jo Ann Emerson will assume the role of President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, where she will continue her advocacy for rural communities in Missouri and throughout the country.

 

請您關注和惠顧聖路易時報的廣告客戶,並向朋友推薦聖路易時報,感謝您的支持!


Follow SCANews on Twitter Find SCANews on Facebook


Please click here to comment on this article

Space Privacy Policy 時報尊重您的權益