Katana VentraIP

President pro tempore of the North Carolina Senate

The president pro tempore of the North Carolina Senate (more commonly, "Pro-Tem") is the highest-ranking (internally elected) officer of one house of the North Carolina General Assembly. The president of the Senate is the Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina, but the president pro tempore actually holds most of the power and presides in the absence of the Lt. Governor. The president pro tempore, a senior member of the party with a majority of seats, appoints senators to committees and also appoints certain members of state boards and commissions. From 1777 to 1868, North Carolina had no Lieutenant Governor, and the highest-ranking officer of the Senate was known as the "Speaker". The Speaker of the Senate was next in line if the office of Governor became vacant. This occurred on two occasions.

President pro tempore of the North Carolina Senate

Major parties (normally)

two years (currently)

1777

Presidents pro tempore are elected at the beginning of each biennial session, currently in January of odd-numbered years. Between 1868 and 1992, it was rare for a president pro tempore to serve more than two terms. Marc Basnight, however, became arguably the most powerful North Carolina Senate leader in history and one of the state's most influential politicians when he served a record nearly 18 years as president pro tempore.

History[edit]

Upon Republican Jim Gardner's assumption of lieutenant gubernatorial office in 1989, Democrats in the Senate modified the body's rules, transferring the powers to appoint committees and assign bills away from the lieutenant governor and to the president pro tempore. This dramatically increased the influence of the latter position.[1]

Powers and duties[edit]

The president pro tempore is responsible for appointing the members of the Senate's committees at the opening of each legislative session.[2] They also have the power to appoint some members of state executive boards.[3]

1777

Samuel Ashe

1778

Whitmell Hill

1778–1779

Allen Jones

1779–1780

Abner Nash

1780–1782

Alexander Martin

1782–1784

Richard Caswell

1785

Alexander Martin

1786–1787[8]

James Coor

1787–1788

Alexander Martin

1789

Richard Caswell

1789

Charles Johnson

1790–1795

William Lenoir

1795–1799

Benjamin Smith

1800–1804

Joseph Riddick

1805

Alexander Martin

1806–1811

Joseph Riddick

1812–1814

George Outlaw

1815–1817

John Branch

1817–1828

Bartlett Yancey

1828–1829

Jesse Speight

1829–1830

Bedford Brown

1830–1832[9]

David F. Caldwell

1832–1835

William D. Moseley

(Whig) 1836–1837 [10][11]

Hugh Waddell

1838–1841[12]

Andrew Joyner

1842–1843[13]

Louis Dicken Wilson

1844–1845

Burgess S. Gaither

1846–1847[12]

Andrew Joyner

1848–1849[14]

Calvin Graves

1849[12]

Andrew Joyner

1850–1852

Weldon N. Edwards

1854–1855

Warren Winslow

1856–1857

William Waightstill Avery

1858–1861

Henry Toole Clark

1862–1865

Giles Mebane

1865–1866

Thomas Settle

1866

C. S. Winstead

1866

Matthias Manly

1867

Joseph Harvey Wilson

Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives

Structure of the North Carolina General Assembly

published by the North Carolina Secretary of State

North Carolina Manual

Cooper, Christopher A.; Knotts, H. Gibbs, eds. (2012). . Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9781469606583.

The New Politics of North Carolina