(Redirected from Governor of Texas)In politics, 'Governor of Texas' is the title given to the
chief executive of the state of
Texas.
Governors of Texas
| No. | Governor | Picture | Took office | Left office | Party | Notes |
|---|
| 1 | James Pinckney Henderson | | February 19, 1846 | December 21, 1847 | Democratic | |
| 2 | George T. Wood | | December 21, 1847 | December 21, 1849 | Democratic | |
| 3 | Peter Hansborough Bell | | December 21, 1849 | November 23, 1853 | Democratic | [1] |
| 4 | James W. Henderson | | November 23, 1853 | December 21, 1853 | Democratic | |
| 5 | Elisha M. Pease | | December 21, 1853 | December 21, 1857 | Unionist | |
| 6 | Hardin R. Runnels | | December 21, 1857 | December 21, 1859 | Democratic | |
| 7 | Sam Houston | | December 12, 1859 | March 16, 1861 | Independent | [2] |
| 8 | Edward Clark | | March 16, 1861 | November 7, 1861 | Democratic | |
| 9 | Francis R. Lubbock | | November 7, 1861 | November 5, 1863 | Democratic | [3] |
| 10 | Pendleton Murrah | | November 5, 1863 | June 17, 1865 | Democratic | [4] |
| 11 | Fletcher Stockdale | | 1865 | 1865 | Democratic | |
| 12 | Andrew J. Hamilton | | June 17, 1865 | August 9, 1866 | Democratic | |
| 13 | James W. Throckmorton | | August 9, 1866 | August 8, 1867 | Democratic | |
| 14 | Elisha M. Pease | | June 8, 1867 | September 30, 1869 | Republican | [5] |
| 15 | Edmund J. Davis | | January 8, 1870 | January 15, 1874 | Republican | |
| 16 | Richard Coke | | January 15, 1874 | December 21, 1876 | Democratic | [6] |
| 17 | Richard B. Hubbard | | December 21, 1876 | January 21, 1879 | Democratic | |
| 18 | Oran M. Roberts | | January 21, 1879 | January 16, 1883 | Democratic | |
| 19 | John Ireland | | January 16, 1883 | January 20, 1887 | Democratic | |
| 20 | Lawrence Sullivan Ross | | January 18, 1887 | January 20, 1891 | Democratic | |
| 21 | James Stephen Hogg | | January 20, 1891 | January 15, 1895 | Democratic | |
| 22 | Charles A. Culberson | | January 15, 1895 | January 17, 1899 | Democratic | |
| 23 | Joseph D. Sayers | | January 17, 1899 | January 20, 1903 | Democratic | |
| 24 | S.W.T. Lanham | | January 20, 1903 | January 15, 1907 | Democratic | |
| 25 | Thomas Mitchell Campbell | | January 15, 1907 | January 17, 1911 | Democratic | |
| 26 | Oscar Branch Colquitt | | January 17, 1911 | January 19, 1915 | Democratic | |
| 27 | James E. Ferguson | | January 19, 1915 | August 25, 1917 | Democratic | [7] |
| 28 | William P. Hobby | | August 25, 1917 | January 18, 1921 | Democratic | |
| 29 | Pat Morris Neff | | January 18, 1921 | January 20, 1925 | Democratic | |
| 30 | Miriam A. Ferguson | | January 20, 1925 | January 17, 1927 | Democratic | |
| 31 | Dan Moody | | January 17, 1927 | January 20, 1931 | Democratic | |
| 32 | Ross S. Sterling | | January 20, 1931 | January 17, 1933 | Democratic | |
| 33 | Miriam A. Ferguson | | January 17, 1933 | January 15, 1935 | Democratic | |
| 34 | James V. Allred | | January 15, 1935 | January 17, 1939 | Democratic | |
| 35 | W. Lee O'Daniel | | January 17, 1939 | August 4, 1941 | Democratic | [8] |
| 36 | Coke R. Stevenson | | August 4, 1941 | January 21, 1947 | Democratic | |
| 37 | Beauford H. Jester | | January 21, 1947 | July 11, 1949 | Democratic | [9] |
| 38 | Allan Shivers | | July 11, 1949 | January 15, 1957 | Democratic | [10] |
| 39 | Price Daniel | | January 15, 1957 | January 21, 1963 | Democratic | |
| 40 | John Connally | | January 15, 1963 | January 21, 1969 | Democratic | |
| 41 | Preston Smith | | January 21, 1969 | January 16, 1973 | Democratic | |
| 42 | Dolph Briscoe | | January 16, 1973 | January 16, 1979 | Democratic | |
| 43 | Bill Clements | | January 16, 1979 | January 18, 1983 | Republican | |
| 44 | Mark White | | January 18, 1983 | January 20, 1987 | Democratic | |
| Bill Clements | | January 20, 1987 | January 15, 1991 | Republican | |
| 45 | Ann Richards | | January 15, 1991 | January 17, 1995 | Democratic | |
| 46 | George W. Bush | | January 17, 1995 | December 21, 2000 | Republican | [11] |
| 47 | Rick Perry | | December 21, 2000 | Present | Republican | [12] |
Notes
1. Resigned to occupy vacant U.S. Congress seat.
2. Resigned due to state's secession from Union.
3. Resigned to serve in Confederate Army.
4. Administration terminated by fall of Confederacy.
5. Resigned.
6. Resigned to enter U.S. Senate.
7. Impeached.
8. Resigned to become U.S. Senator.
9. Died in office.
10. Succeeded upon Jester's death. Elected in 1950, re-elected in 1952 and 1954.
11. Re-elected in 1998. Resigned 12/21/2000.
12. Sworn in after Bush resignation. Elected in 2002, re-elected in 2006.
Gubernatorial Power
As is the trend in many Southern states, the Governor's power is quite limited. When the office was created by the
Texas Constitution of 1876, the authors dispersed much of the power traditionally given to the office of the governor to independently elected officials, creating what some refer to as a "plural executive."
[1] With the exception of the Secretary of State, the remaining members of the Governor's cabinet are also elected by popular vote. In addition, because the Lieutenant Governor runs on a separate ticket, the Governor and Lieutenant Governor can be (and have been) from different political parties.
Another limitation on gubernatorial power involves the commutation of prisoner sentences, an issue which arises whenever a
death penalty sentence is to be carried out. The Governor can ''only'' overturn a death sentence upon the positive recommendation of the
Texas Board of Pardon and Parole, the Governor can choose to ignore the Board's clemency recommendation and carry out the execution, but the opposite is not true—the Governor ''cannot'' commute or overturn a sentence if the Board does not recommend such. The only unilateral option the Governor has is to issue one 30-day stay of execution.
The governor does have one key power that the
Texas Legislature does not have—the governor can call the Legislature into special session for 30 days, as many times as the governor desires (the Legislature cannot call itself into session). These special sessions can only address issues located on the governor's "call", which can be changed at any time by the governor.
See also
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Texas
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Governor
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State Government
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U.S. Politics
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Government of the United States
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List of Texas county name etymologies
External links
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Legislative Reference Library of Texas -- Governors of Texas
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''The Handbook of Texas Online:'' Texas History Quiz -- Presidents and Governors of Texas
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Explanation of the strengths of governors