The 142nd Georgia General Assembly succeeded the 141st and served as the precedent for the 143rd General Assembly in 1995. The 142nd General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia convened its first session in January 1993, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta.
District | Senator | Party | Residence |
---|---|---|---|
1 | J. Tom Coleman, Jr. | (D) | Savannah |
2 | Roy L. Allen | (D) | Savannah |
3 | René D. Kemp | (D) | Hinesville |
4 | Jack Hill | (D) | Reidsville |
5 | Joe Burton | (R) | Atlanta |
6 | Edward E. Boshears | (R) | Brunswick |
7 | Peg Blitch | (D) | Homerville |
8 | Loyce W. Turner | (D) | Valdosta |
9 | Don Balfour | (R) | Stone Mountain |
10 | Nadine Thomas | (D) | Atlanta |
11 | Harold J. Ragan | (D) | Cairo |
12 | Mark Taylor | (D) | Albany |
13 | Rooney L. Bowen | (D) | Cordele |
14 | George Hooks | (D) | Americus |
15 | Ed Harbison | (D) | Columbus |
16 | Pete Robinson | (D) | Columbus |
17 | Mike Crotts | (R) | Conyers |
18 | Sonny Perdue | (D) | Bonaire |
19 | Walter S. Ray | (D) | Douglas |
20 | Hugh M. Gillis, Sr. | (D) | Soperton |
21 | Johnny Isakson | (R) | Marietta |
22 | Charles W. Walker | (D) | Augusta |
23 | Don Cheeks | (D) | Augusta |
24 | G. B. "Jake" Pollard, Jr. | (D) | Appling |
25 | Wilbur E. Baugh | (D) | Milledgeville |
26 | Robert Brown | (D) | Macon |
27 | Edwin A. Gochenour | (R) | Macon |
28 | Arthur B. "Skin" Edge, IV | (R) | Newnan |
29 | Steve Langford, Jr. | (D) | LaGrange |
30 | Wayne Garner | (D) | Carrollton |
31 | Nathan Dean | (D) | Rockmart |
32 | Hugh A. Ragan | (R) | Smyrna |
33 | Steve Thompson | (D) | Powder Springs |
34 | Pam Glanton | (R) | Riverdale |
35 | Arthur Langford, Jr. | (D) | Atlanta |
36 | David Scott | (D) | Atlanta |
37 | Chuck Clay | (R) | Marietta |
38 | Ralph David Abernathy, III | (D) | Atlanta |
39 | Ronald D. Slotin | (D) | Atlanta |
40 | Michael J. Egan | (R) | Atlanta |
41 | James W. (Jim) Tysinger | (R) | Atlanta |
42 | Mary Margaret Oliver | (D) | Decatur |
44 | Terrell Starr | (D) | Forest Park |
43 | John Parrish | (D) | Decatur |
45 | Harrill L. Dawkins | (D) | Conyers |
46 | Paul C. Broun | (D) | Athens |
47 | Eddie Madden | (D) | Elberton |
48 | Clinton M. Day | (R) | Norcross |
49 | Jane Hemmer | (D) | Gainesville |
50 | Guy Middleton | (D) | Dahlonega |
51 | David Ralston | (R) | Blue Ridge |
52 | Richard O. Marable | (D) | Rome |
53 | Waymond C. (Sonny) Huggins | (D) | LaFayette |
54 | Stephen B. Farrow | (D) | Dalton |
55 | Steve Henson | (D) | Stone Mountain |
56 | Sallie Newbill | (R) | Atlanta |
District | Representative | Party | Residence |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Brian D. Joyce | (R) | Lookout Mountain |
2 | Mike Snow | (D) | Chickamauga |
3 | McCracken (Ken) Poston, Jr. | (D) | Ringgold |
4 | Greg Kinnamon | (D) | Dalton |
5 | Harold Mann | (R) | Rocky Face |
6 | Charles N. Poag | (D) | Eton |
7 | Carlton H. Colwell | (D) | Blairsville |
8 | Ralph J. Twiggs | (D) | Hiawassee |
9 | William J. Dover | (D) | Clarkesville |
10 | Tom E. Shanahan | (D) | Calhoun |
11 | Tim Perry | (D) | Trion |
12 | Paul E. Smith | (D) | Rome |
13 | E. M. (Buddy) Childers | (D) | Rome |
14 | Jeff Lewis | (D) | White |
15 | Garland F. Pinholster | (R) | Ball Ground |
16 | Steve Stancil | (R) | Canton |
17 | Melanie Harris | (R) | Woodstock |
18 | Thomas B. Murphy | (D) | Bremen |
19 | David Hughes | (D) | Dawsonville |
20 | Bobby Lawson | (D) | Gainesville |
21 | James W. Mills | (R) | Gainesville |
22 | Mary Jeannette Jamieson | (D) | Toccoa |
23 | Alan T. Powell | (D) | Hartwell |
24 | John Scoggins | (D) | Danielsville |
25 | Tommy Stephenson | (D) | Commerce |
26 | Charlie Watts | (D) | Dallas |
27 | Bill Cummings | (D) | Rockmart |
28 | Mike A. Evans | (R) | Cumming |
29 | Bill Atkins | (R) | Smyrna |
30 | Matt Towery | (R) | Atlanta |
31 | Lynda Coker | (R) | Marietta |
32 | John W. Hammond | (D) | Marietta |
33 | Roy E. Barnes | (D) | Mableton |
34 | Jack Vaughan | (R) | Marietta |
35 | Tom Cauthorn | (D) | Atlanta |
36 | Earl Ehrhart | (R) | Powder Springs |
37 | Mitchell Adam Kaye Sr. | (R) | Marietta |
38 | Kem Shipp, Sr. | (R) | Kennesaw |
39 | Kip Klein | (R) | Marietta |
40 | Steve Clark | (R) | Kennesaw |
41 | Mark Burkhalter | (R) | Alpharetta |
42 | Tom Campbell | (R) | Roswell |
43 | Dorothy Felton | (R) | Atlanta |
44 | Sharon Trense | (R) | Atlanta |
45 | Mitch J. Skandalakis | (R) | Atlanta |
46 | Kathy B. Ashe | (R) | Atlanta |
47 | Jim Martin | (D) | Atlanta |
48 | Grace W. Davis | (D) | Atlanta |
49 | Pamela Stanley | (D) | Atlanta |
50 | LaNett L. Stanley | (D) | Atlanta |
51 | J.E. (Billy) McKinney | (D) | Atlanta |
52 | Henrietta M. Canty | (D) | Atlanta |
53 | Bob Holmes | (D) | Atlanta |
54 | Tyrone D. Brooks | (D) | Atlanta |
55 | Dick Lane | (D) | East Point |
56 | Nan Orrock | (D) | Atlanta |
57 | Georganna T. Sinkfield | (D) | Atlanta |
58 | Sharon Beasley-Teague | (D) | College Park |
59 | Charles Barton (Bart) Ladd | (R) | Atlanta |
60 | J. Max Davis | (R) | Atlanta |
61 | Doug Teper | (D) | Atlanta |
62 | Tom Sherrill | (D) | Atlanta |
63 | Betty Jo Williams | (R) | Atlanta |
64 | Thomas E. Lawrence | (R) | Stone Mountain |
65 | Michele Henson | (D) | Stone Mountain |
66 | June Hegstrom | (D) | Scottdale |
67 | Mike Polak | (D) | Atlanta |
68 | JoAnn McClinton | (D) | Atlanta |
69 | Barbara J. Mobley | (D) | Decatur |
70 | Thurbert E. Baker | (D) | Decatur |
71 | Vernon A. Jones | (D) | Decatur |
72 | Mamie M. Randolph | (D) | Atlanta |
73 | Henrietta E. Turnquest | (D) | Decatur |
74 | Barbara J. Bunn | (R) | Conyers |
75 | Earl O'Neal | (D) | Conyers |
76 | Scott Dix | (R) | Snellville |
77 | Charles E. Bannister | (R) | Lilburn |
78 | Ron Crews | (R) | Tucker |
79 | Bill Goodwin | (R) | Norcross |
80 | Brooks P. Coleman, Jr. | (R) | Duluth |
81 | Ralph L. Johnston | (R) | Duluth |
82 | Vinson Wall | (R) | Lawrenceville |
83 | John David Dickinson | (R) | Snellville |
84 | Jere Johnson | (R) | Grayson |
85 | Keith R. Breedlove | (R) | Buford |
86 | John O. Mobley, Jr. | (D) | Winder |
87 | Tyrone Carrell | (D) | Monroe |
88 | Louise McBee | (D) | Athens |
89 | Keith G. Heard | (D) | Athens |
90 | Charles W. Yeargin | (D) | Elberton |
91 | Frank E. Stancil | (D) | Watkinsville |
92 | Denny M. Dobbs | (D) | Covington |
93 | Frank I. Bailey, Jr. | (D) | Riverdale |
94 | Bill Lee | (D) | Forest Park |
95 | Gail Buckner | (D) | Morrow |
96 | Jimmy W. Benefield | (D) | Atlanta |
97 | Dorothy Gail Johnson | (R) | Jonesboro |
98 | Bill Hembree | (R) | Douglasville |
99 | Dennis Chandler | (D) | Douglasville |
100 | Charles Thomas | (D) | Temple |
101 | John Simpson | (D) | Carrollton |
102 | Vance Smith, Jr. | (R) | Pine Mountain |
103 | Donna Staples Brooks | (R) | Newnan |
104 | Lynn Westmoreland | (R) | Tyrone |
105 | Daniel J. Lakly | (R) | Peachtree City |
106 | John P. Yates | (R) | Griffin |
107 | John Reid Carlisle | (D) | Griffin |
108 | Leland L. Maddox | (R) | Stockbridge |
109 | Larry Smith | (D) | Jackson |
110 | Curtis S. Jenkins | (D) | Forsyth |
111 | Mickey Channell | (D) | Greensboro |
112 | Bobby Harris | (D) | Thomson |
113 | Martha W. Moore | (R) | Evans |
114 | Robin L. Williams | (R) | Augusta |
115 | Jack Connell | (D) | Augusta |
116 | Bettieanne Childers Hart | (D) | Waynesboro |
117 | George M. Brown | (D) | Augusta |
118 | Henry Howard | (D) | Augusta |
119 | Mike Padgett | (D) | Augusta |
120 | Emory E. Bargeron | (D) | Louisville |
121 | Jimmy Lord | (D) | Sandersville |
122 | Bobby Eugene Parham | (D) | Milledgeville |
123 | Kenneth W. (Ken) Birdsong | (D) | Gordon |
124 | David E. Lucas, Sr. | (D) | Macon |
125 | Denmark Groover, Jr. | (D) | Macon |
126 | Robert A.B. Reichert | (D) | Macon |
127 | William C. (Billy) Randall | (D) | Macon |
128 | Robert Ray | (D) | Fort Valley |
129 | Mack Crawford | (R) | Zebulon |
130 | Wade Milam | (D) | LaGrange |
131 | Carl Von Epps | (D) | LaGrange |
132 | Ronnie Culbreth | (D) | Columbus |
133 | Carolyn Hugley | (D) | Columbus |
134 | Maretta Mitchell Taylor | (D) | Columbus |
135 | Thomas Bryant Buck III | (D) | Columbus |
136 | Calvin Smyre | (D) | Columbus |
137 | Jimmy Skipper | (D) | Americus |
138 | Johnny W. Floyd | (D) | Cordele |
139 | Roy H. "Sonny" Watson, Jr. | (D) | Warner Robins |
140 | Lynmore James | (D) | Montezuma |
141 | Larry Walker | (D) | Perry |
142 | Terry L. Coleman | (D) | Eastman |
143 | DuBose Porter | (D) | Dublin |
144 | Larry J. "Butch" Parrish | (D) | Swainsboro |
145 | John F. Godbee | (D) | Brooklet |
146 | Bob Lane | (D) | Statesboro |
147 | Ann R. Purcell | (D) | Rincon |
148 | Diane Harvey Johnson | (D) | Savannah |
149 | Dorothy B. Pelote | (D) | Savannah |
150 | Sonny Dixon | (D) | Garden City |
151 | Thomas C. Bordeaux, Jr. | (D) | Savannah |
152 | Anne Mueller | (R) | Savannah |
153 | Eric Johnson | (R) | Savannah |
154 | Clinton Oliver | (D) | Glennville |
155 | Fisher Barfoot | (D) | Vidalia |
156 | Newt Hudson | (D) | Rochelle |
157 | Ray Holland | (D) | Ashburn |
158 | Gerald E. Greene | (D) | Cuthbert |
159 | Bob Hanner | (D) | Dawson |
160 | Cathy Cox | (D) | Bainbridge |
161 | John White | (D) | Albany |
162 | Lawrence R. Roberts | (D) | Albany |
163 | Tommy Chambless | (D) | Albany |
164 | A. Richard Royal | (D) | Camilla |
165 | Henry Bostick | (D) | Tifton |
166 | Hanson Carter | (D) | Nashville |
167 | Van Streat | (D) | Nicholls |
168 | Harry D. Dixon | (D) | Waycross |
169 | Tommy Smith | (D) | Alma |
170 | Roger C. Byrd | (D) | Hazelhurst |
171 | Hinson Mosley | (D) | Jesup |
172 | James M. Floyd | (D) | Hinesville |
173 | Eugene C. Tillman | (D) | Brunswick |
174 | Willou Smith | (R) | Brunswick |
175 | Charles C. Smith, Jr. | (D) | St. Marys |
176 | Robert L. Patten | (D) | Lakeland |
177 | Tim Golden | (D) | Valdosta |
178 | Henry L. Reaves | (D) | Quitman |
179 | Kermit F. "K" Bates, Jr. | (D) | Bainbridge |
180 | Theo Titus III | (R) | Thomasville |
The Vermont General Assembly is the legislative body of the state of Vermont, in the United States. The Legislature is formally known as the "General Assembly", but the style of "Legislature" is commonly used, including by the body itself. The General Assembly is a bicameral legislature, consisting of the 150-member Vermont House of Representatives and the 30-member Vermont Senate. Members of the House are elected by single and two-member districts. 68 districts choose one member, and 41 choose two, with the term of service being two years. The Senate includes 30 Senators, elected by seven single-member and nine multi-member districts with two or three members each. It is the only state legislative body in the United States in which a third party has had continuous representation and been consecutively elected alongside Democrats and Republicans.
The Georgia General Assembly is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Georgia. It is bicameral, consisting of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
The Missouri General Assembly is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Missouri. The bicameral General Assembly is composed of a 34-member Senate and a 163-member House of Representatives. Members of both houses of the General Assembly are subject to term limits. Senators are limited to two four-year terms and representatives to four two-year terms, a total of 8 years for members of both houses.
The Georgia House of Representatives is the lower house of the Georgia General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia. There are currently 180 elected members. Republicans have had a majority in the chamber since 2005. The current House Speaker is Jon G. Burns.
The Georgia State Senate is the upper house of the Georgia General Assembly, in the U.S. state of Georgia. The Georgia State Senate and the lower house of the General Assembly, the Georgia House of Representatives, comprise the bicameral legislature of the state. Together, the Senate and the House maintain authority under Article III. of the 1983 Constitution of Georgia to enact laws "necessary and proper for the welfare of the state", although state law is subordinate to the state constitution, the United States Constitution, and federal law.
The Indiana House of Representatives is the lower house of the Indiana General Assembly, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Indiana. The House is composed of 100 members representing an equal number of constituent districts. House members serve two-year terms without term limits. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, each State House district contains an average of 64,838 people.
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The 2005 regular session of the 148th Georgia General Assembly met from January 10, 2005, to March 31, 2005, at which time both houses adjourned sine die. In addition, Governor Sonny Perdue called for a special session, which met from September 6, 2005, to September 10, 2005. This was the first session since Reconstruction that both houses were controlled by Republicans, as the House of Representatives was won by the GOP at the 2004 election. The legislature redrew legislative and congressional maps in 2005 after federal judges struck down both maps which were drawn by the 146th legislature as violating the one person, one vote guarantee of the U.S. Constitution, resulting in a reshuffling of districts which took effect in the next legislature which shored up Republican gains in both chambers and in Congress.
The 2003 regular session of the 147th General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia met from January 13, 2003, at 10:00 am, to Friday, April 25, at midnight, at which time both houses adjourned sine die. Control of the General Assembly was split between the Republican-controlled Senate and the Democratic-controlled House.
The state government of Georgia is the U.S. state governmental body established by the Georgia State Constitution. It is a republican form of government with three branches: the legislature, executive, and judiciary. Through a system of separation of powers or "checks and balances", each of these branches has some authority to act on its own, some authority to regulate the other two branches, and has some of its own authority, in turn, regulated by the other branches. The seat of government for Georgia is located in Atlanta.
The 142nd Delaware General Assembly was a meeting of the legislative branch of the state government, consisting of the Delaware Senate and the Delaware House of Representatives. Elections were held the first Tuesday after November 1 and terms began in Dover on the first Tuesday in January. This date was January 7, 2003, which was two weeks before the beginning of the third administrative year of Democratic Governor Ruth Ann Minner from Kent County and Democratic Lieutenant Governor John Carney from New Castle County.
The 1904–05 United States Senate elections were held on various dates in various states, coinciding with President Theodore Roosevelt's landslide election to a full term and the 1904 House of Representatives elections. As these U.S. Senate elections were prior to the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913, senators were chosen by state legislatures. Senators were elected over a wide range of time throughout 1904 and 1905, and a seat may have been filled months late or remained vacant due to legislative deadlock. In these elections, terms were up for the senators in Class 1.
The 140th Georgia General Assembly met from January 9, 1989, until January 14, 1991, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta.
The 152nd General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia convened its first session on January 14, 2013, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta. The 152nd Georgia General Assembly succeeded the 151st and preceded the 153rd.
The first regular session of the 144th General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia met from Monday, January 13, 1997, at 10:00 am, to Monday, March 28, 1997, at which time both houses adjourned sine die.
The 153rd General Assembly of the U.S. state of Georgia convened its first session on January 12, 2015, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta. Its second session was January 11 through March 24, 2016. The 153rd Georgia General Assembly succeeded the 152nd of 2013 and 2014, and preceded the 154th in 2017 and 2018.
The 155th Georgia General Assembly convened its first session on January 14, 2019, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta. The first session lasted for 40 legislative days in early 2019, and a second session began on January 13, 2020. The 155th Georgia General Assembly succeeds the 154th of 2017 and 2018, and precedes the 156th in 2021 and 2022.
The 156th Georgia General Assembly convened its first session on January 11, 2021, at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta.
William Solomon Wade is an American banker and politician from the State of Georgia. He is a Republican member of the Georgia House of Representatives for District 9. Wade currently serves as a House floor leader for Governor Brian Kemp.