Today is Tuesday, 13th May 2025

Republicans Pick House Leadership in Maryland

Another set of leaders chosen as Republicans across the country elect their leadership.

From delmarvanow.com:

Eastern Shore state Delegate Jeannie Haddaway-Riccio is the new minority whip in the Maryland General Assembly’s House Republican Caucus, moving a step up from assistant minority whip after a unanimous acclamation by caucus members.

Haddaway-Riccio represents District 37B that includes all of Talbot County and parts of Caroline, Dorchester and Wicomico counties. She has been a member of the House of Delegates since 2003, and was assistant minority whip since 2005. She also is the 1st vice president of the Women Legislators of Maryland.

The House Republican Caucus, during its annual leadership election on Wednesday, also elected Delegate Anthony J. O’Donnell as minority leader by unanimous acclamation. His District 29C makes up Calvert and St. Mary’s counties.

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Oregon Republicans pick their Senate Leaders

From OregonLive.com:

Republican senators are sticking with Ted –Ferrioli, not Kulongoski — as their caucus leader.

Following elections this week, Republicans announced that Ferrioli, R-John Day, will return next year for his fourth session as GOP caucus leader.

Sen. Bruce Starr, R-Hillsboro, and Sen. Frank Morse, R-Albany, were chosen as deputy caucus leaders. Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg, will continue as caucus whip. Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, and Sen. Chris Telfer, R-Bend, will serve as assistant majority leaders.

Republicans picked up two senate seats in the most recent election, boosting them from 12 to 14 of 30 Senate seats. There’s still a chance that they’ll be sharing power with the Democrats. Republicans have requested a recount in a closely contested race in Jackson County, where the Democratic incumbent is the presumptive winner.

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Republicans Pick Co-Speaker in Oregon

The Republican Caucus as selected Representative Bruce Hanna as Co-Speaker.

From The Register Guard:

Oregon House Republicans have selected Rep. Bruce Hanna of Roseburg to be their co-speaker-designee for the 2011 Legislature, his office announced Wednesday.

Hanna, whose district includes eastern Lane County, has been the House Republican leader for the past two years while the Republicans were in the minority. Last month’s election resulted in a tie in the House, with 30 seats held by Republicans and 30 seats held by Democrats.

The chamber’s Democrats met Saturday and voted unanimously to select Rep. Arnie Roblan of Coos Bay to be their speaker or co-speaker-nominee for 2011.

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AL: Lt. Governor’s power will be limited

Following recent precedent, the new Republican Senate is aiming to keep most of the power within the Senate.

From al.com:

Republican Lt. Gov.-elect Kay Ivey won’t have the power of many of her Democratic predecessors even though she will preside over the first Republican majority in the Alabama Senate in 136 years.

Key Republican senators, including President Pro Tem-designate Del Marsh, said Monday the new Republican majority plans to keep the system used in recent years where most of the Senate’s power rests with senators, not with the lieutenant governor.

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Staff Cuts Likely in Alabama Legislature

The assumed Speaker of the House Mike Hubbard makes a good point.

From MontgomeryAdvertiser.com:

The incoming legislative leadership expects to reduce the size of the staff in the Alabama House of Representatives and Alabama Senate.

Republican Sen. Del Marsh of Anniston said he expects to trim the budget of the president pro tem by a third when he takes that office.

Republican state Rep. Mike Hubbard of Auburn, who is expected to be the next speaker of the House, said he expects cuts to the staff because he has a hard time with the Legislature continuing to ask agencies to make cuts while lawmakers do not.

“I think we are a little top-heavy personnel-wise,” he said.

But Hubbard said, combating State House rumors, they are not targeting anyone and there is no list of people they already plan to fire. But he said he wants to ensure the resources are being used properly.

“I intend to have this thoroughly looked through,” Hubbard said. “Everything is on the table. It is a new day and unfortunately we don’t have unlimited resources.”


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Kansas House Picks it’s Leadership

Conservatives now control the house and it’s speaker now predicts many previously thwarted conservative measures will make their way through.

From LJWorld.com:

Get ready for the conservative juggernaut in the Kansas House.

House Republicans, now with a commanding 92-33 advantage, elected leaders Monday to steer the GOP caucus during the 2011 legislative session that starts next month.

House Speaker Mike O’Neal, R-Hutchinson, was re-elected speaker without opposition. He predicted many conservative issues thwarted in recent years by a coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans will now be passed.

Along with a pickup of 16 seats in the House in the last election, Republicans hold a 31-9 advantage in the state Senate, and most importantly, have wrested the governor’s mansion from Democrats and are set to swear in conservative Republican Sam Brownback.

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Ohio AG Elect Picks Top Law Enforcement Officers

From Cleveland.com:

Attorney General-elect Mike DeWine today picked a county prosecutor and the director of the Ohio Department of Public Safety to lead the office’s law enforcement efforts, including oversight of the state’s Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation — a branch of the attorney general’s office DeWine heavily criticized during the campaign.

Clark County Prosecutor Steve Schumaker will be DeWine’s deputy attorney general for law enforcement. Schumaker — a Republican, like DeWine — will oversee BCI and other law enforcement divisions within the office.

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Alabama takes on Ethics Overhaul

This happening in the wake of the drama earlier this year.

From the Wall Street Journal:

The Alabama legislature is scheduled to open a special session on an ethics overhaul Wednesday. Gov. Bob Riley called the session to push for stricter ethics rules following indictments by federal prosecutors in October of 11 people—including four state senators—in an alleged vote-buying scheme.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that Mr. Riley, a Republican, decided to call the session soon after his party—campaigning strongly against public corruption—won control of the state House and Senate for the first time in 136 years.

Mr. Riley, who is term-limited and will leave office in January, is calling for a range of changes, including disclosure by lobbyists of all spending on public officials and employees; limits on lobbyists’ gift-giving; outlawing money transfers between political action committees; and granting subpoena power to the Alabama Ethics Commission.

Gov.-elect Robert Bentley and Republican leaders in the legislature support the ethics push. Democratic leaders have said they also support ethics overhaul, but consider the special session to be political grandstanding.


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Alabama House Republicans pick Number two spot

From MontgomeryAdvertiser.com:

State Rep. Victor Gaston of Mobile is the choice of the new Republican majority in the Alabama House of Representatives to hold the number two spot of speaker pro tem.

The Republican caucus nominated him Tuesday during a meeting in Tuscaloosa and plan to make it official with a vote of the House at the start of a special session Wednesday.


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LA: State Legislature to Redraw Districts in March

From dailycomet.com:

House Speaker Jim Tucker says the special legislative session to redraw the state’s political district lines is expected to be scheduled for late March.

Tucker said Monday that three weeks will be set aside for the redistricting session. The session is required to rework congressional, legislative, Public Service Commission and state education board districts to account for population shifts over the last decade.

The session is expected to be a contentious one because post-Hurricane Katrina population shifts will force significant changes in the political maps, and Louisiana is predicted to lose a congressional seat due to population declines.

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