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State Level Secretary of State

From dKosopedia

Secretary of State is an official in the state governments of 47 of the 50 states of the United States, as well as Puerto Rico and other U.S. possessions. In Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, this official is called the Secretary of the Commonwealth. In the states of Alaska, Hawaii, and Utah, there is no Secretary of State; in those states many duties that a Secretary of State might normally execute fall within the domain of the Lieutenant Governor. Like the Lieutenant Governor, in most states the Secretary of State is in the line of succession to succeed the governor, usually immediately behind the Lieutenant Governor. In those states with no Lieutenant Governor, such as Arizona, [1], the Secretary of State is sometimes first in the line of succession in the event of a gubernatorial vacancy.

Currently, in 35 states, such as California, Illinois, and Mississippi, the Secretary of State is elected at the general election, [2] usually for a four-year term. In others, the Secretary of State is appointed by the governor; Florida [3], Oklahoma, and Texas are amongst the states with this practice. In three states, the Secretary of State is elected by the state legislature; the General Assembly of Tennessee meets in joint convention to elect the Secretary of State to a four-year term,[4] and the Maine Legislature and New Hampshire General Court also select their Secretaries of State, but to two-year terms. State of Maine The longest serving state Secretary of State in history was Thad A. Eure of North Carolina, who served from 1936 until 1989.

Most Secretaries of State or those acting in such capability (with the exception of Wisconsin and Hawaii) belong to the National Association of Secretaries of State.

Contents

Duties

The actual duties of a state’s Secretary of State vary greatly from state to state. In most states, the Secretary of State’s office is a creation of the original draft of the state constitution. However, in many cases responsibilities have been added by statute or executive order.

Duties in most states

The most common, and arguably the most important, function held by Secretaries of State is to serve as the state’s chief elections official. In 38 states, ultimate responsibility for the conduct of elections, including the enforcement of qualifying rules, oversight of finance regulation, establishment of actual election-day procedures, falls on the Secretary of State. (Florida is one of the many states in which this is true, and for this reason Florida’s Secretary of State in 2000, Katherine Harris, became one of the few people holding this position to become well known outside of her own state.)

In the vast majority of states, the Secretary of State is also responsible for the administration of the Uniform Commercial Code, an act which provides for the uniform application of business contracts and practices across the United States, including the registration of liens on personal property. Hand in hand with this duty, in most states the Secretary of State is responsible for chartering businesses (usually including partnerships and corporations) that wish to operate within their state. Accordingly, in most states, the Secretary of State also maintains all records on business activities within the state. And in some states, the Secretary of State has actual wide-ranging regulatory authority over businesses as well.

Along with record keeping on businesses, in perhaps a majority of states, the Secretary of State’s office is the primary repository of official records. This includes in most states the official copies of state documents including the actual official copy of the state’s constitution (and in Delaware, the state’s copy of the US Bill of Rights, [5]) formal copies of legislative acts enacted into law, executive orders issued by the governor, and regulations and interpretations of statutes issued by state regulatory agencies. In at least a half-dozen states, this record keeping authority extends to civil acts, such as marriages, birth certificates, and adoption and divorce decrees. Many states also require the Secretary of State's office to also maintain records of land transactions and ownership.

In at least 35 states, the Secretary of State is also responsible for the administration of notaries public. And almost all states also designate (almost always in the state constitution itself) that the Secretary of State shall be the “Keeper of the Great Seal” of the state. Ostensibly this requires the Secretary of State to make decisions as to where the state seal shall be affixed, whether it be onto legislation, state contracts, et cetera.

Those states which have Address Confidentiality Programs often place the Secretary of State in charge of administering them.

Less common duties

About a dozen states give the Secretary of State the task of issuing professional licenses. This includes doctors, plumbers, cosmeticians, general contractors, and, in at least two states, ministers (to perform marriages). In Nevada, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, the Secretary of State must clear anyone who wishes to act as a sports agent for a professional athlete.

In several states (including Indiana, Mississippi, Massachusetts, and Wyoming), the Secretary of State is responsible for oversight of the securities industry.

In Illinois, Maine, and Michigan, the Secretary of State is in charge of the issuance of driver's licenses.

In several states the Secretary of State is also in charge of monitoring the activities of lobbyists. While some might regard this as a natural extension of the role as chief elections officer, the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Virginia, who is not in charge of elections in that state, is nonetheless responsible for regulating lobbying.

In about five states, the Secretary of State is the official in charge of the official state museum. In some of these states, and also some states without official museums, the Secretary of State is designated as the official with responsibility for maintenance of the state’s historical records.

A few states place the Secretary of State in charge of the use of public property. In most cases this means only public buildings (usually the state capitol), but in Mississippi it also includes some lands that are legally defined as belonging to the state, such as tidelands.[6]

Several states grant a technical statutory authority to the Secretary of State in the realm of pardons and commutations. In most cases this is nothing more than the responsibility to affix the state seal upon the governor's proclamation. However, in Delaware[7] and Nebraska[8], the Secretary of State sits on a Board of Pardons with the governor, and the Secretary of State commands equal authority with the governor in any pardoning decisions that are issued.

Since the early 1980s, many states have increased efforts to develop direct commercial relations with foreign nations. In several of these states, the state's Secretary of State has been given primary responsibility in this area. Despite this, there should be no confusion of the duties of a particular state's Secretary of State and those of the United States Secretary of State. The prohibition of the United States Constitution against individual states having diplomatic relations with foreign states is absolute; these recently-evolved duties are of a purely commercial nature.

Unique responsibilities

Several states have given their Secretary of State at least one responsibility that shared by no other Secretary of State:

List of Secretaries Of State

State Name
AL Beth Chapman
AK No such office
AR Charlie Daniels
AZ Jan Brewer
CA Debra Bowen
CO Mike Coffman
CT Susan Bysiewicz
DE Harriet Smith Windsor
FL Kurt S. Browning
GA Karen Handel
HI No such office
ID Ben Ysursa
IL Jesse White
IN Todd Rokita
IA Michael Mauro
KS Ron Thornburgh
KY Trey Grayson
LA Jay Dardenne
MD Dennis Schnepfe
MA Bill Galvin
ME Matthew Dunlap
MI Terri Lynn Land
MN Mark Ritchie
MS Delbert Hosemann
MO Robin Carnahan
MT Brad Johnson
NE John Gale
NV Ross Miller
NH Bill Gardner
NJ Nina Mitchell Wells
NM Mary Herrera
NY Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez
NC Elaine Marshall
ND Al Jaeger
OH Jennifer Brunner
OK M. Susan Savage
OR Bill Bradbury
PA Pedro A. Cortés
RI Ralph Mollis
SC Mark Hammond
SD Chris Nelson
TN Riley Darnell
TX Esperanza Andrade
UT No such office
VT Deborah Markowitz
VA Katherine Hanley
WA Sam Reed
WV Betty Ireland
WI Doug LaFollette
WY Max Maxfield

See also


References

This page was started with content from Wikipedia, a list of contributors to that page can be seen here

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This page was last modified 10:12, 26 November 2008 by Andrew Sylvia. Content is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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