Senate of Virginia

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Seal of the Senate of Virginia
Seal of the Senate of Virginia
Historic Partisan Makeup of the Virginia State Senate
Historic Partisan Makeup of the Virginia State Senate

The Senate of Virginia is the upper house of the Virginia General Assembly. It is composed of 40 Senators and is presided over by the Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. Prior to Independence, the other part of government was represented by the Governor's Council, an upper house made up of executive counselors appointed by the Governor as advisers.

The Lieutenant Governor, unlike the Vice President of the United States in the United States Senate, presides daily over the Virginia Senate. In the Lieutenant Governor's absence, a president pro tempore presides, usually a powerful member of the majority party. The Senate is equal with the House of Delegates, the lower chamber of the legislature, except that taxation bills must originate in the House, just like in the U.S. Congress.

Virginia Senators are elected every four years by the voters of the several senatorial districts on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday in November. The last election took place on 6 November 2007.

In the 2007 election, the Democratic Party reclaimed the majority in the Senate for the first time since 1999, when the Republican Party took control of the Senate for the first time in history.


Contents

[edit] From January 2008

Affiliation Members
  Democratic Party 21
  Republican Party 19
 Total
40

[edit] Leadership

[edit] Members

Name Party and District First Election
  John Miller Democratic Party (1) 2007
  Maime Locke Democratic Party (2) 2003
  Tommy Norment Republican Party (3) 1991
  Ryan McDougle Republican Party (4) 2006
  Yvonne B. Miller Democratic Party (5) 1987
  Ralph Northam Democratic Party (6) 2007
  Frank Wagner Republican Party (7) 2001
  Ken Stolle Republican Party (8) 1991
  A. Donald McEachin Democratic Party (9) 2007
  John Watkins Republican Party (10) 1997
  Stephen Martin Republican Party (11) 1993
  Walter Stosch Republican Party (12) 1991
  Fred Quayle Republican Party (13) 1991
  Harry Blevins Republican Party (14) 2001
  Frank Ruff Republican Party (15) 2000
  Henry Marsh III Democratic Party (16) 1991
  Edd Houck Democratic Party (17) 1983
  Louise Lucas Democratic Party (18) 1991
  Robert Hurt Republican Party (19) 2007
  Roscoe Reynolds Democratic Party (20) 1996
  John S. Edwards Democratic Party (21) 1995
  Ralph K. Smith Republican Party (22) 2007
  Steve Newman Republican Party (23) 1995
  Emmett Hanger Republican Party (24) 1995
  Creigh Deeds Democratic Party (25) 2001
  Mark Obenshain Republican Party (26) 2003
  Jill Holtzman Vogel Republican Party (27) 2007
  Richard H. Stuart Republican Party (28) 2007
  Chuck Colgan Democratic Party (29) 1975
  Patsy Ticer Democratic Party (30) 1995
  Mary Margaret Whipple Democratic Party (31) 1995
  Janet Howell Democratic Party (32) 1991
  Mark Herring Democratic Party (33) 2006
  Chap Petersen Democratic Party (34) 2007
  Richard L. Saslaw Democratic Party (35) 1980
  Toddy Puller Democratic Party (36) 2000
  Ken Cuccinelli Republican Party (37) 2001
  Phillip Puckett Democratic Party (38) 1998
  George Barker Democratic Party (39) 2007
  William C. Wampler, Jr. Republican Party (40) 1988

[edit] Senate seal

The Senate has its own coat of arms designed and granted by the College of Arms in England.[1][2] The coat of arms also makes up the official seal of the Virginia Senate. It bears no resemblance to the Seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia, which is the seal of the state as a whole.

The seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
The seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
The seal of the London Company.
The seal of the London Company.

The coat of arms adopted January 22, 1981 was designed by the College of Arms and supposedly based on the seal and coat of arms used by the London Company, the royally-chartered English entrepreneurs who funded the European settlement of Virginia. However, other than both devices displaying a quartered shield, there is little resemblance between them.

The Senate's arms have a shield in the center which is divided into four sections by a red cross. In each quarter are smaller shields representing the arms of four countries (England, France, Scotland, and Ireland) that contributed settlers to Virginia's earliest waves of European immigration.[1][2]

The four coats of arms, a small crest of a crowned female head with unbound hair representing Queen Elizabeth (the Virgin Queen for whom Virginia was named), and the dragon (part of the Elizabethan royal seal of England) represent Virginia's European heritage.[1][2] The Senate's seal makes no reference to Virginia's Native American or African American heritage.

An ivory gavel emblazoned on the vertical arm of the red cross represents the Senate as a law making body. The cardinal and dogwood depicted are Virginia's official state bird and tree. The ribbon contains the Latin motto of the Senate, Floreat Senatus Virginiae, which means "May the Senate of Virginia flourish." [1][2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Official Virginia State Senate "Capitol Classroom" site. Accessed November 7, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d Answers.Com: Virginia State Senate Seal Accessed November 7, 2007.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links