Alabama State Legislature | |
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Type | |
Type | Bicameral |
Houses | Senate House of Representatives |
Term limits | None |
New session started | March 1, 2011 |
Leadership | |
President Pro Tem of the Senate | Del Marsh, (R) since November 3, 2010 |
Speaker of the House | Mike Hubbard, (R) since November 3, 2010 |
Structure | |
Members | 140 |
Political groups | Republican Party (87) Democratic Party (51) Independent (1) |
Authority | Article IV, Alabama Constitution |
Salary | $10/day + per diem |
Elections | |
Last election | November 2, 2010 |
Next election | November 4, 2014 |
Redistricting | Legislative Control |
Meeting place | |
Alabama State Capitol Montgomery, Alabama |
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Website | |
Alabama State Legislature |
The Alabama Legislature is the legislative branch of the state government of Alabama. It is a bicameral body composed of the Alabama House of Representatives, with 105 members, and the Alabama Senate, with 35 members. Historically, the Alabama Legislature has been dominated by Democrats; however, after the 2010 elections, for the first time in 136 years, both houses came under Republican control.
The Legislature meets in the Alabama State House (officially designated as such by Amendment 427 to the Alabama Constitution) in Montgomery. The original capitol building located nearby has not been used by the Legislature since 1985, when it closed for renovations. It serves as the seat of the executive branch as well as a museum.
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The Alabama Legislature was created in 1818 as a territorial legislature for the Alabama Territory. Following the federal Alabama Enabling Act of 1819 and the successful passage of the first Alabama Constitution in the same year, the Alabama General Assembly became a fully fledged state legislature upon its accession to statehood.
The General Assembly was one of the 11 state legislatures of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. Following the state's secession from the Union in January 1861, delegates from across the South met at the state capital of Montgomery to create the Confederate government. Between February and May 1861, Montgomery served as the Confederacy's capital, where Alabama state officials let members of the new Southern federal government make use of its offices. The Provisional Confederate Congress met for three months inside the General Assembly's chambers at the Alabama State Capitol, while Jefferson Davis was inaugurated as the Confederacy's first (and only) president on the steps of the capitol.
However, following complaints from Southern bureaucrats over Montgomery's uncomfortable conditions and Virginia's entry into the Confederacy, the Confederate government moved to Richmond in May 1861.
Following the Confederacy's defeat in 1865, the state government underwent a transformation. Upon the state's readmission into the United States in 1868, Radical Republicans, including white Northerners known as "carpetbaggers", "scalawag" Southern Republicans, and "freedmen" African-Americans dominated both the state governorship and General Assembly. For the first time, blacks could vote and were elected to the legislature, a feat that would not be repeated for another one hundred years. The resulting 1868 Constitution reflected the radicals period in the state government.
Yet as in other states during Reconstruction, former Confederate and reactionary "redeemer" forces from the Democratic Party gradually overturned the radicals. By the 1874 state general elections, the General Assembly was once again a body dominated by Bourbon Democrats. Both the resulting 1875 and 1901 Constitutions disfranchised blacks and destroyed Republican influence, leading to the creation and enforcement of Jim Crow laws. It was also in the 1901 Constitution that the General Assembly changed its name to the Alabama Legislature.
The American Civil Rights Movement began only miles away from the Alabama Legislature's chambers with Rosa Parks' refusal to change seats on a Montgomery bus in December 1955. The subsequent Montgomery Bus Boycott and the rise of both Parks and Martin Luther King, Jr. to national and international prominence began a decade and a half of tumultuous political and social changes.
Throughout the late 1950s and into the 1960s, the Alabama Legislature and a series of succeeding segregationist governors massively resisted Civil Rights protesters. During this period, the Legislature created the Alabama State Sovereignty Commission. Mirroring Mississippi's own similarly named authority, the commission acted as a state intelligence agency to spy on Alabama citizens suspected of sympathizing with the Civil Rights movement.
However by the 1970s, with federal legislation enforcing bans on poll taxes, literacy tests and other blatant bureaucratic tools of discrimination, African-Americans entered the Legislature for the first time since Reconstruction.
In May 2007, the Alabama Legislature officially apologized for slavery, making it the fourth Deep South state to do so.
Alabama has had a total of six different state constitutions, coming in 1819, 1861, 1865, 1868, 1875, and 1901. The current constitution is also the longest written constitution in both the United States and the entire world.
The Alabama Legislature convenes in regular annual sessions on the first Tuesday in February, except during the first year of the four-year term, when the session begins on the first Tuesday in March. In the last year of a four-year term, the legislative session begins on the second Tuesday in January. The length of the regular session is limited to 30 meeting days within a period of 105 calendar days. There are usually two meeting or "legislative" days per week, with other days devoted to committee meetings.
The Governor of Alabama can call, by proclamation, special sessions of the Alabama Legislature. The Governor must list the subjects on which legislation will be debated upon. These sessions are limited to 12 legislative days within a 30 calendar day span. In a regular session, bills may be enacted on any subject. In a special session, legislation must be enacted only on those subjects which the Governor announces on their proclamation or "call." Anything not in the "call" requires a two-thirds vote of each house to be enacted.
Unlike other state legislatures, where gubernatorial vetos require a three-fifths or even a two-thirds majority vote to be overridden, the Alabama Legislature has the power to override a veto with a simple majority vote in both houses. The Legislature also has the constitutional power to override line item vetos by a simple majority. This has led to contention in recent years between the Governor's Office and the Legislature.
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