Pennsylvania House of Representatives

Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Pennsylvania General Assembly
Type
Type Lower house
Term limits None
New session started January 4, 2011
Leadership
Speaker of the House Sam Smith, (R)
since January 4, 2011
Majority Leader Mike Turzai, (R)
since January 4, 2011
Minority Leader Frank Dermody, (D)
since January 4, 2011
Structure
Members 203
Political groups      Republican Party (112)
     Democratic Party (91)
Length of term 2 years
Authority Article II, section 1, Pennsylvania Constitution
Salary $78,314/year[1]
Elections
Last election November 2, 2010
(203 seats)
Next election November 6, 2012
(203 seats)
Meeting place
House of Representatives Chamber
Pennsylvania State Capitol
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Website
Pennsylvania House of Representatives

The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is the lower house of the bicameral Pennsylvania General Assembly, the legislature of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. There are 203 members, elected for two year terms from single member districts.[2][3]

Following the 2010 elections, the house consisted of 112 Republicans, 91 Democrats. Republican Sam Smith was elected Speaker of the House on January 4, 2011. In 2002, a State Representative district had an average population of 60,498 residents.

The house is the second largest state legislature in the United States (behind the New Hampshire House of Representatives). It is considering a proposal to reduce its size to 153 after 2020.[4]

Contents

Hall of the House

The Hall of the House contains important symbols to Pennsylvania history and the work of legislators.

Speaker of the House

The speakership is the oldest elected state-wide office in the Commonwealth. Since its first session in 1682—presided over by William Penn—over 130 house members have been elevated to the speaker's chair. The house cannot hold an official session in the absence of the speaker or his designated speaker pro tempore. Speaker Leroy Irvis was the first African American elected speaker of any state legislature in the United States since Reconstruction. Speaker Dennis O'Brien was the only minority-party Speaker known in Pennsylvania and only the second known nationwide. Pennsylvania has never had a female speaker.

Composition

Results of the November 2, 2010 elections:

Affiliation Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
Democratic Republican Vacant
End of previous legislature 104 98 203 0
Begin 90 112 202 1
February 15, 2011[5] 91 203 0
January 2, 2012[6] 88 110 198 5
January 3, 2012[7] 87 197 6
Latest voting share 44.8% 55.2%

Gender Composition

The Pennsylvania House of Representatives has only 33 women out of 203 total representatives in 2011.[8] This is only 16%, which is below the national average of 23.1% women in all statewide legislative positions.

House of Representatives Leadership

As of January 4, 2010[9]

Speaker of the House of Representatives: Sam Smith (R)

Majority Party (R) Leadership Position Minority Party (D)
Mike Turzai Floor Leader Frank Dermody
Stan Saylor Whip Mike Hanna
Sandra Major Caucus Chairperson Dan Frankel
Mike Vereb Caucus Secretary Jennifer Mann
Bill Adolph Appropriations Committee Chairman Joe Markosek
Dick Stevenson Caucus Administrator Ron Buxton
Dave Reed Policy Committee Chairman Mike Sturla

Members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives

See also

References

  1. ^ The Pennsylvania Manual, p. 3-7.
  2. ^ Article II, section 2, Pennsylvania Constitution.
  3. ^ Article II, section 16, Pennsylvania Constitution.
  4. ^ http://www.columbiamissourian.com/stories/2011/04/04/missouri-senate-oks-advances-move-shrink-house/
  5. ^ Democrat Maria Donatucci elected to fill the vacant seat previously held by Democrat Robert Donatucci, who died prior to the session being seated.
  6. ^ Republicans Dennis M. O'Brien and Doug Reichley and Democrats Kenyatta Johnson, Chelsa Wagner, and Jewell Williams resign following elections to new offices.
  7. ^ Democrat Josh Shapiro resigns following elections to new office.
  8. ^ http://www.cawp.rutgers.edu/fast_facts/levels_of_office/documents/stleg.pdf
  9. ^ "Officers". Pennsylvania House of Representatives. http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/home/member_information/house/officers.cfm. Retrieved January 4, 2011. 

Sources

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Pennsylvania_House_of_Representatives Pennsylvania House of Representatives] at Wikimedia Commons