Lieutenant Governor of Guam | |
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Seal of Guam | |
Incumbent Josh Tenorio since January 7, 2019 | |
Style | The Honorable |
Term length | Four years, renewable once |
Inaugural holder | Kurt Moylan |
Formation | 1971 |
Website | Office of the Lt. Governor |
Politics of Guam |
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The Guamanian self-governing government consists of a locally elected governor, lieutenant governor and a fifteen-member Legislature. The first popular election for governor and lieutenant governor took place in 1970. The current lieutenant governor is Josh Tenorio, who has been in office since January 7, 2019.
List of lieutenant governors of Guam
- Parties
Image | Name | Start | End | Party | Governor |
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Kurt Moylan (b. 1939) |
January 4, 1971 | January 6, 1975 | Republican | Carlos Camacho | |
Rudy Sablan (1931–1995) |
January 6, 1975 | January 1, 1979 | Democratic | Ricardo Bordallo | |
Joseph F. Ada (b. 1943) |
January 1, 1979 | January 3, 1983 | Republican | Paul McDonald Calvo | |
Edward Diego Reyes (1930–2018) |
January 3, 1983 | January 5, 1987 | Democratic | Ricardo Bordallo | |
Frank Blas (1941–2016) |
January 5, 1987 | January 2, 1995 | Republican | Joseph Franklin Ada | |
Madeleine Bordallo (b. 1933) |
January 2, 1995 | January 6, 2003 | Democratic | Carl Gutierrez | |
Kaleo Moylan (b. 1966) |
January 6, 2003 | January 1, 2007 | Republican | Felix Perez Camacho | |
Michael Cruz (b. 1958) |
January 1, 2007 | January 3, 2011 | Republican | ||
Ray Tenorio (b. 1965) |
January 3, 2011 | January 7, 2019 | Republican | Eddie Baza Calvo | |
Josh Tenorio (b. 1973) |
January 7, 2019 | Incumbent | Democratic | Lou Leon Guerrero |
References
- "Guam Country Brief". Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (Australia). Retrieved 2008-09-05.
Lieutenant governors of Guam | ||
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Lieutenant governors in the United States | |
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Vice President of the United States: ▌Kamala Harris (D) | |
AL ▌Ainsworth (R) AK ▌Dahlstrom (R) AZ ▌Fontes (D) AR ▌Rutledge (R) CA ▌Kounalakis (D) CO ▌Primavera (D) CT ▌Bysiewicz (D) DE ▌Hall-Long (D) FL ▌Nuñez (R) GA ▌Jones (R) HI ▌Luke (D) ID ▌Bedke (R) IL ▌Stratton (D) IN ▌Crouch (R) IA ▌Cournoyer (R) KS ▌Toland (D) KY ▌Coleman (D) LA ▌Nungesser (R) ME ▌Daughtry (D) MD ▌A. Miller (D) MA ▌Driscoll (D) MI ▌Gilchrist (D) MN ▌Flanagan (DFL) MS ▌Hosemann (R) MO ▌Kehoe (R) MT ▌Juras (R) NE ▌Kelly (R) NV ▌Anthony (R) NH ▌Carson (R) NJ ▌Way (D) NM ▌Morales (D) NY ▌Delgado (D) NC ▌Robinson (R) ND ▌Strinden (R) OH ▌Husted (R) OK ▌Pinnell (R) OR ▌Read (D)* PA ▌Davis (D) RI ▌Matos (D) SC ▌Evette (R) SD ▌Rhoden (R) TN ▌McNally (R) TX ▌Patrick (R) UT ▌Henderson (R) VT ▌Zuckerman (P) VA ▌Sears (R) WA ▌Heck (D) WV ▌Blair (R) WI ▌Rodriguez (D) WY ▌Gray (R) Federal districts: DC ▌Mendelson (D)Territories: AS ▌Ale (D) GU ▌Tenorio (D) MP ▌Apatang (I) PR ▌Marrero (PNP) VI ▌Roach (D) | |
An asterisk indicates an Acting Lt. Governor
Italics indicate next-in-line of succession for states and territories without a directly elected lieutenant governor or whose lieutenant governor office is vacant:
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United States lieutenant governors by political division | |
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States |
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Insular areas | |
Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, Wyoming, and Puerto Rico do not have lieutenant governors. |