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(Redirected from Ohio State Legislature) Legislative branch of the state government of Ohio For the current General Assembly, see 135th Ohio General Assembly.

Ohio General Assembly
135th Ohio General Assembly
Coat of arms or logo
Type
TypeBicameral
HousesSenate
House of Representatives
Leadership
Senate PresidentMatt Huffman (R)
since January 4, 2021
House SpeakerJason Stephens (R)
since January 3, 2023
Structure
Seats132 voting members:
33 senators
99 representatives
Composition of the Ohio Senate
Senate political groups
Composition of the Ohio House of Representatives
House political groups
AuthorityArticle II
Ohio Constitution
Elections
Last Senate electionNovember 3, 2024
(16 seats)
Last House electionNovember 3, 2024
(99 seats)
Next Senate electionNovember 3, 2026
(17 seats)
Next House electionNovember 3, 2026
(99 seats)
Meeting place
Ohio Statehouse
Columbus
Website
General Assembly
Senate
House of Representatives

The Ohio General Assembly is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Ohio. It consists of the 99-member Ohio House of Representatives and the 33-member Ohio Senate. Both houses of the General Assembly meet at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus.

Legislative agencies

The Legislative Service Commission is one of several legislative agencies. It serves as a source for legal expertise and staffing and drafts proposed legislation, also helps serve as an advertisement to the general public as to what is happening inside the assembly.

History

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2013)

The General Assembly first convened in Chillicothe, then the Ohio capital, on March 1, 1803.

The second constitution of Ohio, effective in 1851, took away the power of the General Assembly to choose the state's executive officers, granting that right to the voters. A complicated formula apportioned legislators to Ohio counties and the number of seats in the legislative houses varied from year-to-year.

The Ohio Politics Almanac by Michael F. Curtin (Kent State University Press) described apportionment thus:

The new constitution ... contained a complicated formula for apportionment, the so-called "major fraction rule." Under it, the state's population was divided by 100, with the resulting quotient being the ratio of representation in the House of Representatives. Any county with a population equal to at least half the ratio was entitled to one representative; a county with a population of less than half the ratio was grouped with an adjacent county for districting; a county containing a population of at least one and three-fourths the ratio was entitled to two representatives; a county with a population equal to three times the ratio was entitled to three representatives. To determine Senate districts, a similar procedure was followed; the starting point, however was figured by dividing the state's population by 35. The ratios for the House and Senate and the resulting apportionment was determined by a board consisting of the governor, auditor, and secretary of state.

In 1903, the apportionment system was modified by the Hanna amendment, which also gave the governor veto power over the assembly's acts, which could be overridden by a two-thirds vote of both houses. The last state constitutional convention, held in 1912, gave the governor a line-item veto, but reduced the supermajority required for overriding the veto to three-fifths. In 1956, a referendum increased the terms of state senators from two to four years.

The Hanna amendment (which guaranteed each county at least one representative and all members elected at large) guaranteed that rural areas of Ohio would dominate the legislature. However, several decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court surrounding the legal principal of one man, one vote mandated apportionment proportional to population. Reapportionment was ordered in 1964. Starting with the 1966 election, the number of seats in the two chambers were fixed at their present numbers of 33 and 99.

Republican activists, led by Fred A. Lennon, began pursuing term limits in the 1980s, in 1992, a referendum set term limits of eight consecutive years in office: four consecutive terms in the House or two consecutive terms in the Senate. Years in office are considered consecutive if they are separated by less than four years. A former member of the legislature who had served eight years becomes eligible for election to the legislature after four years out of office.

Vacancies

The Ohio House and Ohio Senate use slightly different methods to fill vacant seats. In both chambers, a replacement is first elected by the members of the relevant chamber who are affiliated with the same party as the departing member. In the House, the replacement will serve for the remainder of the term. In the Senate, the replacement will serve for the remainder of the term only if the vacancy occurred after the first 20 months of the four-year Senate term. If the vacancy occurred during the first 20 months of the term, then a special election will be held during the next regularly-scheduled even-year statewide election. The replacement selected by the party members will then serve until the end of December following the special election, with the winner serving the remainder of the term.

See also

References

  1. The Ohio General Assembly Official Government Website, https://www.legislature.ohio.gov/
  2. The Ohio House Official Government Website, http://www.ohiohouse.gov/index
  3. The Ohio Senate Official Government Website, http://ohiosenate.gov/
  4. Blue, Frederick J. (Autumn 2002). "The Date of Ohio Statehood". Ohio Academy of History Newsletter. Archived from the original on September 11, 2010.
  5. A Brief History of Ohio's State Government, https://www.legislature.ohio.gov/publications/a-brief-history
  6. "The Ohio Legislature". www.legislature.ohio.gov. Retrieved December 6, 2020.

Further reading

External links

Ohio Ohio General Assemblies by year convened
Current members of the Ohio Senate
135th General Assembly (2023-2025)
President of the Senate
Matt Huffman (R)
President pro tempore
Vacant
Majority Leader
Rob McColley (R)
Minority Leader
Nickie Antonio (D)
  1. Rob McColley (R)
  2. Theresa Gavarone (R)
  3. Michele Reynolds (R)
  4. George Lang (R)
  5. Steve Huffman (R)
  6. Niraj Antani (R)
  7. Steve Wilson (R)
  8. Louis Blessing (R)
  9. Catherine Ingram (D)
  10. Bob Hackett (R)
  11. Paula Hicks-Hudson (D)
  12. Matt Huffman (R)
  13. Nathan Manning (R)
  14. Terry Johnson (R)
  15. Hearcel Craig (D)
  16. Stephanie Kunze (R)
  17. Shane Wilkin (R)
  18. Jerry Cirino (R)
  19. Andrew Brenner (R)
  20. Tim Schaffer (R)
  21. Kent Smith (D)
  22. Mark Romanchuk (R)
  23. Nickie Antonio (D)
  24. Matt Dolan (R)
  25. Bill DeMora (D)
  26. Bill Reineke (R)
  27. Kristina Roegner (R)
  28. Vernon Sykes (D)
  29. Vacant
  30. Brian Chavez (R)
  31. Al Landis (R)
  32. Sandra O'Brien (R)
  33. Alessandro Cutrona (R)
Members of the Ohio House of Representatives
135th Ohio General Assembly (2023–2024)
Speaker of the House
Jason Stephens (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Scott Oelslager (R)
Majority Leader
Bill Seitz (R)
Minority Leader
Allison Russo (D)
  1. Dontavius Jarrells (D)
  2. Latyna Humphrey (D)
  3. Ismail Mohamed (D)
  4. Beryl Piccolantonio (D)
  5. Richard Brown (D)
  6. Adam Miller (D)
  7. Allison Russo (D)
  8. Beth Liston (D)
  9. Munira Abdullahi (D)
  10. David Dobos (R)
  11. Anita Somani (D)
  12. Brian Stewart (R)
  13. Michael J. Skindell (D)
  14. Sean Brennan (D)
  15. Richard Dell'Aquila (D)
  16. Bride Rose Sweeney (D)
  17. Tom Patton (R)
  18. Darnell Brewer (D)
  19. Phil Robinson (D)
  20. Terrence Upchurch (D)
  21. Elliot Forhan (D)
  22. Juanita Brent (D)
  23. Dan Troy (D)
  24. Dani Isaacsohn (D)
  25. Cecil Thomas (D)
  26. Sedrick Denson (D)
  27. Rachel Baker (D)
  28. Jodi Whitted (D)
  29. Cindy Abrams (R)
  30. Bill Seitz (R)
  31. Bill Roemer (R)
  32. Jack Daniels (R)
  33. Veronica Sims (D)
  34. Casey Weinstein (D)
  35. Steve Demetriou (R)
  36. Andrea White (R)
  37. Tom Young (R)
  38. Willis Blackshear Jr. (D)
  39. Phil Plummer (R)
  40. Rodney Creech (R)
  41. Josh Williams (R)
  42. Derek Merrin (R)
  43. Michele Grim (D)
  44. Elgin Rogers Jr. (D)
  45. Jennifer Gross (R)
  46. Thomas Hall (R)
  47. Sara Carruthers (R)
  48. Scott Oelslager (R)
  49. Jim Thomas (R)
  50. Reggie Stoltzfus (R)
  51. Brett Hillyer (R)
  52. Gayle Manning (R)
  53. Joe Miller (D)
  54. Dick Stein (R)
  55. Scott Lipps (R)
  56. Adam Mathews (R)
  57. Jamie Callender (R)
  58. Tex Fischer (R)
  59. Lauren McNally (D)
  60. Brian Lorenz (R)
  61. Beth Lear (R)
  62. Jean Schmidt (R)
  63. Adam Bird (R)
  64. Nick Santucci (R)
  65. Mike Loychik (R)
  66. Sharon Ray (R)
  67. Melanie Miller (R)
  68. Thaddeus Claggett (R)
  69. Kevin Miller (R)
  70. Brian Lampton (R)
  71. Bill Dean (R)
  72. Gail Pavliga (R)
  73. Jeff LaRe (R)
  74. Bernard Willis (R)
  75. Haraz Ghanbari (R)
  76. Marilyn John (R)
  77. Scott Wiggam (R)
  78. Susan Manchester (R)
  79. Monica Robb Blasdel (R)
  80. Jena Powell (R)
  81. Jim Hoops (R)
  82. Roy Klopfenstein (R)
  83. Jon Cross (R)
  84. Angela King (R)
  85. Tim Barhorst (R)
  86. Tracy Richardson (R)
  87. Riordan McClain (R)
  88. Gary Click (R)
  89. D. J. Swearingen (R)
  90. Justin Pizzulli (R)
  91. Bob Peterson (R)
  92. Mark Johnson (R)
  93. Jason Stephens (R)
  94. Jay Edwards (R)
  95. Don Jones (R)
  96. Ron Ferguson (R)
  97. Adam Holmes (R)
  98. Darrell Kick (R)
  99. Sarah Fowler (R)
Legislatures of the United States
United States Congress
State legislatures
Other legislatures
Legislative elections

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