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Arkansas Senate

Arkansas State Senate
Arkansas General Assembly
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Term limits
16 years (both houses)
History
New session started
January 12, 2015
Leadership
Tim Griffin (R)
Since January 13, 2015
President pro Tempore of the Senate
Jonathan Dismang (R)
Since January 15, 2013
Majority Leader
Jim Hendren (R)
Since January 15, 2013
Minority Leader
Keith Ingram (D)
Since January 15, 2013
Structure
Seats 35
Arkansas Senate Arch 2012.svg
Political groups
Republican Party (24)
Democratic Party (11)
Length of term
4 years
Authority Article 8, Section 2, Arkansas Constitution
Salary $39,399.84/year + per diem
Elections
Last election
November 8, 2016
(35 seats)
Next election
November 7, 2018
(17 seats)
Redistricting Arkansas Board of Apportionment and Arkansas General Assembly
Meeting place
Arkansas State Senate.png
State Senate Chamber
Arkansas State Capitol
Little Rock, Arkansas
Website
Arkansas State Senate

The Arkansas State Senate is the upper branch of the Arkansas General Assembly. The Senate consists of 35 members, each representing a district with about 83,000 people. Service in the state legislature is part-time, and many state senators have full-time jobs during the rest of the year. The 35-member Senate consists of twenty-four Republicans and eleven Democrats.

The Arkansas Senate was created and re-created by five separate constitutions, the first of which was ratified on January 30, 1836, and the fifth and current of which was adopted in 1874. The reason for so many constitutions is in part because of the secession of Arkansas from the United States during the time of the American Civil War and the aftermath of the war. The constitution has also changed over time through numerous amendments.

In 1947, the Arkansas Legislative Council committee was created to collect data for legislators and oversee the Bureau of Legislative Research, which is composed of professional, nonpartisan staff to aid in the legislative process. The committee consists of 36 legislators, 16 of which are state senators.

In 1964, Dorathy M. Allen became the first woman elected to the Arkansas Senate. During her time in office, she was the only female in the Arkansas Senate.

Originally, legislators met biennially. A 2008 ballot proposal approved by voters created annual legislative sessions. In 1992, voters approved term limits, limiting state senators to two four-year terms. In 2014, term limits were extended to 16 years cummulative in either house.

Arkansas state senators are responsible for making and amending the laws of Arkansas in collaboration with the Arkansas House of Representatives and the governor. Senators begin the legislative process by submitting bill requests to the staff of the Bureau of Legislative Research that drafts a bill to conform to the author's intent. Bills are then filed with the Secretary of the Arkansas Senate or an assistant secretary of the Arkansas Senate. The legislative process during the legislative session mirrors that of other state legislatures in the United States. Bills are introduced on First Reading and assigned to a committee, vetted by the committee, undergo Second and Third Readings on the floor of the Senate, go to the opposite house of the legislature, and return or go directly to the governor. The governor has veto power, but two-thirds of the membership of both houses of the legislature can override that veto.


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Wikipedia

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