Oregon State Senate | |
---|---|
Oregon Legislative Assembly | |
Type | |
Type | |
Term limits
|
None |
History | |
New session started
|
January 12, 2015 |
Leadership | |
President pro Tempore
|
|
Majority Leader
|
|
Minority Leader
|
|
Structure | |
Seats | 30 |
Political groups
|
Governing Party
Opposition Party
|
Length of term
|
4 years |
Authority | Article IV, Oregon Constitution |
Salary | $21,612/year + per diem |
Elections | |
Last election
|
November 8, 2016 (16 seats) |
Next election
|
November 6, 2018 (14 seats) |
Redistricting | Legislative Control |
Meeting place | |
State Senate Chamber Oregon State Capitol Salem, Oregon |
|
Website | |
Oregon State Senate |
Governing Party
Opposition Party
The Oregon State Senate is the upper house of the statewide legislature for the US state of Oregon. Along with the lower chamber Oregon House of Representatives it makes up the Oregon Legislative Assembly. There are 30 members of the State Senate, representing 30 districts across the state, each with a population of 114,000. The State Senate meets at the Oregon State Capitol in Salem.
Oregon State Senators serve four-year terms without term limits. In 2002, the Oregon Supreme Court struck down the decade-old Oregon Ballot Measure 3, that had restricted State Senators to two terms (eight years) on procedural grounds.
Like certain other upper houses of state and territorial legislatures and the federal U.S. Senate, the State Senate can confirm or reject gubernatorial appointments to state departments, commissions, boards, and other state governmental agencies.
The current Senate President is Peter Courtney of Salem.
Oregon, along with Arizona, Maine, and Wyoming, is one of the four U.S. states to not have the Office of the Lieutenant Governor, a position which for most upper houses of state legislatures and indeed for the U.S. Congress (with the Vice President) is the head of the legislative body and holder of the casting vote in the event of a tie. Instead, a separate position of Senate President is in place, removed from the state executive branch. If the chamber is tied, legislators must devise their own methods of resolving the impasse. In 2002, for example, Oregon's state senators entered into a power sharing contract whereby Democratic senators nominated the Senate President while Republican senators chaired key committees.