Wyoming State Senate | |
---|---|
Wyoming State Legislature | |
Type | |
Type | |
Term limits
|
None |
History | |
New session started
|
January 10, 2017 |
Leadership | |
Vice President of the Senate
|
|
Majority Leader
|
|
Minority Leader
|
|
Structure | |
Seats | 30 |
Political groups
|
Governing party
Opposition party
|
Length of term
|
4 years |
Authority | Article 3, Wyoming Constitution |
Salary | $150/day + per diem |
Elections | |
Last election
|
November 8, 2016 (15 seats) |
Next election
|
November 6, 2018 (15 seats) |
Redistricting | Legislative Control |
Meeting place | |
State Senate Chamber Wyoming State Capitol Cheyenne, Wyoming |
|
Website | |
Wyoming State Legislature |
Governing party
Opposition party
The Wyoming Senate is the upper house of the Wyoming State Legislature. There are 30 Senators in the Senate, representing an equal number of constituencies across Wyoming, each with a population of at least 17,000. The Senate meets at the Wyoming State Capitol in Cheyenne.
Members of the Senate serve four year terms without term limits. Term limits were declared unconstitutional by the Wyoming Supreme Court in 2004, overturning a decade-old law that had restricted Senators to three terms (twelve years).
Like other upper houses of state and territorial legislatures and the federal U.S. Senate, the Wyoming Senate can confirm or reject gubernatorial appointments to the state cabinet, commissions, boards, or justices to the Wyoming Supreme Court.
Wyoming, along with Arizona, Maine, and Oregon, is one of the four U.S. states to have abolished 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. Instead, a separate position of Senate President is in place, removed from the Wyoming executive branch.