Oklahoma House of Representatives explained

Oklahoma House of Representatives
Legislature:Oklahoma State Legislature
Coa Pic:OK House of Representatives Seal.png
House Type:Lower house
Term Limits:12-year cumulative total, in either or both chambers
New Session:2023
Leader1 Type:Speaker
Leader1:Charles McCall (R)
Election1:January 3, 2017
Leader2 Type:Speaker pro tempore
Leader2:Kyle Hilbert (R)
Election2:February 8, 2022
Leader3 Type:Majority Leader
Leader3:Tammy West (R)
Election3:January 3, 2023
Leader4 Type:Minority Leader
Leader4:Cyndi Munson (D)
Election4:November 16, 2022
Members:101
Last Election1:November 8, 2022
(101 seats)
Next Election1:November 5, 2024
(101 seats)
Redistricting:Legislative control
Structure1:Oklahoma House of Reps 2022.svg
Structure1 Res:290px
Political Groups1:Majority

Minority

Term Length:2 years
Authority:Article V, Oklahoma Constitution
Salary:$38,400/year + per diem
Meeting Place:House of Representatives Chamber
Oklahoma State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Website:Oklahoma House of Representatives

The Oklahoma House of Representatives is the lower house of the legislature of the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Its members introduce and vote on bills and resolutions, provide legislative oversight for state agencies, and help to craft the state's budget. The upper house of the Oklahoma Legislature is the Oklahoma Senate.

The Oklahoma Constitution established the powers of the Oklahoma House of Representatives in 1907. Voters further amended those powers through constitutional referendums. One referendum required legislators to balance the annual state budget. Others specified the length and dates of the legislative session. Today, there are 101 House members, each representing a legislative district. District boundaries are redrawn every decade to ensure districts of equal population. Members must be 21 years of age at the time of election and a qualified elector and a resident of the legislative district to serve in the House. The state holds district elections every two years coincident with federal elections and special elections to fill vacant seats. The House meets from early February until the last Friday in May. Members elect a Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives as the presiding officer and a Speaker Pro Tempore, who serves as the presiding officer in the absence of the speaker. Members organize in political party-based caucuses to develop partisan policy agendas.

After the 2022 election, Republicans hold a supermajority of the House seats in the 59th Oklahoma Legislature.

History

Early years

The Oklahoma Constitution established both the Oklahoma House of Representatives and Oklahoma Senate in 1907. It met in Guthrie until 1910. William H. Murray was the first Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives. Less than 50 legislative employees aided lawmakers in the first year.[1]

A weakening of the Democratic coalition leading up to the 1908 election allowed Republicans to make gains in the Oklahoma House. Republicans gained an even third of the legislative seats.[2] The largest gains came in Holdenville, Okmulgee, and Guthrie, each of which had a sizable African-American population.[2] The Oklahoma Democratic lawmakers of the early 1900s opposed integration. The first legislature passed legislation that made it almost impossible for African-Americans to vote.[2] The legislature's first African-American member, A. C. Hamlin, served only one term, though he did gain the support of his fellow lawmakers to fund an African-American school in his district and create more equal accommodations for black and white railroad passengers.[3]

The Democratic Party also pushed to make Oklahoma City the capital over Guthrie, a Republican and African-American voting stronghold.[2]

In 1913, a House investigative committee forced the resignation of the state auditor and impeached the state printer and insurance commissioner.[1] The legislature at the time included Democratic members who were angry at then Governor Lee Cruce over his veto of a redistricting plan that would have gerrymandered Congressional districts and his attempt to remove public institutions established by earlier legislatures.[4] Cruce escaped an impeachment trial by one vote of the House investigative committee.[4]

Women earned the right to vote in Oklahoma in 1918 through a constitutional amendment approved by voters.[5] In 1920, Bessie S. McColgin became the first woman elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives. A Republican, McColgin and her female colleague in the Oklahoma Senate, focused on the passage of public health bills, but failed in many of their efforts.[6]

After eight Democratic-controlled Legislatures, Republicans took the majority from 1921 to 1922 and elected George B. Schwabe as Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[7] The Republican-dominated House brought impeachment charges against Lieutenant Governor Martin Trapp and narrowly failed to approve impeachment charges against both the state treasurer and Oklahoma Governor James Roberts. The Democratic-dominated Senate did not sustain the impeachment charges against Trapp.[8]

Members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives voted eleven articles of impeachment against Governor Henry S. Johnston, which led to his expulsion from office.[9]

1930s through 1950s

A severe drought beginning in 1932 in western Oklahoma combined with land consolidation and mechanization in eastern Oklahoma drove farmers out of the state and left others in economic distress.[10] Legislatures of the 1930s battled with governors William H. Murray and Ernest W. Marland, targeting Murray's efforts to generate relief for farmers and Marland's proposals to create a state public works program, reform the tax code and create unemployment insurance.[10] Lawmakers did enact an old age pension system funded by a dedicated sales tax.[10] The rejection of providing state matching funds for New Deal projects resulted in fewer projects.[10] A conservative reaction developed in Oklahoma in the late 1930s and rejected further New Deal programs.[10]

In 1941, Governor Leon C. Phillips pushed the state legislature to send a constitutional amendment to voters to force the Oklahoma House of Representatives to approve a balanced budget each year.[11] Ever since voters approved the state question, the state legislature has been constitutionally required to pass a balanced budget.

The number of Republican Party seats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives plummeted in the 1930s.[12]

1960s to present

The legislative sessions held by the Oklahoma House of Representatives and Oklahoma Senate changed due to two key legislative reforms in 1966 and 1989. In 1966, Oklahomans voted to institute 90-day annual sessions.[13] An initiative petition championed by Governor Henry Bellmon in 1989 further required the legislative sessions to end by 5 p.m. on the last Friday in May.[1]

After earlier attempts to raise legislative pay failed, voters approved a state question in 1968 to create a board to set legislative compensation. It set compensation at $8,400 that year.[1]

State legislators enacted Oklahoma's open meeting and open records laws in 1977, but made the Oklahoma House of Representatives exempt.[14]

A shift in the behavior of Oklahoma voters occurred, beginning in the 1960s. Registered Democrats began to more often vote Republican at the federal level and later at state level. As partisan debate became more polarizing, southern states including Oklahoma abandoned old voting patterns of supporting the Democratic party.[15] After the 2004 Presidential Election, Republicans gained control of the House for the first time since 1921.[16] In 2010, Republicans gained a large majority of 70 seats in the Oklahoma House of Representatives.[17] Following the 2018 general election, Republicans gained the largest majority in state history with 76 of the 101 seats. This also includes the largest ever freshman class, with 46 new representatives.[18]

Powers and legislative process

The Oklahoma House and the Oklahoma Senate are responsible for introducing and voting on bills and resolutions, providing legislative oversight for state agencies, and helping to craft the state's budget. Every ten years, legislators are responsible for designating new district boundaries for state electoral districts, along with Congressional districts. The governor must sign these bills into law, or a statewide panel convenes to draw the disputed lines.[19]

Legislators, with staff support, develop and file bills prior to the legislative session. Bill sponsors submit requests for bill drafting to the professional staff of the Oklahoma House of Representatives. The staff ensure bills have proper legal language and meet constitutional requirements. The bills are filed electronically with the Clerk of the House's office by a designated filing deadline. Since 1999, members of the Oklahoma House are limited to a maximum of eight bills that will receive a hearing.[20]

A proposal may be introduced as a bill, a joint resolution, a concurrent resolution, or a simple resolution.[21] Legislators use joint resolutions to propose a constitutional amendment. Concurrent resolutions (passed by both houses) and simple resolutions (passed by only one house) do not have the force of law. Instead, they serve to express the opinion of approving house of houses, or to regulate procedure. Article 5 Section 33 of the Oklahoma Constitution requires bills for raising revenue to originate in the Oklahoma House.

The Oklahoma House meets in regular session in the west wing of the Oklahoma State Capitol in Oklahoma City, from the first Monday in February to the last Friday in May. Special sessions may be called by the governor, or by a written call signed by two-thirds of the members of each chamber of the Legislature.

Bills receive a First Reading when they are published in the House Journal. They then undergo a Second Reading upon assignment to committee. The committee system is designed to screen out legislation that is, in the committee's judgment, unnecessary or not ready for passage.[20]

Committees either stop the progress of a bill or approve it for consideration on the floor of the House. When a bill is called up on the floor, either the principal author or a designated member will be recognized for the explanation of the bill. Typically, after questions from other members, the bill is advanced to Third Reading and a vote is taken on final passage.[20]

Fifty-one votes are required for bill passage on the floor of the Oklahoma House. Lawmakers also vote on whether or not to make the bill effective upon signature of the governor, which requires a two-thirds majority. Action on the floor is recorded in the House Journal.[20] Once approved on Third Reading, which is the name for this stage of the floor process, approved bills are sent to the Oklahoma Senate. If amended, bills will return to the Oklahoma House of Representatives for an acceptance of the Senate amendment(s) or to work out the differences in a conference committee, but can go directly to the governor after Senate passage.[20]

The Oklahoma House is not subject to the state's open meeting and open records laws due to provisions to exempt the state legislature in the 1977-enacted laws.[14]

Party composition

8120
RepublicanDemocratic
AffiliationParty

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

Total
RepublicanDemocraticVacant
nowrap style="font-size:80%"54th Legislature72291010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"55th Legislature71301010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"Begin 56th Legislature75261010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"End 56th Legislature7227992
nowrap style="font-size:80%"Begin 57th Legislature76251010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"December 6, 2018[22] 77241010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"Begin 58th Legislature82191010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"January 21, 2022[23] 82181001
nowrap style="font-size:80%"Begin 59th Legislature81201010
nowrap style="font-size:80%"September 1, 2023[24] 801001
nowrap style="font-size:80%"February 21, 2024[25] 811010
Latest voting share

Current members

District Representative Party Residence First elected
1Eddy DempseyRepublicanValliant2020
2Jim OlsenRepublicanSallisaw2018
3Rick WestRepublicanHeavener2020
4Bob Ed Culver Jr.RepublicanTahlequah2020
5Josh WestRepublicanGrove2016
6Rusty CornwellRepublicanVinita2018
7Steve BashoreRepublicanMiami2020
8Tom GannRepublicanInola2016
9Mark LepakRepublicanClaremore2014
10Judd StromRepublicanCopan2018
11John KaneRepublicanBartlesville2022
12Kevin McDugleRepublicanBroken Arrow2016
13Neil HaysRepublicanChecotah2022
14Chris SneedRepublicanFort Gibson2018
15Randy RandlemanRepublicanEufaula2018
16Scott FetgatterRepublicanOkmulgee2016
17Jim GregoRepublicanMcAlester2018
18David SmithRepublicanMcAlester2018
19Justin HumphreyRepublicanLane2016
20Sherrie ConleyRepublicanNewcastle2018
21Cody MaynardRepublicanDurant2022
22Charles McCallRepublicanAtoka2013
23Terry O'DonnellRepublicanCatoosa2013
24Chris BanningRepublicanBixby2022
25Ronny JohnsRepublicanAda2018
26Dell KerbsRepublicanShawnee2016
27Danny SterlingRepublicanWanette2018
28Danny WilliamsRepublicanSeminole2020
29Kyle HilbertRepublicanDepew2016
30Mark LawsonRepublicanSapulpa2016
31Collin DuelRepublicanGuthrie2022
32Kevin WallaceRepublicanWellston2014
33John TalleyRepublicanCushing2018
34Trish RansonDemocraticStillwater2018
35Ty BurnsRepublicanMorrison2018
36John GeorgeRepublicanNewalla2022
37Ken LuttrellRepublicanPonca City2018
38John PfeifferRepublicanOrlando2014
39Erick HarrisRepublicanEdmond2024
40Chad CaldwellRepublicanEnid2014
41Denise Crosswhite HaderRepublicanEnid2018
42Cynthia RoeRepublicanPurcell2018
43Jay SteagallRepublicanYukon2018
44Jared DeckDemocraticNorman2022
45Annie MenzDemocraticNorman2022
46Jacob RosecrantsDemocraticNorman2017
47Brian HillRepublicanMustang2018
48Tammy TownleyRepublicanArdmore2018
49Josh CantrellRepublicanKingston2022
50Marcus McEntireRepublicanDuncan2016
51Brad BolesRepublicanMarlow2018
52Gerrid KendrixRepublicanAltus2020
53Mark McBrideRepublicanMoore2013
54Kevin WestRepublicanMoore2016
55Nick ArcherRepublicanElk City2022
56Dick LoweRepublicanAmber2013
57Anthony MooreRepublicanWeatherford2020
58Carl NewtonRepublicanWoodward2016
59Mike DobrinskiRepublicanKingfisher2020
60Rhonda BakerRepublicanYukon2016
61Kenton PatzkowskyRepublicanBalko2018
62Daniel PaeRepublicanLawton2018
63Trey CaldwellRepublicanLawton2018
64Rande WorthenRepublicanLawton2016
65Toni HasenbeckRepublicanElgin2018
66Clay StairesRepublicanSkiatook2022
67Jeff BoatmanRepublicanTulsa2018
68Lonnie SimsRepublicanTulsa2018
69Mark TedfordRepublicanTulsa2022
70Suzanne SchreiberDemocraticTulsa2022
71Amanda SwopeDemocraticTulsa2022
72Monroe NicholsDemocraticTulsa2016
73Regina GoodwinDemocraticTulsa2015
74Mark VancurenRepublicanOwasso2018
75T. J. MartiRepublicanTulsa2018
76Ross FordRepublicanBroken Arrow2017
77John WaldronDemocraticTulsa2018
78Meloyde BlancettDemocraticTulsa2016
79Melissa ProvenzanoDemocraticTulsa2018
80Stan MayRepublicanBroken Arrow2018
81Mike OsburnRepublicanEdmond2016
82Nicole MillerRepublicanOklahoma City2018
83Eric RobertsRepublicanOklahoma City2020
84Tammy WestRepublicanBethany2016
85Cyndi MunsonDemocraticOklahoma City2015
86David HardinRepublicanStilwell2018
87Ellyn HefnerDemocraticOklahoma City2022
88Mauree TurnerDemocraticOklahoma City2020
89Arturo Alonso-SandovalDemocraticOklahoma City2022
90Jon EcholsRepublicanOklahoma City2013
91Chris KannadyRepublicanOklahoma City2014
92Forrest BennettDemocraticOklahoma City2016
93Mickey DollensDemocraticOklahoma City2016
94Andy FugateDemocraticOklahoma City2018
95Max WolfleyRepublicanOklahoma City2020
96Preston StinsonRepublicanEdmond2020
97Jason LoweDemocraticOklahoma City2016
98Dean DavisRepublicanBroken Arrow2018
99Ajay PittmanDemocraticOklahoma City2018
100Marilyn StarkRepublicanOklahoma City2018
101Robert MangerRepublicanChoctaw2018

Notable past members

Organization

Leadership in the state House begins two leaders elected by their fellow lawmakers - the Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives and Speaker Pro Tempore.[26] Party caucuses play a major role in this process by nominating candidates for key leadership positions.[27]

The speaker appoints a majority floor leader and a majority whip. The majority floor leader sets the floor calendar during session.[28] The duties of the majority whip are to assist the floor leader, ensure member attendance, count votes, and communicate the majority position on issues.[28]

The speaker also names assistant floor leaders, assistant whips, and caucus officers. Additionally, the minority party caucus elects a minority leader. The minority leader develops caucus positions, negotiates with the majority party caucus, and directs minority caucus activities on the chamber floor.[28]

The speaker appoints committee and subcommittee chairs and vice chairs.[26] The majority floor leader selects an informal team that assists with management of legislation on the House Floor.[26]

As of November 2018, The Oklahoma House of Representatives has 22 committees and 10 subcommittees.[29]

A non-partisan staff provides professional services for members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives in addition to the Oklahoma Legislative Service Bureau. Individual members are also assisted by partisan staff members, and those in leadership positions have additional partisan staff.[1] Committees are staffed primarily by research, fiscal and legal staff. The current Clerk of the House is Jan B. Harrison.[30]

Membership

See also: Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives.

Terms and qualifications

In order to file for election to the Oklahoma House of Representatives, one must be 21 years of age at the time of their election and a qualified elector and resident of their legislative district.[31] Officers of the United States or state government and individuals who have been adjudged guilty of a felony are not eligible to election to the Oklahoma Legislature. If a member of the Oklahoma Legislature is expelled for corruption, they are not eligible to return to legislative office.[32]

State representatives serve a two-year term and are limited to six terms or 12 years. No member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives can serve more than 12 years in the Oklahoma Legislature. A term-limited member can not run for election to the Senate as both Representative terms and Senate terms are added together in determining the total number of Legislative years in office.[33]

Salaries and benefits

Members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives receive $38,400 in annual pay.[34] The Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives receives $56,332 in annual pay. The Speaker Pro Tempore, minority leader and appropriations chair receive $50,764 in annual pay.[34] Pay is set by a nine-member state board appointed by the governor, Speaker, and President Pro Tempore of the Oklahoma Senate.[34]

State legislators can seek reimbursement for expenses related to meals, lodging, and travel related to their duties at any point during the year. They have access to benefits, including health and life insurance and retirement savings plans.[34]

Current makeup

As of November 2018, members of the Republican Party hold a supermajority in the House, or three-fourths seats. There are 77 Republicans and 24 Democrats.[35]

Representation

Originally, the House was apportioned according to a method spelled out in the state constitution, in which each county formed a legislative district. Representation was determined by taking the total population of the state, according to the most recent federal census, and that number was divided by one hundred, with the quotient equaling one ratio. Counties having a population less than one full ratio received one Representative; every county containing an entire ratio but less than two ratios was to be assigned two Representatives; every county containing a population of two entire ratios but less than three ratios was to be assigned three Representatives; and every county containing a population of three entire ratios but less than four ratios was to be assigned four Representatives. After the first four Representatives, a county was to qualify for additional representation on the basis of two whole ratios of population for each additional Representative.

In 1964, the United States Supreme Court ruled that this method violated the federal constitution, as it resulted in districts having wildly different populations. State lawmakers implemented a new method that continues to be used today. The Oklahoma House of Representatives must draw new district boundaries within 90 days of the latest Federal Decennial Census. Under the holding of Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964) districts must be apportioned within a five percent margin of the average target size district as determined by the U.S. Census population figures divided by the one hundred and one districts. This allows for certain districts to be slightly smaller or larger than others. The Oklahoma House of Representatives draws its own maps of its district lines, which are subject to the approval of both the state senate and the governor. Should the redistricting not occur in the time limits prescribed by law, the lines are determined by a panel of five statewide elected officials.

Leadership

Majority Leadership

PartyOfficeOfficer
RepSpeaker Pro TemporeVacant
Majority Floor LeaderJon Echols
Majority WhipTammy West
Chair of the Appropriations and Budget Committee Kevin Wallace
Vice Chair of the House Appropriations and Budget CommitteeKyle Hilbert
Majority LeaderJosh West
Deputy Majority LeaderTrey Caldwell
Deputy Majority Floor LeaderJohn Pfeiffer
Deputy Majority Floor LeaderDustin Roberts
Majority Caucus ChairSheila Dills
Majority Caucus Vice ChairRusty Cornwell
Majority Caucus SecretaryDenise Crosswhite Hader

Minority Leadership

PartyOfficeOfficer
DemMinority LeaderEmily Virgin
Assistant Minority Floor LeaderForrest Bennet
Minority Floor LeaderAndy Fugate
Minority WhipMickey Dollens
Minority Caucus ChairCyndi Munson
Minority Caucus Vice ChairMonroe Nichols
Minority Caucus SecretaryTrish Ranson
Assistant Minority Floor LeaderRegina Goodwin
Assistant Minority Floor LeaderJohn Waldron

[36]

Past composition of the House of Representatives

See main article: Political party strength in Oklahoma.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.okhouse.gov/Documents/CenturyToRemember.pdf "A Century to Remember"
  2. Scales, James R. and Danny Goble (1982). Oklahoma Politics: A History, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, p. 41-58.
  3. Bruce, Michael L. "Hamlin, Albert Comstock (1881-1912)", Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, Oklahoma Historical Society. (accessed April 17, 2013)
  4. Gibson, Arrell Morgan (1972). Harlow's Oklahoma History, Sixth Ed. Harlow Publishing Corporation, Norman.
  5. Reese, Linda W. Women, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
  6. Pappas, Christine. McColgin, Amelia Elizabeth Simison (1875-1972, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
  7. Hannemann, Carolyn G. Schwabe, George Blaine (1886-1952), Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. (accessed April 29, 2013)
  8. O'Dell, Larry. Robertson, James Brooks Ayers (1871-1938), Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 11, 2013)
  9. Burke, Bob. Johnston, Henry Simpson, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
  10. Bryant Jr., Keith L. New Deal, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
  11. Hudson, Geneva Johnston (AuthorHouse, 2005). Statesman or Rogue: Elected to Serve.
  12. Gaddie, Ronald Keith. Republican Party, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed May 9, 2013)
  13. Kirkpatrick, Samuel A. (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1978). The Legislative Process in Oklahoma, p. 8.
  14. Dean, Bryan. Oklahoma legislators consider making themselves subject to openness laws, Oklahoman, March 11, 2012. (accessed March 28, 2022)
  15. Kirkpatrick, Samuel A., David R. Morgan and Thomas G. Kielhorn (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1977. The Oklahoma Voter.
  16. McNutt, Michael. "Republicans select speaker designate" http://newsok.com/republicans-select-speaker-designate/article/2969390, The Oklahoman November 10, 2006.
  17. McNutt, Michael. "Oklahoma's legislative leaders pledge to work with Democrats", The Oklahoman, November 7, 2010.
  18. Web site: Oklahoma House of Representatives elections, 2018. Ballotpedia.
  19. http://www.okhouse.gov/research/Redistricting.aspx Redistricting
  20. "Course of Bills", Oklahoma House of Representatives (accessed April 19, 2013)
  21. Kirkpatrick, Samuel A. (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1978). The Legislative Process in Oklahoma, p. 109-111.
  22. Web site: Oklahoma state representative changes party affiliation. December 6, 2018. kfor.com.
  23. Web site: Oklahoma House Rep resigns over inappropriate actions . 20 January 2022 .
  24. Web site: Oklahoma Rep. Ryan Martinez to resign from office following plea . 19 August 2023 .
  25. Web site: Harris Sworn in to Serve Oklahoma House District 39 . 21 February 2024 .
  26. Farmer, Rick, "Legislature", " Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture (accessed June 23, 2010).
  27. "Legislative Organization", Inside the Legislative Process, National Conference of State Legislatures. (accessed January 3, 2014)
  28. "Legislative Organization: Legislative Leaders", Inside the Legislative Process, National Conference of State Legislatures. (accessed January 3, 2014)
  29. http://www.okhouse.gov/Media/News_Story.aspx?NewsID=5174, (accessed January 17, 2017).
  30. "Legislative Committee Structure and Staffing Patterns", Southern Legislative Conference. (accessed January 3, 2014)
  31. http://oklegal.onenet.net/okcon/V-17.html Article V, Section 17: Age - Qualified electors - Residents
  32. http://oklegal.onenet.net/okcon/V-19.html Section V-19: Expelled member ineligible - Punishment not to bar indictment
  33. http://oklegal.onenet.net/okcon/V-17A.html Section V-17A: Limitation of time served in the Legislature
  34. http://www.okhouse.gov/Documents/2013LegislativeManual.pdf 2013 Legislative Manual
  35. Web site: Membership . Oklahoma House of Representatives . July 17, 2018.
  36. Web site: House Leadership . 12 April 2021.