Maryland Senate Explained

Maryland Senate
Legislature:Maryland General Assembly
Coa Pic:Seal of Maryland (reverse).svg
Session Room:MDSenate.jpg
House Type:Upper house
Term Limits:None
New Session:January 11, 2023
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1:Bill Ferguson (D)
Election1:January 8, 2020
Leader2 Type:President Pro Tempore
Leader2:Malcolm Augustine (D)
Election2:January 11, 2023
Leader3 Type:Majority Leader
Leader3:Nancy J. King (D)
Election3:January 8, 2020
Leader4 Type:Minority Leader
Leader4:Stephen S. Hershey Jr. (R)
Election4:January 11, 2023
Members:47
Structure1:Maryland Senate 2023.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:Majority

Minority

Next Election1:November 3, 2026
Redistricting:Legislative Control
Term Length:4 years
Authority:Article III, Section 2, Maryland Constitution
Salary:$50,330/year[1]
Meeting Place:State Senate Chamber
Maryland State House
Annapolis, MD
Website:Maryland Senate
Rules:2024 Senate of Maryland Rules

The Maryland Senate, sometimes referred to as the Maryland State Senate, is the upper house of the General Assembly, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Maryland. Composed of 47 senators elected from an equal number of constituent single-member districts, the Senate is responsible, along with the Maryland House of Delegates, for passage of laws in Maryland, and for confirming executive appointments made by the Governor of Maryland.

It evolved from the upper house of the colonial assembly created in 1650 when Maryland was a proprietary colony controlled by Cecilius Calvert. It consisted of the Governor and members of the Governor's appointed council. With slight variation, the body to meet in that form until 1776, when Maryland, now a state independent of British rule, passed a new constitution that created an electoral college to appoint members of the Senate. This electoral college was abolished in 1838 and members began to be directly elected from each county and Baltimore City. In 1972, because of a Supreme Court decision, the number of districts was increased to 47, and the districts were balanced by population rather than being geographically determined.

To serve in the Maryland Senate, a person must be a citizen of Maryland 25 years of age or older. Elections for the 47 Senate seats are held every four years coincident with the federal election in which the President of the United States is not elected. Vacancies are filled through appointment by the Governor. The Senate meets for three months every year; the rest of the year the work of the Senate is light and most members hold another job during this time. It has been controlled by Democrats since 1900. In the 2018 election, more than two-thirds of the Senate seats were won by Democrats.

Senators elect a President to serve as presiding officer of the legislative body, as well as a President Pro Tempore. The President appoints chairs and membership of six standing committees, four legislative committees as well as the Executive Nominations and Rules Committees. Senators are also organized into caucuses, including party- and demographically-based caucuses. They are assisted in their work by paid staff of the non-partisan Department of Legislative Services and by partisan office staff.

History

The origins of the Maryland Senate lie in the creation of an assembly during the early days of the Maryland colony. This assembly first met in 1637, making it the longest continuously operating legislative body in the United States.[2] Originally, the assembly was unicameral, but in 1650, the Governor and his appointed council began serving as the upper house of a now bicameral legislature. These appointees had close political and economic ties to the proprietors of the Maryland colony, Cecilius Calvert and his descendants. Thus, the upper house in colonial times often disagreed with the lower house, which was elected, tended to be more populist, and pushed for greater legislative power in the colony.[3]

The upper house was briefly abolished during the English Civil War, as Puritan governors attempted to consolidate control and prevent the return of any proprietary influence. It was again abolished by Governor Josias Fendall in 1660, who sought to create a colonial government based on an elected unicameral legislature like that of the Virginia colony. The position of Governor was removed from the legislature in 1675, but for the following century, its function and powers largely remained the same.[3]

In 1776, following the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, Maryland threw off proprietary control and established a new constitution. Under this new constitution, the upper house of the General Assembly first became known as the Maryland Senate. The new body consisted of fifteen senators appointed to five-year terms by an electoral college. The college, made up of two electors from each county and one each from the cities of Baltimore and Annapolis, was required to select nine senators from the western shore and six from the eastern shore.[3]

The first election under the 1776 constitution took place in 1781, and the system would not change again until 1838. In the interim, a number of problems had cropped up in the appointment process. Under the 1776 constitution, the electoral college selected all of the State Senators, and faced no restrictions, other than the geographic requirement, in how they were selected. As a result, it was commonplace for the electoral college to select a State Senate entirely composed of one political party.[4] Only in 1826, when National Republicans won a majority on the electoral college with a pledge to elect a balanced Senate, was more than one party represented. That year, the electoral college selected 11 National Republicans and four Federalists.[5] Additionally, all vacancies in the State Senate were filled by the Senate itself, which frequently resulted in a disproportionately high share of the Senate having been appointed to fill vacancies. During one session, fourteen out of fifteen senators had been selected to fill vacancies.[4]

In 1836, tensions rose over the State Senate's composition. That year, the Democratic Party won 53% of the statewide vote for the electoral college, but ended up with only nineteen of forty electors. When the Whig electors planned to elect an all-Whig State Senate, the Democratic electors absconded, denying the electoral college a quorum. The refusal to elect a State Senate also prevented the election of a Governor, as Maryland's governors were elected by the legislature. Ultimately, however, the Democrats' position weakened following the State House elections the following month, when the Whigs won an overwhelming majority. The electors returned, providing a quorum, and an all-Whig Senate was elected.[4]

The controversy ultimately resulted in long-term changes to the body in 1838. The electoral college was abolished, terms were lengthened to six years with rotating elections such that a third of the senate would be elected every two years, a single Senator was chosen by direct election from each county and the City of Baltimore, and vacancies were filled by special elections. The Senate no longer acted as the Governor's Council, although they would continue to confirm the Governor's appointments. Constitutional changes altered this new system slightly in 1851, when terms were shortened to four years, and 1864, when Baltimore City was given three Senate districts rather than one, but substantial change to the structure of the Senate did not come again until 1964.[3]

In 1964, the Supreme Court ruled in Reynolds v. Sims that state legislative seats must be apportioned on the principle of one man, one vote. A number of state legislatures, including Maryland, had systems based on geography rather than population, and the court rules that this violated the 14th Amendment. Disproportionate population growth across Maryland since 1838 meant that the principle of one seat per county gave the voters of some counties, such as those on the eastern shore, disproportionate representation. Other counties, especially those in suburban areas, were underrepresented.[3]

A special session of the legislature in 1965 changed the Senate to represent 16 districts and reapportioned the seats, again by county, but did so in such a way as to make the representation more proportional to population than it had been. Thus, the eastern shore, which had previously elected nine senators, elected only four after 1965. This was done to preserve the ideal of having whole counties represented by a single Senator, rather than breaking counties up into multiple districts. A constitutional amendment in 1972 expanded the Senate to 47 members, elected from districts proportional to the population. These districts are reapportioned every ten years based on the United States Census to ensure they remain proportional.[3]

Powers and legislative process

The Maryland Senate, as the upper house of the bicameral Maryland General Assembly, shares with the Maryland House of Delegates the responsibility for making laws in the state of Maryland. Bills are often developed in the period between sessions of the General Assembly by the Senate's standing committees or by individual senators. They are then submitted by senators to the Maryland Department of Legislative Services for drafting of legislative language. Between 2000 and 2005, an average of 907 bills were introduced in the Senate annually during the three-month legislative session. The bill is submitted, and receives the first of three constitutionally mandated readings on the floor of the Senate, before being assigned to a committee.[6] The decision about whether legislation passes is often made in the committees. Committees can hold legislation and prevent it from reaching the Senate floor. The recommendations of committees on bills carry tremendous weight; it is rare for the Senate as a whole to approve legislation that has received a negative committee report.[2] Once a committee has weighed in on a piece of legislation, the bill returns to the floor for second hearing, called the "consideration of committee" report, and a third hearing, which happens just before the floor vote on it.[6]

Once passed by the Senate, a bill is sent to the House of Delegates for consideration. If the House also approves the bill without amendment, it is sent to the Governor. If there is amendment, however, the Senate may either reconsider the bill with amendments or ask for the establishment of a conference committee to work out differences in the versions of the bill passed by each chamber. Once a piece of legislation approved by both houses is forwarded to the Governor, it may either be signed or vetoed. If it is signed, it takes effect on the effective date of the legislation, usually October 1 of that year. If it is vetoed, both the Senate and the House of Delegates must vote by a three-fifths majority to overturn the veto. They may not, however, overturn a veto in the first year of a new term, since the bill would have been passed during the previous session. Additionally, joint resolutions and the budget bill may not be vetoed, although the General Assembly is constitutionally limited in the extent to which it may influence the latter; it may only decrease the Governor's budget proposal, not increase it.[6]

Unlike the House of Delegates, the Senate has the sole responsibility in the state's legislative branch for confirming gubernatorial appointees to positions that require confirmation. After the Governor forwards his nomination to the Senate, the Executive Nominations Committee reviews the nominee and makes a recommendation for confirmation or rejection to the Senate as a whole. Only one gubernatorial nominee in recent history has been rejected; Lynn Buhl, nominated as Maryland Secretary of the Environment by Governor Robert Ehrlich, was rejected over concerns about her qualifications.[7] The Senate also has sole responsibility for trying any persons that have been impeached by the House of Delegates. They must be sworn in before such a trial takes place, and a two-thirds majority is required for conviction of the impeached person.

Composition

AffiliationParty

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

Total
DemocraticRepublicanVacant
nowrap style="font-size:80%"2007–2010 Session3314047
nowrap style="font-size:80%"2011–2014 Session3512047
nowrap style="font-size:80%"2015–2018 Session[8] 3314047
nowrap style="font-size:80%"2019–2022 Session[9] 3215047
nowrap style="font-size:80%"2023–2026 Session3413047
Latest voting share

List of current senators

See main article: List of current members of the Maryland Senate.

District Senator Party Since Residence Counties represented
1Mike McKayRepublican2023CumberlandAllegany, Garrett, Washington
2Republican2020HagerstownFrederick, Washington
3Karen Lewis YoungDemocratic2023FrederickFrederick
4William FoldenRepublican2023MyersvilleFrederick
5Republican2015ManchesterCarroll
6Republican2015DundalkBaltimore County
7Republican2011JoppaBaltimore County, Harford
8Democratic2003Perry HallBaltimore County
9Democratic2019Ellicott CityHoward, Montgomery
10Benjamin BrooksDemocratic2023Milford MillBaltimore County
11Democratic2020PikesvilleBaltimore County
12Democratic2019ColumbiaAnne Arundel County, Howard
13Democratic2015ColumbiaHoward
14Democratic2016BrookevilleMontgomery
15Democratic2013PotomacMontgomery
16Democratic2024BethesdaMontgomery
17Democratic2015RockvilleMontgomery
18Democratic2019KensingtonMontgomery
19Democratic2019DerwoodMontgomery
20Democratic2016Silver SpringMontgomery
21Democratic2007College ParkAnne Arundel, Prince George's
22Alonzo T. WashingtonDemocratic2023GreenbeltPrince George's
23Democratic2021Upper MarlboroPrince George's
24Democratic2011LandoverPrince George's
25Democratic2023ForestvillePrince George's
26C. Anthony MuseDemocratic2023AccokeekPrince George's
27Democratic2021BrandywineCalvert, Charles, Prince George's
28Democratic2019Indian HeadCharles
29Republican2019MechanicsvilleCalvert, St. Mary's
30Democratic2019AnnapolisAnne Arundel
31Republican2007Glen BurnieAnne Arundel
32Democratic2019LinthicumAnne Arundel
33Democratic2023Severna ParkAnne Arundel
34Democratic2023Havre de GraceHarford
35Republican2019ChurchvilleCecil, Harford
36Republican2013QueenstownCaroline, Cecil, Kent, Queen Anne's
37Johnny MautzRepublican2023Saint MichaelsCaroline, Dorchester, Talbot, Wicomico
38Republican2019Ocean CitySomerset, Wicomico, Worcester
39Democratic2007Montgomery VillageMontgomery
40Democratic2019BaltimoreBaltimore City
41Democratic2018BaltimoreBaltimore City
42Republican2019TowsonBaltimore County, Carroll County
43Democratic2019BaltimoreBaltimore City, Baltimore County
44Democratic2020BaltimoreBaltimore County
45Democratic2019BaltimoreBaltimore City
46Democratic2011BaltimoreBaltimore City
47Democratic2019CheverlyPrince George's

Organization

Maryland's Senate consists of senators elected from 47 Senate districts. While each senator has the power to introduce and vote on bills and make motions on the floor, various committees, caucuses, and leadership positions help to organize the work of the Senate. Senators elect a President of the Senate, who serves as the presiding officer of the chamber. They also elect a President Pro Tempore, who presides over the chamber when the President is absent. The President of the Maryland Senate has significant influence over legislation that passes through the body through both formal means, such as his ability to appoint committee chairs and leaders of the majority party, and informal means that are less easily defined.[2] [10] These powers place the President of the Maryland Senate among the strongest state legislature presiding officers in the country.[2]

Once legislation is introduced, it is passed to one of the standing committees of the Senate. There are six such committees. As a whole, the Maryland General Assembly has fewer standing committees than any other state legislature in the United States. Each committee has between 10 and 15 members.[2] Four of the standing committees deal primarily with legislation; the Budget and Taxation Committee, the Education, Energy, and Environment Committee, the Finance Committee, and the Judicial Proceedings Committee. The Chairs of these legislative committees have the power to determine whether their committees will hear a bill, and they therefore have significant influence over legislation.[2] The Executive Nominations Committee manages the Senate's responsibility to confirm gubernatorial appointments and makes recommendations of approval and disapproval to the body as a whole. Lastly, the Rules Committee sets the rules and procedures of the body. It also has the power to review legislation that has been introduced by a member of the Senate after the deadline for submission, and decide whether to refer it to a standing committee or let it die.[11] Along with serving on the Senate committees, members of the Senate also serve on a number of joint committees with members of the House of Delegates.[12]

While the committees are established by formal Senate rules, there are a number of caucuses that exercise significant influence over the legislative process. The most powerful of these are the Democratic Caucus and the Republican Caucus, each of which has a leader and a whip, referred to as a majority and minority leader and whip.[12] As Democrats currently control a majority of seats in the Senate, their leader is referred to as the Majority Leader, and their caucus is able to influence legislation to a greater extent than the Republican caucus. The Majority Leader and Minority leader are responsible for managing their party's participation in debate on the floor. Party caucuses also raise and distribute campaign money to assist their candidates.[2] The Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland and Women Legislators of Maryland, caucuses of African-American and female Senators respectively, also play prominent roles in the Senate.[13]

Professional services for members of the Senate and the House of Delegates are provided by the Department of Legislative Services, which is non-partisan. Individual members are also assisted by partisan staff members, and those in leadership positions have additional partisan staff.[2] These staff members help to manage the offices of the senators. Each senator has one year-round administrative assistant, as well as a secretary who assists them during the legislative session. There is also an allowance given to help pay for district offices.[14]

Membership

See also: President of the Maryland State Senate and List of current members of the Maryland Senate.

Qualifications

To be eligible to run for the Maryland Senate, a person must be a citizen and be at least 25 years old. They must also have lived in the state for at least one year, and must have lived in the district in which they are to run for at least six months, assuming the district has existed with its current boundaries for at least that long. No elected or appointed official of the United States government, including the military, may serve in the Senate, excluding those serving in the military reserves and National Guard. Similarly, no employees of the state government may serve, except for law enforcement officers, firefighters, and rescue workers.[15]

Elections and vacancies

Members of the Maryland Senate are elected every four years, in off-year elections in the middle of terms for Presidents of the United States.[15] Party nominations are determined by primary elections.[2] The general election for Senate seats and all other state and federal elections in the normal cycle is held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. Should a Senate seat become vacant in the middle of a term, because of death, illness, incapacitation, disqualification, resignation, or expulsion of a member of the Senate, that seat is filled by appointment. The Central Committee of the previous Senator's party in the county or counties in which the Senate district lies makes a recommendation to the Governor on whom to appoint to the seat. Within fifteen days of the Central Committee's recommendation being selected, the Governor must appoint that person to the vacant seat.[15]

The 47 districts from which senators are elected are apportioned every ten years on the basis of population. Maryland's constitution explicitly defines the process for the drawing of these districts, requiring that the Governor make a recommendation of a new electoral map and submit it for legislative approval. As of 2005, there were approximately 112,000 people in each district. Each Senate district also elects three Delegates, and incumbent senators and delegates will often run jointly as members of incumbent slates in their districts. It is rare, however, for an incumbent to be challenged.[2]

Salaries and benefits

Members of the State Senate and the House of Delegates, besides the Senate President and Speaker of the House of Delegates (referred to as the "Presiding Officers"), earn the same salary. These salaries are determined by the General Assembly Compensation Commission.[16] After two terms, 2007-2010 and 2011-2014, during which the salary for members of the General Assembly was $43,500 per year ($56,500 for the Presiding Officers), members began receiving annual raises in 2015 such that, at the start of the 2018 General Assembly Session, they will be earning $50,330 per year, an increase of about 16 percent over four years. The salaries of the Presiding Officers will be increased to $65,371 annually.[17] The increase is being phased in the amounts of approximately $1,707 per year for rank-and-file legislators and $2,218 per year for the Presiding Officers.

Senators can also seek reimbursement for expenses related to meals and lodging during the legislative session, and for certain travel expenses related to their duties at any point during the year. They also have access to benefits received by state employees, including health and life insurance as well as retirement savings plans. Maryland has a voluntary legislator pension plan to which both senators and delegates have access. Besides receiving their own benefits, Senators can award up to $138,000 each year in scholarships to students of their choosing if those students meet requirements set by Senate rules.

Current makeup

As of January 2023, a majority of seats in the Maryland Senate are held by members of the Democratic Party, with 34 Democrats and 13 Republicans, greater than a two-thirds majority.[18] [19] This dominance is nothing new, as Democrats have had strong majorities in the chamber for decades. Democrats tend to control seats in the large population centers such as Baltimore City, Montgomery County, and Prince George's County, while Republicans control most seats on the Eastern Shore and in western Maryland. The chamber has also had significant numbers of women and African-Americans serve, with women averaging around 36% of the seats and African-Americans around 31%.[9] [20]

Leadership

On January 8, 2020, Democratic senator Bill Ferguson, from the 46th district, was elected to the position of Senate president following the retirement of the longest-serving Senate president in both Maryland and American history, Thomas V. Mike Miller.[21] Melony G. Griffith, from the 25th District in Prince George's County, is the President Pro Tempore. The Democratic caucus is led by Majority Leader Nancy J. King of the 39th District in Montgomery County.[22] Stephen S. Hershey Jr. of the 36th District, which covers Caroline, Cecil, Kent, and Queen Anne's counties, was elected as the minority leader by the Senate's Republican Caucus in 2022.[23]

Rules and procedures

Many rules and procedures in the Maryland Senate are set by the state constitution.[15] Beyond the constitutional mandates, rules in the Senate are developed by the Rules Committee.[11] The Senate and House of Delegates both meet for ninety days following the second Wednesday in January, although these sessions may be extended for up to thirty days by majority votes in both houses, and special sessions may be called by the Governor.[2] The Senate meets in the Senate Chamber of the Maryland State House, which has both gallery seating and a door open to the State House lobby, the latter being mandated by the state constitution.[15] Seating in the Senate is by party, with the leaders of each party choosing the exact seating assignments.[2] Each Senator has offices in Annapolis, in the Miller or James Senate Office Buildings.

A typical session of the Senate begins with a call to order by the President of the Senate. After the call to order, the previous day's journal is approved, petitions are heard, and orders involving committee and leadership appointments or changes to the rules are presented. First, readings of legislation take place. Senators are then given leeway to introduce any visitors, often people observing its deliberations from the gallery above the Senate chamber. Then the Senators consider legislation. They begin with unfinished business from the previous session, then consider legislation and special orders with accompanying reports from committees. At the discretion of the presiding officer, the Senate may adjourn at any time, unless a majority of members present object to adjournment.[24]

Lobbying is common in Annapolis; there are more than 700 lobbyists registered with the state. While lobbyists may spend freely on advocacy, they are limited in gifts to legislators and in their ability to contribute to campaigns.[2] Ethics issues related to lobbyists and other matters are handled by the Joint Committee on Legislative Ethics, a twelve-member committee that includes six senators. Members of the Senate may turn to either this committee or an ethics counsel to help them resolve questions of potential ethical conflict. Members are encouraged to avoid conflicts of interest, and are required to submit public financial disclosures to the state. In addition to employment prohibitions laid out in the state constitution, members are barred from advocating for any paying client before any part of the state government.[24]

Past composition

See main article: Political party strength in Maryland.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Report of the General Assembly Compensation Commission . 22 August 2019.
  2. Book: Little, Thomas H. . Ogle, David B. . amp . The legislative branch of state government: people, process, and politics . ABC-CLIO . 2006 . 312–316 . registration . why are maryland senate committee chairs so powerful. . 1-85109-761-9.
  3. Web site: Senate: Origins and Functions . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . October 26, 2009 . October 1, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121001182444/http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/senf.html . dead .
  4. Yeargain. Tyler. 2020. The Legal History of State Legislative Vacancies and Temporary Appointments. Journal of Law and Policy. 28. 2. 578–80. April 29, 2021.
  5. Book: Steiner, Bernard C.. The Electoral College for the Senate of Maryland and the Nineteen Van Buren Electors. 1896. American Historical Association Annual Report for 1895. Washington, D.C.. Government Printing Office. 134.
  6. Web site: General Assembly — The Legislative Process: How a Bill Becomes a Law . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . October 27, 2009 . April 12, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210412200710/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/07leg/html/proc.html . dead .
  7. Web site: Kobell . Rona . Lynn Buhl, EPA . Bay and Environment . Baltimore Sun . July 21, 2008 . October 27, 2009 . October 16, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20231016025841/https://www.baltimoresun.com/bs-mtblog-2007-04-welcome_to_our_blog-story.html . dead .
  8. Web site: The Baltimore Sun . November 5, 2014 . Republicans ride GOP wave to gain General Assembly seats . November 5, 2014.
  9. Web site: The Baltimore Sun . January 9, 2019 . By the numbers: 188 members, more than 2,500 bills in Maryland General Assembly session . January 24, 2019 . April 19, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190419233704/https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-session-numbers-20181228-story.html . dead .
  10. Web site: Pagnucco . Adam . Mike Miller is Not Going Anywhere . Maryland Politics Watch . October 27, 2009.
  11. Web site: Senate — Standing Committees . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . October 27, 2009 . June 19, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210619143916/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/sencom.html . dead .
  12. Web site: General Assembly: Organizational Structure . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . October 27, 2009 . April 11, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210411004425/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/07leg/html/ga.html . dead .
  13. Web site: Maryland Department of Legislative Services . Maryland Legislator's Handbook . 2006 . 30 . October 27, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110318055205/http://mlis.state.md.us/2006rs/misc/Legislative_Handbooks/Volume_I.pdf . March 18, 2011 . dead . mdy-all .
  14. Web site: Maryland Department of Legislative Services . Maryland Legislator's Handbook . 2006 . 39–41 . October 27, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110318055205/http://mlis.state.md.us/2006rs/misc/Legislative_Handbooks/Volume_I.pdf . March 18, 2011 . dead . mdy-all .
  15. Book: Constitution of the State of Maryland, Article 3 . Maryland State Archives . October 27, 2009 . June 19, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210619155744/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/43const/html/03art3.html . dead .
  16. Web site: If legislators do nothing, they get a pay raise. Lazarick. Len. March 19, 2014. Maryland Reporter. April 24, 2017.
  17. Web site: Report of the General Assembly Compensation Commission. January 2014. General Assembly of Maryland. 21. April 24, 2017.
  18. Web site: Maryland Senators — Democrats . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . January 24, 2019 . October 25, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211025073535/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/sendem.html . dead .
  19. Web site: Maryland Senators — Republicans . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . January 24, 2019 . October 25, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211025082331/https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/senrep.html . dead .
  20. Web site: Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland, Inc. . Maryland Manual Online . Maryland State Archives . January 24, 2019.
  21. Web site: Miller says he'll step down as Maryland senate president; Democrats pick Baltimore's Bill Ferguson to replace him. The Baltimore Sun. Pamela Wood, Luke Broadwater. October 24, 2019. February 1, 2020.
  22. Web site: Current Senate Members. January 22, 2020. General Assembly of Maryland. October 28, 2020.
  23. News: Sears . Bryan P. . Maryland Senate Republicans choose Hershey as new leader . November 28, 2022 . . November 28, 2022.
  24. Web site: Maryland Department of Legislative Services . Maryland Legislator's Handbook . 2006 . 47–51 . October 27, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110318055205/http://mlis.state.md.us/2006rs/misc/Legislative_Handbooks/Volume_I.pdf . March 18, 2011 . dead . mdy-all .