Michigan Senate Explained

Michigan State Senate
Legislature:Michigan Legislature
Coa Pic:Seal of Michigan.svg
House Type:Upper house
Term Length:4 years
Term Limits:3 terms (12 years)
Foundation:January 26, 1837
Motto:In God We Trust
Preceded By:Michigan Territorial Council
New Session:January 11, 2023
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1:Garlin Gilchrist (D)
Election1:January 1, 2019
Leader3 Type:Majority Leader
Leader3:Winnie Brinks (D)
Election3:January 1, 2023
Leader2 Type:President Pro Tempore
Leader2:Jeremy Moss (D)
Election2:January 11, 2023
Leader4 Type:Minority Leader
Leader4:Aric Nesbitt (R)
Election4:January 11, 2023
Members:38 voting members
Political Groups1:Majority

Minority

Structure1:Michigan State Senate.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Salary:$71,685 salary/year + $10,800 per diem/year
Authority:Article IV, Michigan Constitution
Last Election1:November 8, 2022
(38 seats)
Next Election1:November 3, 2026
(38 seats)
Meeting Place:State Senate Chamber
Michigan State Capitol
Lansing, Michigan
Session Room:Michigan Senate.jpg
Redistricting:Michigan Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission
Rules:Senate Rules

The Michigan Senate is the upper house of the Michigan Legislature. Along with the Michigan House of Representatives, it composes the state legislature, which has powers, roles and duties defined by Article IV of the Michigan Constitution, adopted in 1963.[1] The primary purpose of the Legislature is to enact new laws and amend or repeal existing laws.

The Michigan Senate is composed of 38 members, each elected from a single-member district with a population of between approximately 212,400 to 263,500 residents.[2] Legislative districts are drawn on the basis of population figures, provided by the federal decennial census. In January 2023, Democrats took the majority with 20 seats to Republicans' 18 seats. The Senate chamber is located in the State Capitol building.[2]

Titles

Members of the Michigan Senate are called senators. Because this shadows the terminology used to describe members of the United States Senate, constituents and the news media, using The Associated Press Stylebook, often refer to members of the Michigan Senate as state senators when necessary to avoid confusion with their federal counterparts.

Terms

Senators are elected on a partisan basis for four-year terms, concurrent with the election of the Governor of Michigan. Terms for senators begin on January 1 at noon, following the November general election and end on January 1 when their replacements are sworn in.[2]

Senate elections are always held two years after the election for President of the United States, with the next election scheduled for November 3, 2026.

Term limits

On November 3, 1992, almost 59 percent of Michigan voters backed Proposal B, the Michigan Term Limits Amendment, which amended the state constitution, to enact term limits on federal and state officials. In 1995, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could not enact congressional term limits, but ruled that the state-level term limits remain. Under the amendment, a person could be elected to the state senate two times. A provision governing partial terms was also included. These provisions became Article IV, section 54 and Article V, section 30 of the Michigan Constitution.[3] On November 8, 2022, nearly 2 in 3 voters approved Proposal 1, limiting state legislators to 12 years combined in either chamber of the legislature, but incumbent senators re-elected in 2022 would remain eligible for their new terms even if it pushed them over the 12-year limit.[4]

Qualifications

Each senator must be a citizen of the United States, at least 21 years of age, and an elector of the district they represent. Under state law, moving out of the district shall be deemed a vacation of the office. No person who has been convicted of subversion or who has within the preceding 20 years been convicted of a felony involving a breach of public trust shall be eligible for either house of the legislature.

Legislative session

For reckoning periods of time during which the legislature operates, each two-year period coinciding with the election of new members of the House of Representatives is numbered consecutively as a legislature, dating to the first legislature following Michigan's admission as a state. The current two-year term of the legislature (January 1, 2023 – December 31, 2024) is the 102nd Legislature.

Each year during which the legislature meets constitutes a new legislative session. According to Article IV Section 13 of the State Constitution, a new session of the legislature begins when the members of each house convene, on the second Wednesday of January every year at noon. A regular session of the legislature typically lasts throughout the entire year with several periods of recess and adjourns sine die in late December.

The Michigan legislature is one of ten full-time state legislative bodies in the United States.[5] Members receive a base salary of $71,685 per year, which makes them the fourth-highest paid state legislators in the country, after California, Pennsylvania and New York. While legislators in many states receive per diems that make up for lower salaries, Michigan legislators receive $10,800 per year for session and interim expenses.[5] Salaries and expense allowances are determined by the State Officers Compensation Commission.

Any legislation pending in either chamber at the end of a session that is not the end of a legislative term of office continues and carries over to the next legislative session.

Powers and process

The Michigan legislature is authorized by the Michigan Constitution to create and amend the laws of the U.S. state of Michigan, subject to the governor's power to veto legislation. To do so, legislators propose legislation in the forms of bills drafted by a nonpartisan, professional staff. Successful legislation must undergo committee review, three readings on the floor of each house, with appropriate voting majorities, as required, and either be signed into law by the governor or enacted through a veto override approved by two-thirds of the membership of each legislative house.[6]

Composition

AffiliationParty

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

Total
RepublicanVacant
nowrap style="font-size:80%"End of Previous Legislature2216380
nowrap style="font-size:80%"Begin Legislature (2023)1820380
Latest voting share

Leadership

The Michigan Senate is headed by the Lieutenant Governor of Michigan, who serves as President of the Senate but may cast a vote only in the instance of a tie.[7] The presiding officers of the senate, apart from the president, are elected by the body at its first session and serve until their term of office is up. Majority and minority party officers are elected at the same time by their respective caucuses.[8]

The senate majority leader controls the assignment of committees and leadership positions, along with control of the agenda in the chamber.

Members, 2023–2026


District Senator Party Residence Term Eligible for
re-election in 2026
Erika GeissDem Taylor2nd No
Sylvia SantanaDem Detroit2nd No
Stephanie ChangDem Detroit2nd No
Darrin CamilleriDem Brownstown1st Yes
Dayna PolehankiDem Livonia2nd Yes
Mary CavanaghDem Redford1st Yes
Jeremy MossDem Southfield2nd No
Mallory McMorrowDem Royal Oak2nd Yes
Michael WebberRep Rochester Hills1st Yes
Paul WojnoDem Warren2nd No
Veronica KlinefeltDem Eastpointe1st Yes
Kevin HertelDem St. Clair Shores1st Yes
Rosemary BayerDem Beverly Hills2nd Yes
Sue ShinkDem Ann Arbor1st Yes
Jeff IrwinDem Ann Arbor2nd No
Joe BellinoRep Monroe1st Yes
Jonathan LindseyRep Bronson1st Yes
Thomas AlbertRep Lowell1st Yes
Sean McCannDem Kalamazoo2nd No
Aric NesbittRep Porter Township2nd No
Sarah AnthonyDem Lansing1st Yes
Rep 2nd No
Jim RunestadRep White Lake Township2nd No
Ruth JohnsonRep Holly2nd No
Rep Capac2nd No
Kevin DaleyRep Lum2nd No
John CherryDem 1st Yes
Sam SinghDem East Lansing1st Yes
Dem 2nd No
Mark HuizengaRep Walker2nd (1st full) Yes
Roger VictoryRep Hudsonville2nd No
Jon BumsteadRep Newaygo2nd No
Rep 2nd No
Roger HauckRep Mount Pleasant1st Yes
Kristen McDonald RivetDem Bay City1st Yes
Michele HoitengaRep Manton1st Yes
John DamooseRep Harbor Springs1st Yes
Rep 2nd No

Past composition of the Senate

See main article: Political party strength in Michigan.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Article IV Section 1 . Michigan Constitution of 1963 . Michigan Legislature .
  2. Web site: Senate Information . Michigan Senate .
  3. Web site: Constitutional Amendments . Michigan Legislature .
  4. Web site: DesOrmeau . Taylor . November 9, 2022 . Proposal 1: Voters pass plan to shorten term limits, require politicians to disclose finances . November 22, 2022 . MLive . en .
  5. Web site: Full- and Part-Time Legislatures . National Conference of State Legislatures . National Conference of State Legislatures .
  6. Book: Citizens Guide . Michigan House of Representatives .
  7. Web site: Article V, Section 25 . Michigan Constitution of 1963 . Michigan Legislature .
  8. Book: Chapter 1, Section 1 . http://www.senate.michigan.gov/rulesandappts/senaterules.html . Senate Rules . Michigan State Senate . December 26, 2016 .
  9. Web site: Senate Leadership . Michigan Senate .