California_Assembly

California State Assembly

California State Assembly

Lower house of the California State Legislature


The California State Assembly is the lower house of the California State Legislature, the upper house being the California State Senate. The Assembly convenes, along with the State Senate, at the California State Capitol in Sacramento.

Quick Facts Type, Term limits ...

The Assembly consists of 80 members, with each member representing at least 465,000 people. Due to a combination of the state's large population and a legislature that has not been expanded since the ratification of the 1879 Constitution,[1] the Assembly has the largest population-per-representative ratio of any state lower house and second largest of any legislative lower house in the United States after the federal House of Representatives.

Members of the California State Assembly are generally referred to using the titles Assemblyman (for men), Assemblywoman (for women), or Assemblymember (gender-neutral). In the current legislative session, Democrats have a three-fourths supermajority of 62 seats, while Republicans control a minority of 18 seats.

Leadership

The Speaker presides over the State Assembly in the chief leadership position, controlling the flow of legislation and committee assignments. The Speaker is nominated by the caucus of the majority party and elected by the full Assembly. Other leaders, such as the majority and minority leaders, are elected by their respective party caucuses according to each party's strength in the chamber.

The current Speaker is Democrat Robert Rivas (29th–Hollister). The Majority Leader is Democrat Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (4thWinters), while the minority leader is Republican James Gallagher (3rdYuba City).[2]

Terms of office

Members are allowed, by current term limits, to serve 12 years in the legislature in any combination of four-year State Senate or two-year State Assembly terms. However, members elected to the Legislature prior to 2012 are restricted to three two-year terms (six years), few if any legislators remain from this era, though it could affect future candidates running after a hiatus from office.

Every two years, all 80 seats in the Assembly are subject to election. This is in contrast to the State Senate, in which only half of its 40 seats are subject to election every two years.

Meeting chamber

The chamber's green tones are based on the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. The dais rests along a wall shaped like an "E", with its central projection housing the rostrum. Along the cornice appears a portrait of Abraham Lincoln and a Latin quotation: legislatorum est justas leges condere ("It is the duty of legislators to pass just laws"). Almost every decorating element is identical to the Senate Chamber.

Candidate qualifications

To run for the Assembly, a candidate must be a United States citizen and a registered voter in the district at the time nomination papers are issued, and meet the criteria of the term limits described above. According to Article 4, Section 2(c) of the California Constitution, the candidate must have one year of residency in the legislative district and California residency for three years.[3]

Employees

The chief clerk of the Assembly, a position that has existed since the Assembly's creation, is responsible for many administrative duties. The chief clerk is the custodian of all Assembly bills and records and publishes the Assembly Daily Journal, the minutes of floor sessions, as well as the Assembly Daily File, the Assembly agenda. The chief clerk is the Assembly's parliamentarian, and in this capacity gives advice to the presiding officer on matters of parliamentary procedure. The chief clerk is also responsible for engrossing and enrolling of measures, and the transmission of legislation to the governor.[4]

The Assembly also employs the position of chaplain, a position that has existed in both houses since the first legislative session back in 1850. Currently, the chaplain of the Assembly is Imam Mohammad Yasir Khan, the first chaplain historically that practices Islam.

The position of sergeant-at-arms of the Assembly has existed since 1849; Samuel N. Houston was the first to hold this post, overseeing one deputy. The sergeant-at-arms is mostly tasked with law enforcement duties, but customarily also has a ceremonial and protocol role. Today, some fifty employees are part of the Assembly Sergeant-at-Arms Office.[5]

Current session

Composition

62 18
Democratic Republican
More information Affiliation, Party (Shading indicates majority caucus) ...

Past composition of the Assembly

Officers

More information Position, Name ...

The Chief Clerk, the Chief Sergeant-at-Arms, and the Chaplains are not members of the Legislature.

Members

More information District, Name ...
  • elected in a special election

Seating chart

Speaker
R. Rivas
Sanchez Chen Davies Lackey Ta Gallagher Bryan Ortega Calderon Holden Petrie-Norris Irwin
Joe Patterson V. Fong Jim Patterson Dixon Essayli Flora Zbur Gipson Nguyen Lee Muratsuchi Jackson
Alanis Dahle Hoover Mathis Wilson Grayson Ting Connolly Lowenthal Low McCarty Schiavo
Wallis Waldron Bennett Hart Bauer-Kahan Quirk-Silva Friedman Pellerin M. Fong Bains Santiago Wicks
Ward Maienschein McKinnor Jones-Sawyer Bonta Kalra Rubio Wood Villapudua J. Carrillo Arambula Rodriguez
W. Carrillo Pacheco Addis Boerner Papan L. Rivas Reyes Weber Cervantes Rendon Ramos Valencia
Berman Gabriel Haney Aguiar-Curry R. Rivas Soria Alvarez Garcia

Standing Committees

Current committees, chairs and vice chairs include:[9]

More information Committee, Chair ...

Recent sessions

See also


References

  1. "California Constitution of 1879, prior to any amendments" (PDF). California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
  2. "Officers of the California State Assembly | Assembly Internet". assembly.ca.gov. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
  3. About Us, Office of the Chief Clerk, California State Assembly.
  4. History Archived June 16, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, Sergeant-at-Arms Office, California State Assembly.
  5. "Committees". January 6, 2022. Retrieved January 6, 2022.

38°34′35″N 121°29′36″W


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