Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Executive Council of New Hampshire

Encyclopedia : E : EX : EXE : Executive Council of New Hampshire



 

New Hampshire Executive Council
District Name Party
1 Raymond Burton Republican
2 Peter Spaulding Republican
3 Ruth Griffin Republican
4 Raymond Wieczorek Republican
5 Debora Pignatelli Democrat

Executive Council of the State of New Hampshire (commonly Governor's Council) is the Executive body of the U.S. state of New Hampshire. The Executive Council advises the Governor on all matters and provides a check on the governor's power. New Hampshire is one of the few states which has an Executive Council and the state whose council has the most power. While the Governor retains the right to veto legislation and command the New Hampshire National Guard, the Council has veto power over pardons, contracts over $1000 and nominations. The Executive Council Chambers have been located in the New Hampshire State House since the chambers were added to the capitol in 1909.

Construction

300 px
Enlarge
300 px

The Executive Council is made up of 5 councilors elected for two-year terms by their respective districts. The General Court divides the state into five districts by population, as needed for the public good, with each district containing approximately 247,000 citizens.

The governor has the sole power and authority to convene the meetings of the council at his discretion. The council does not have the power or authority to convene itself. The governor with, or a majority, of the council "may and shall, from time to time hold a council, for ordering and directing the affairs of the state, according to the laws of the land." ([[wikisource:New Hampshire Constitution#Council|Part II. Art. 62 of the N.H. Constitution]])

Members of the council may be impeached by the house, and tried by the senate for bribery, corruption, malpractice, or maladministration. ([[wikisource:New Hampshire Constitution#Council|Part II. Art 63]])

The constitution provides for the governor and council to be compensated for their services, from time to time, by such grants as the general courts shall think reasonable. (Part II. Art. 58) Each councilor is provided a salary $12,354 (FY 2006) and an additional $4000 for each councilor in districts 2-5 ($5800 for District #1) is given to each councilor in lieu of expenses.

Districts

Currently, the state is divided into 5 Executive Council districts:

Powers

The Governor and Council, together, have the authority and responsibility over the administration of the affairs of the State as defined in the New Hampshire Constitution, the New Hampshire statutes (Revised Statutes Annotated), and the advisory opinions of the New Hampshire Supreme Court and the state Attorney General. The General Court has also designated specific powers to the governor and council in [RSA Chapter 4.] Other powers of the council derive from the NH Constitution:

History

Colonial Era

The Executive Council had its beginnings in 1679, when King Charles II issued a 3,438 word commission, on September 18. The Royal Commission separated the territory of New Hampshire from Massachusetts and directed that a new government be organized in the Province of New Hampshire. A President and a nine-member Council (representing the four towns of Portsmouth, Dover, Hampton and Exeter) were appointed by the king from the 4,000 settlers of the seacoast area and were required to assume office by January 21, 1680.

Appointees to the Council and President were all Puritans, some with long associations with the Boston government and several had served in the Puritan Legislature in Boston. Some of the designated Council members were so firmly opposed to the new government that they considered refusing their appointed positions. When an ultimatum was presented that less desirable men would replace them, they all relented and took the oath of office on January 21, 1680.

John Cutt, a wealthy Portsmouth merchant, was appointed the first President (later called Governor) of New Hampshire. The first official act of the President and Council was to create a legislative body, then called an Assembly, to raise taxes and establish public conduct laws. The president and council obtained listings of property owners in the four towns and posted those freeholders (voters) in each town, to elect representatives to the Assembly, which was convened on March 16, 1680.

The first Assembly, of which the Council was the upper branch, was quick to express its opposition to the directives of the royal command. They promptly enacted a law that New Hampshire's property owners' titles, as granted by the Massachusetts Bay Colony over the years, would continue as valid, contraty to the ruling of the King. The legislators also joined with the president and his council in voting an apology to the Bay State for having been torn from their jurisdiction. They also expressed special appreciation for the favors they received through the 38 year affiliation.

At that time, the Council's primary responsibility was to report on the activities of the president to the King, especially if he strayed from the crown's dictates.

Post-Colonial Council

On January 5, 1776, the founding fathers of the State created New Hampshire's first constitution, which eliminated the position of governor, but kept the concept of a Council due to its former status as a check on the power of authoritarian rule, a reoccurring theme during the Revolution and afterwards with the creation of the Articles of Confederation, an ethos that made the founding fathers change selection of councilors from appointed to elected positions

In the second and current Constitution, first written in 1784, a head executive was renewed, but given the title "President" rather than Governor to avoid the connotations of the Royal Governorship during the Colonial period(which was changed back to Governor by 1792.) However, the Council, while being unable to act on its own, was now given the right to veto the head of state by a 3-2 vote.

The only time the Council was in danger of being eliminated was in 1850, when the future US President Franklin Pierce suggested its removal during that year's Constitutional Convention, with the voters of New Hampshire disagreeing with him by a more than 2-1 margin (27,910 to 11,299).

In 1933, Executive Council meetings were opened to the public.

References

Official Websites

State of New Hampshire

Constitution | General Court | Executive Council | Governors | Supreme Court
Regions: Dartmouth-Lake Sunapee | Golden Triangle | Great North Woods | Lakes Region | Merrimack Valley | Monadnock | Seacoast | White Mountains
Counties:

Belknap | Carroll | Cheshire | Coos | Grafton | Hillsborough | Merrimack | Rockingham | Strafford | Sullivan
Cities: Berlin | Claremont | Concord | Dover | Franklin | Keene | Laconia | Lebanon | Manchester | Nashua | Portsmouth | Rochester | Somersworth
Towns:

Acworth | Albany | Alexandria | Allenstown | Alstead | Alton | Amherst | Andover | Antrim | Ashland | Atkinson | Auburn | Barnstead | Barrington | Bartlett | Bath | Bedford | Belmont | Bennington | Benton | Bethlehem | Boscawen | Bow | Bradford | Brentwood | Bridgewater | Bristol | Brookfield | Brookline | Campton | Canaan | Candia | Canterbury | Carroll | Center Harbor | Charlestown | Chatham | Chester | Chesterfield | Chichester | Clarksville | Colebrook | Columbia | Conway | Cornish | Croydon | Dalton | Danbury | Danville | Deerfield | Deering | Derry | Dorchester | Dublin | Dummer | Dunbarton | Durham | East Kingston | Easton | Eaton | Effingham | Ellsworth | Enfield | Epping | Epsom | Errol | Exeter | Farmington | Fitzwilliam | Francestown | Franconia | Freedom | Fremont | Gilford | Gilmanton | Gilsum | Goffstown | Gorham | Goshen | Grafton | Grantham | Greenfield | Greenland | Greenville | Groton | Hampstead | Hampton | Hampton Falls | Hancock | Hanover | Harrisville | Hart's Location | Haverhill | Hebron | Henniker | Hill | Hillsborough | Hinsdale | Holderness | Hollis | Hooksett | Hopkinton | Hudson | Jackson | Jaffrey | Jefferson | Kensington | Kingston | Lancaster | Landaff | Langdon | Lee | Lempster | Lincoln | Lisbon | Litchfield | Littleton | Londonderry | Loudon | Lyman | Lyme | Lyndeborough | Madbury | Madison | Marlborough | Marlow | Mason | Meredith | Merrimack | Middleton | Milan | Milford | Milton | Monroe | Mont Vernon | Moultonborough | Nelson | New Boston | New Castle | New Durham | New Hampton | New Ipswich | New London | Newbury | Newfields | Newington | Newmarket | Newport | Newton | North Hampton | Northfield | Northumberland | Northwood | Nottingham | Orange | Orford | Ossipee | Pelham | Pembroke | Peterborough | Piermont | Pittsburg | Pittsfield | Plainfield | Plaistow | Plymouth | Randolph | Raymond | Richmond | Rindge | Rollinsford | Roxbury | Rumney | Rye | Salem | Salisbury | Sanbornton | Sandown | Sandwich | Seabrook | Sharon | Shelburne | South Hampton | Springfield | Stark | Stewartstown | Stoddard | Strafford | Stratford | Stratham | Sugar Hill | Sullivan | Sunapee | Surry | Sutton | Swanzey | Tamworth | Temple | Thornton | Tilton | Troy | Tuftonboro | Unity | Wakefield | Walpole | Warner | Warren | Washington | Waterville Valley | Weare | Webster | Wentworth | Westmoreland | Whitefield | Wilmot | Wilton | Winchester | Windham | Windsor | Wolfeboro | Woodstock
Unincorporated: Atkinson and Gilmanton Academy Grant | Bean's Grant | Bean's Purchase | Cambridge | Chandler's Purchase | Crawford's Purchase | Cutt's Grant | Dix's Grant | Dixville | Erving's Location | Green's Grant | Hadley's Purchase | Hale's Location | Kilkenny | Livermore | Low and Burbank's Grant | Martin's Location | Millsfield | Odell | Pinkham's Grant | Sargent's Purchase | Second College Grant | Success | Thompson and Meserve's Purchase | Wentworth's Location

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: