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Mississippi House of Representatives

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Mississippi House of Representatives


General Information
Type:   Lower house
Term limits:   None
2011 session start:   January 4, 2011
Website:   Official House Page
Leadership
House Speaker:  William McCoy, (D)
Majority Leader:   Tyrone Ellis (D)
Minority leader:   E. Harvey Moss (R)
Structure
Members:  122
   Democratic Party (68)
Republican Party (54)
Length of term:   4 years
Authority:   Art IV, Mississippi Constitution
Salary:   $10,000/year + per diem
Elections
Last Election:  November 6, 2007 (122 seats)
Next election:  November 8, 2011 (122 seats)
Redistricting:  Legislature first draws, Commission acts as back-Up.

Contents

The Mississippi House of Representatives is the lower house of the Mississippi State Legislature. 122 members serve in the House and are elected to four-year terms every four odd-numbered years. Each member represents an average of 24,322 residents, as of the 2010 Census.[1] After the 2000 Census, each member represented approximately 23,316 residents.[2] The session begins the first Tuesday of each January and each session meets for only 90 days during that term unless the governor orders a special session[3].

Sessions

Article IV of the Mississippi Constitution establishes when the Mississippi State Legislature, of which the House of Representatives is a part, is to meet. Section 36 of Article IV states that the legislature is to convene in regular session on the Tuesday following the first Monday in January of each year. Section 36 limits the length of regular sessions to ninety calendar days, except for once every four years when the regular session can last up to one hundred twenty-five calendar days. The most recent one hundred twenty-five day session was in 2008, and the next session of this kind will be in 2012.

Section 36 also allows the Legislature to extend its sessions for thirty days by a two-thirds vote of both legislative houses. There is no limit on the number of times a session can be extended in this way. In 2010, the Legislature extended its session once, moving the date of adjournment from April 3rd to May 3rd.

Article V of the Mississippi Constitution gives the Governor of Mississippi the power to call the Legislature into extraordinary session. Section 121 of Article V enumerates this power.

2011

In 2011, the Legislature was in session from January 4 through April 7. [4]

2010

In 2010, the House was originally scheduled to be in session from January 5th to April 3rd. However, the session was extended to May 3rd. Additionally, a special session was held that convened on April 22nd and adjourned on April 23rd.[5]

Elections

2011

See also: Mississippi House of Representatives elections, 2011

Elections for the office of Mississippi's state house representatives will be held in Mississippi on November 8, 2011.

2007

As of the 2000 Census, Mississippi's 122 state representatives each represent an average population of 23,317 people. In 2007, the candidate running for state house raised a total of $6,201,617 in campaign contributions.

Year Number of candidates Total contributions
2007 253 $6,201,617
2003 308 $4,346,149

The top 10 donors were:[6]

Donor Amount
Mississippi House Democratic Leadership $343,247
Mississippi Republican Party $248,791
Mississippi Association of Realtors $113,200
Mississippi Medical Association $111,200
Reeves, John $106,730
Lawyers Involved for Mississippi Betterment $99,503
AT&T $91,809
Mississippi Bankers Association $90,500
Mississippi Hospital Association $86,250
Improve Mississippi $85,467

Vacancies

See also: How vacancies are filled in state legislatures
How Vacancies are filled in State Legislatures
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If there is a vacancy in the House, a special election is required to fill the vacant seat. The Governor must call for an election no later than 30 days after the vacancy happened. After the Governor sets the election date, the counties conducting the election must give no less than 45 days notice before the election. All qualifying deadlines are 30 days before the election[7].

No special election is held if the vacancy happens after June 1st in an election year[8].

Partisan composition

See also: Partisan composition of state houses
Party As of September 2011
     Democratic Party 68
     Republican Party 54
Total 122


Representatives

Leadership

The Speaker of the House is the presiding officer of the body.[9]

Current leadership

Position Representative Party
State Speaker of the House William McCoy Democrat
State House Speaker Pro Tempore Joseph Compretta Democrat
State House Majority Leader Tyrone Ellis Democrat
State House Majority Whip E. Harvey Moss Democrat
State House Minority Leader Mark Baker Republican

Salaries

See also: Comparison of state legislative salaries

As of 2011, members of the Mississippi legislature are paid $10,000/year. Per diem is $109/day tied to the federal rate.[10]

The $10,000/year that Mississippi legislators are paid as of 2011 is the same as they were paid during legislative sessions in 2007. Per diem has increased from $91/day in 2007 to $116/day in 2010 and decreased to $109/day in 2011.[11][12]

When sworn in

See also: When state legislators assume office after a general election

Mississippi legislators assume office the first day of the regular session of the year following election. The Constitution requires the Legislature to convene yearly on the Tuesday after the first Monday in January.

Current members

District Representative Party Residence
1 Lester Carpenter Republican Burnsville
2 E. Harvey Moss Democrat Corinth
3 William McCoy Democrat Rienzi
4 Greg Ward Democrat Ripley
5 Kelvin Buck Democrat Holly Springs
6 Eugene Hamilton Republican Olive Branch
7 Wanda Jennings Republican Southaven
8 Larry Baker Republican Senatobia
9 Clara Burnett Democrat Tunica
10 Warner McBride Democrat Courtland
11 Joe Gardner Democrat Batesville
12 Noal Akins Republican Oxford
13 Jack Gadd Democrat Hickory Flat
14 Margaret Rogers Republican New Albany
15 Mac Huddleston Republican Pontotoc
16 Daniel Holland Democrat Plantersville
17 Brian Aldridge Republican Tupelo
18 Jerry Turner Republican Baldwin
19 Mark DuVall Democrat Mantachic
20 Jimmy Puckett Democrat Amory
21 Donnie Bell Democrat Fulton
22 Preston Sullivan Democrat Okolona
23 Charles Beckett Republican Bruce
24 Sidney Bondurant Republican Grenada
25 John Mayo Democrat Clarksdale
26 Chuck Espy Democrat Clarksdale
27 Ferr Smith Democrat Carthage
28 S. David Norquist Democrat Cleveland
29 Linda Coleman Democrat Mound Bayou
30 Robert Huddleston Democrat Sumner
31 Sara Thomas Democrat Indianola
32 Willie Perkins, Sr. Democrat Greenwood
33 Thomas Reynolds, II Democrat Charleston
34 Linda Whittington Democrat Schlater
35 Dannie Reed Republican Ackerman
36 David Gibbs Democrat West Point
37 Gary Chism Republican Columbus
38 Tyrone Ellis Democrat Starkville
39 Jeffrey Smith Republican Columbus
40 W.T. Mayhall, Jr. Republican Southaven
41 Esther Harrison Democrat Columbus
42 Reecy Dickson Democrat Macon
43 Russ Nowell Republican Louisville
44 C. Scott Bounds Republican Philadelphia
45 Bennett Malone Democrat Carthage
46 Bobby Howell Republican Kilmichael
47 Bryant Clark Democrat Pickens
48 Mary Stevens Democrat West
49 Willie Bailey Democrat Greenville
50 John Hines Democrat Greenville
51 Rufus Straughter Democrat Belzoni
52 Thomas Woods Republican Byhalia
53 Robert Moak Democrat Bogue Chitto
54 Alex Monsour Republican Vicksburg
55 George Flaggs, Jr. Democrat Vicksburg
56 Philip Gunn Republican Clinton
57 Edward Blackmon, Jr. Democrat Canton
58 Rita Martinson Republican Madison
59 Kevin McGee Republican Brandon
60 John Moore Republican Brandon
61 Ray Rogers Republican Pearl
62 Thomas Weathersby, Sr. Republican Florence
63 Walter Robinson, Jr. Democrat Bolton
64 William Denny, Jr. Republican Jackson
65 Mary Coleman Democrat Jackson
66 Cecil Brown Democrat Jackson
67 Earle Banks Democrat Jackson
68 Credell Calhoun Democrat Jackson
69 Alyce Clarke Democrat Jackson
70 James Evans Democrat Jackson
71 Adrienne Wooten Democrat Canton
72 Kimberly Campbell Buck Democrat Jackson
73 James Ellington Republican raymond
74 Mark Baker Republican Brandon
75 Tracy Arinder, Jr. Democrat Morton
76 Gregory Holloway, Sr. Democrat Hazlehurst
77 J. Andrew Gipson Republican Braxton
78 Billy Nicholson Republican Little rock
79 Blaine Eaton, II Democrat Taylorville
80 Omeria Scott Democrat Laurel
81 Stephen Horne Republican Meridian
82 Wilbert Jones Democrat Meridian
83 Elton Gregory Snowden Republican Meridian
84 Tad Campbell Republican Meridian
85 America Chuck Middleton Democrat Mississippi
86 Sherra Lane Democrat Waynesboro
87 Johnny Stringer Democrat Montrose
88 Gary Staples Republican Laurel
89 Bobby Shows Republican Ellisville
90 Joseph Warren Democrat Mount Olive
91 Robert Evans Democrat Monticello
92 Becky Currie Republican Brookhaven
93 Dirk Dedeaux Democrat Perkinston
94 Robert Johnson, III Democrat Natchez
95 Jessica Upshaw Republican Diamondhead
96 Angela Cockerham Democrat Magnolia
97 Sam Mims, V Republican McComb
98 David Myers Democrat McComb
99 Bill Pigott Republican Tylertown
100 Ken Morgan Republican Morgantown
101 Harvey Fillingane Republican Sumrall
102 Toby Barker Republican Hattiesburg
103 Percy Watson Democrat Hattiesburg
104 Larry Byrd Republican Petal
105 J. Shaun Walley Democrat Leakesville
106 Herbert Frierson Republican Poplarville
107 Deryk Parker Democrat Lucedale
108 Mark Formby Republican Picayune
109 Frank Hamilton Republican Hurley
110 Billy Broomfield Democrat Moss Point
111 Brandon Jones Democrat Pascagoula
112 John Read Republican Gaultier
113 Henry Zuber, III Republican Ocean Springs
114 Jeffrey S. Guice Republican Ocean Springs
115 Randall Patterson Democrat Biloxi
116 Casey Eure Republican Biloxi
117 Scott DeLano Republican Biloxi
118 Roger Ishee Republican Gulfport
119 Frances Fredericks Democrat Gulfport
120 Richard Bennett Republican Long Beach
121 Diane Peranich Democrat Pass Christian
122 Joseph Compretta Democrat Bay St. Louis

Standing committees

Mississippi House of Representatives has 46 standing committees:

It also has three select committees:

External links

References

Personal tools