Kansas Legislature

Kansas Legislature
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Houses Kansas Senate
Kansas House of Representatives
Leadership
Susan Wagle, R
Since January 14, 2013
Senate Majority Leader
Terry Bruce, R
Since January 14, 2013
Speaker of the House
Ray Merrick, R
Since January 14, 2013
House Majority Leader
Jene Vickrey, R
Since January 10, 2011
Structure
Seats 165
Senate political groups
Republican: 32
Democratic: 8
House political groups
Republican: 97
Democratic: 28
Authority Kansas Constitution
Elections
Senate last election
November 6, 2012
House last election
November 4, 2014
Senate next election
November 2, 2016
House next election
November 2, 2016
Meeting place
Kansas State Capitol, Topeka

The Kansas Legislature is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Kansas. It is a bicameral assembly, composed of the lower Kansas House of Representatives, with 125 state representatives, and the upper Kansas Senate, with 40 state senators.

Prior to statehood, separate pro-slavery and anti-slavery territorial legislatures emerged, drafting four separate constitutions, until one was finally ratified and Kansas became a state in 1861. Republicans hold a long-standing supermajority in both houses of the state legislature, despite a short-lived dominance by the Populist Party. The state legislature approved one of the first child labor laws in the nation.

Composed of 165 state lawmakers, the state legislature meets at the Kansas State Capitol in Topeka once a year in regular session. Additional special sessions can be called by the governor of Kansas.

History

Pre-statehood

The Kansas Territory was created out of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854.[1] In several of the provisions of the act, the law allowed the settlers of the newly created territory to determine, by vote, whether Kansas, once statehood was achieved, would be entered as either a free or a slave state.[2] The act created a rush of both abolitionist Northern and pro-slavery Southern immigrants to the territory, hoping that strength through numbers would place Kansas in their camp. Animosities between the newly arrived sides quickly turned into open violence and guerrilla warfare, giving name to this period known as Bleeding Kansas.[2]

During Kansas' first elections for a territorial government on March 30, 1855, nearly 5,000 Missouri men, led by United States Senator David Rice Atchison and other prominent pro-slavery Missourians, entered the territory, took over the polling places, and elected pro-slavery candidates.[3] The elections resulted in 13 pro-slavery members of the upper house of the territorial legislature and one free-state member, who resigned.[4] The lower house ended up with 25 pro-slavery members and one free-state member.[4] Free-Staters immediately cried foul, naming the new Kansas Territorial Legislature the "Bogus Legislature."[5] Thirty-eight pro-slavery legislators met at the Shawnee Manual Labor School between July 16 and August 30, 1855,[4] and began crafting over a thousand pages of laws aimed at making Kansas a slave state.

Free-Staters convened their own unauthorized shadow legislature and territorial government in Topeka, crafting their own Topeka Constitution in late 1855. While the document was debated and submitted to a vote in the territory, it was never accepted by Congress.[6] The pro-slavery territorial legislature's response to the Free-Staters and growing violence was the Lecompton Constitution in 1857. Due to an electoral boycott by abolitionist groups and the questions regarding the validity of the legislature itself, it never officially became law.

While the Lecompton Constitution was debated, new elections for the territorial legislature in 1857 gave the Free-Staters a majority government, caused in part by a boycott by pro-slavery groups. With this new mandate, the legislature convened to write the Leavenworth Constitution, a radically progressive document for the Victorian era in its wording of rights for women and African-Americans. The constitution was adopted in 1858, though it too suffered the same fate as previous documents when Congressrefused to ratify it.

Following the Leavenworth Constitution's defeat, the territorial legislature again crafted a new document the following year, dubbed the Wyandotte Constitution. A compromise of sorts, it outlawed slavery in the territory, while removing progressive sections on Native Americans, women, and blacks. The territorial legislature passed the document, and submitted it to public referendum. It was ratified by the Kansas electorate on October 4, 1859.

Statehood-present

Following long debates in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, on January 29, 1861, President James Buchanan authorized Kansas to become the 34th state of United States. It had entered into the Union as a free state. Only six days later, the Confederate States of America formed between seven Southern states that had seceded from the United States in the previous two months.

The first Kansas impeachments occurred in 1862, brought about in part by United States Republican Party infighting in the state.[7]

The election of state officers under the Wyandotte Constitution took place in December 1859, and because of a delay in the Kansas path to statehood, those officers did not assume office until February 1861.[7] The lapse of time created a constitutional question as to the expiration of the two-year terms for which Governor Charles L. Robinson and the chief administrative officers were elected, with Robinson's opponents calling for a November 1861 election.[7] Robinson refused to permit the canvassing of votes for the offices in the 1861 election and his position was upheld by the Kansas Supreme Court.[7]

The state legislature brought impeachment trials against the governor, Kansas Secretary of State J. W. Robinson, and State Auditor George S. Hillyer over what they believed to be the unlawful sale of state bonds.[7] They convicted J. W. Robinson and Hillyer of selling state bonds in a manner in direct violation of the laws of the state, but failed to convict the two officials on conspiracy and other articles of impeachment.[7] Only three state senators voted to impeach the governor, who was less directly involved in the sale of the bonds.[7]

In 1867, a constitutional amendment was sent to voters to allow women to vote, but failed.[8]

State offices began to move from the Old Constitutional Hall to the east wing of the Kansas State Capitol in 1869, which was still undergoing construction.[9] The state legislature first met there in 1870, though the east wing was not completed until 1873.[9] Work would continue on the building until March 24, 1903.[9]

Removal of liquor during prohibition.

On February 19, 1881, Kansas became the first state to amend its constitution to prohibit all alcoholic beverages.[10] This action was spawned by the temperance movement, and was enforced by the ax-toting Carrie A. Nation beginning in 1888.[10] After 1890, prohibition was joined with progressivism to create a reform movement.[10] Kansas did not repeal prohibition until 1948, and even then it continued to prohibit public bars until 1987.[10]

The Populist Party was a significant third party movement in Kansas during the 1890s and peaked in the fall elections of 1892, when the ticket won the governor's office, four congressional seats, and control of the Kansas Senate.[11] Populists and Republicans both claimed control of the Kansas House of Representatives, with the Populists accusing the Republican Party of election fraud.[11] The dispute at led to separate Populist-led and Republican-led Houses in 1893 that at first shared the chamber, but later met in separate locations in the Kansas State Capitol after the Republican-led House took control of the chamber on February 15, 1893.[11] The Kansas Supreme Court eventually sided with the Republicans and the Populist-led House disbanded.[11]

The state legislature was a leader in child labor reform, enacting a law in 1905 to restrict children under 14 from working in factories, meatpacking houses, or mines.[12]

Kansas was a center of the Progressive Movement, with support from the middle classes, editors such as William Allen White of the Emporia Gazette, and the prohibitionists.[13] With the help of progressive state legislators, women gained the right to vote through a constitutional amendment approved by Kansans on November 5, 1912.[8]

Between 1922 and 1927, there were several legal battles Kansas against the Ku Klux Klan, resulting in their expulsion from the state.[14]

The Kansas Legislature adopted the flag of Kansas in 1927.

Since 1966 the legislature holds annual general sessions. Previously, the session in odd-numbered years was of unlimited duration while in even-numbered years the session was limited to 60 calendar days (unless two-thirds of the elected members of each house voted to extend it). A constitutional amendment adopted at the 1974 general election extended the duration of the session held in the even-numbered years to 90 calendar days, still subject to extension by a vote of two-thirds of the elected membership of each house.[15]

Legislative procedure

The Kansas Legislature is composed of 165 part-time legislators, meeting normally once a year. Meetings begin in January and usually will last for a period of 90 days. The Governor of Kansas retains the power to call a special legislative session if needed.

Bills

A proposed law is introduced in the state legislature as a bill. There are seven basic steps to the life of a bill: the introduction, standing committee action, a vote by the Committee of the Whole, floor passage, action by the second house, action by the governor and publication of the law.[16]

When a bill is introduced its title is read, it is printed and distributed to members of the house of origin, and it is referred to a standing committee.[16] Standing committee chairs decide whether or not to hear a bill and members of the committee can submit amendments to the bill.[16] After consideration and discussion, the committee votes on whether or not to send a committee report to the Committee of the Whole.[16] While under consideration by the Committee of the Whole, amendments can be submitted by state legislators in the house of origin.[16] The final action in the house of origin is a vote by the full membership.[16]

Bills go through an identical process in the opposite house of the state legislature.[16] After passage by both houses, a bill is submitted to the governor, who either signs it into law or vetos it. If vetoed, the bill only becomes law if both houses of the legislature vote to override the veto with a two-thirds majority of their membership.[16]

See also

References

  1. Johannsen. Robert W. Stephen A. Douglas (1973) ISBN 0-19-501620-3
  2. 1 2 Goodrich, Thomas. War to the Knife: Bleeding Kansas, 1854-1861 (2004)
  3. Billings, R. A. (1949). Westward Expansion. New York NY: Macmillan. pp. 599–601.
  4. 1 2 3 Kansas Bogus Legislature (accessed July 25, 2013)
  5. Miner, Craig (2002). Kansas: The History of the Sunflower State, 1854-2000 (ISBN 0-7006-1215-7)
  6. James, Richardson. "A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved July 25, 2013.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Ewing, Cortez A. M. "Early Kansas Impeachments," Kansas Historical Quarterly, August 1932 (Vol. 1, No. 4), p. 307-325, digitized with permission of the Kansas Historical Society. (accessed July 25, 2013)
  8. 1 2 Women's Suffrage, Kansapedia, Kansas Historical Society, November 2001 (accessed July 25, 2013)
  9. 1 2 3 Kansas State Capitol, Kansapedia, Kansas Historical Society, 2004. (accessed July 25, 2013)
  10. 1 2 3 4 Bader, Robert Smith. Prohibition in Kansas: A History (1986)
  11. 1 2 3 4 Cool Things - Legislative War Artifacts, Kansapedia, Kansas Historical Society, November 1997. (accessed July 25, 2013)
  12. Children in Kansas - 1890s-1920s, Kansapedia (accessed July 25, 2013)
  13. Robert Sherman La Forte, Leaders of reform: progressive Republicans in Kansas, 1900-1916 (University Press of Kansas, 1974)
  14. Charles William Sloan, Jr., ""Kansas Battles the Invisible Empire: The Legal Ouster of the KKK From Kansas, 1922–1927," Kansas Historical Quarterly Fall, 1974 (Vol. 40, No. 3), pp 393–409 (ed. explains in detail how the KKK worked in Kansas.)
  15. "Kansas Legislative Research Manual Kansas Legislative Procedures," March 12, 2009.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Legislative Procedure in Kansas, Kansas Legislative Research Department, November 2006. (accessed July 24, 2013)

External links

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