CALIFORNIA STATE SENATE
The 'California State Senate' is the upper house of the California State Legislature. There are 40 State Senators. The state legislature meets in the state capital, Sacramento. The Lieutenant Governor is the ''ex officio'' President of the Senate.
Prior to 1968, state senate districts were restricted such that one county could only hold at most one seat. This led to the situation of Los Angeles County, with 6 million residents as of 1968, receiving 600 times less representation than residents of Alpine County and Calaveras County, some of California's least populous counties. The ''Reynolds v. Sims'' decision by the United States Supreme Court compelled all states to draw up districts that were apportioned by population rather than geography. As such, boundaries were changed such that equal representation was provided.[1]
Senators serve four year terms. The terms of the Senators are staggered so that half the membership is elected every two years. The Senators representing the odd-numbered districts are elected in years evenly divisible by four. The Senators from the even-numbered districts are elected in the intervening even-numbered years. Senators are limited to two terms.[2]
Each Senator represents approximately 846,791 Californians, which is more than the approximately 639,088 residents in each of California's Congressional Districts.
In 2007, Rajan Zed, Hindu chaplain, read the first Hindu prayer in California Senate.
| Contents |
| Senators, 2007-2008 Session |
| Senators, 2005-2006 Session |
| Senators, 2003-2004 Session |
| Senators, 2001-2002 Session |
| See also |
| External links |
Senators, 2007-2008 Session
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | Democrats: 25 |
★ | Republicans: 15 |
The party affiliation and district numbers of Senators are listed after their names in this list.
'President Pro Tem': Don Perata (D-9)
'Majority Leader': Gloria Romero (D-24)
'Minority Leader': Dick Ackerman (R-33)
| District | Name | Party | Seat Up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Dave Cox | Rep | 2008 |
| 2nd | Pat Wiggins | Dem | 2010 |
| 3rd | Carole Migden | Dem | 2008 |
| 4th | Sam Aanestad | Rep | 2010 |
| 5th | Michael Machado Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 6th | Darrell Steinberg | Dem | 2010 |
| 7th | Tom Torlakson Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 8th | Leland Yee | Dem | 2010 |
| 9th | Don Perata Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 10th | Ellen M. Corbett | Dem | 2010 |
| 11th | Joe Simitian | Dem | 2008 |
| 12th | Jeff Denham | Rep | 2010 |
| 13th | Elaine Alquist | Dem | 2008 |
| 14th | Dave Cogdill | Rep | 2010 |
| 15th | Abel Maldonado | Rep | 2008 |
| 16th | Dean Florez | Dem | 2010 |
| 17th | George Runner | Rep | 2008 |
| 18th | Roy Ashburn | Rep | 2010 |
| 19th | Tom McClintock Term limited | Rep | 2008 |
| 20th | Alex Padilla | Dem | 2010 |
| 21st | Jack Scott Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 22nd | Gilbert Cedillo | Dem | 2010 |
| 23rd | Sheila Kuehl Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 24th | Gloria Romero | Dem | 2010 |
| 25th | Edward Vincent Term limited | Dem | 2008 |
| 26th | Mark Ridley-Thomas | Dem | 2010 |
| 27th | Alan S. Lowenthal | Dem | 2008 |
| 28th | Jenny Oropeza | Dem | 2010 |
| 29th | Bob Margett Term limited | Rep | 2008 |
| 30th | Ronald S. Calderon | Dem | 2010 |
| 31st | Robert Dutton | Rep | 2008 |
| 32nd | Gloria Negrete McLeod | Dem | 2010 |
| 33rd | Dick Ackerman Term limited | Rep | 2008 |
| 34th | Lou Correa | Dem | 2010 |
| 35th | Tom Harman | Rep | 2008 |
| 36th | Dennis Hollingsworth | Rep | 2010 |
| 37th | Jim Battin Term limited | Rep | 2008 |
| 38th | Mark Wyland | Rep | 2010 |
| 39th | Christine Kehoe | Dem | 2008 |
| 40th | Denise Moreno Ducheny | Dem | 2010 |
Senators, 2005-2006 Session
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | Democrats: 25 |
★ | Republicans: 15 |
The party affiliation and district numbers of Senators are listed after their names in this list.
'President Pro Tem': Don Perata (D-9)
'Majority Leader': Gloria Romero (D-24)
'Minority Leader': Dick Ackerman (R-33)
| District | Name | Party | Seat Up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Dave Cox | Rep | 2008 |
| 2nd | Wesley Chesbro Term limited | Dem | 2006 |
| 3rd | Carole Migden | Dem | 2008 |
| 4th | Sam Aanestad | Rep | 2006 |
| 5th | Michael Machado | Dem | 2008 |
| 6th | Deborah Ortiz Term limited. Lost primary election for Secretary of State | Dem | 2006 |
| 7th | Tom Torlakson | Dem | 2008 |
| 8th | Jackie Speier Term limited. Lost primary election for Lieutenant Governor | Dem | 2006 |
| 9th | Don Perata | Dem | 2008 |
| 10th | Liz Figueroa Term limited. Lost primary election for Lieutenant Governor | Dem | 2006 |
| 11th | Joe Simitian | Dem | 2008 |
| 12th | Jeff Denham | Rep | 2006 |
| 13th | Elaine Alquist | Dem | 2008 |
| 14th | Charles Poochigian Term limited. Lost general election for Attorney General | Rep | 2006 |
| 15th | Abel Maldonado | Rep | 2008 |
| 16th | Dean Florez | Dem | 2006 |
| 17th | George Runner | Rep | 2008 |
| 18th | Roy Ashburn | Rep | 2006 |
| 19th | Tom McClintock Lost general election for Lieutenant Governor | Rep | 2008 |
| 20th | Richard Alarcón Term limited. Elected to California State Assembly, 39th District | Dem | 2006 |
| 21st | Jack Scott | Dem | 2008 |
| 22nd | Gilbert Cedillo | Dem | 2006 |
| 23rd | Sheila Kuehl | Dem | 2008 |
| 24th | Gloria Romero | Dem | 2006 |
| 25th | Edward Vincent | Dem | 2008 |
| 26th | Kevin Murray Term limited | Dem | 2006 |
| 27th | Alan S. Lowenthal | Dem | 2008 |
| 28th | Debra Bowen Term limited. Elected Secretary of State | Dem | 2006 |
| 29th | Bob Margett | Rep | 2008 |
| 30th | Martha Escutia Term limited | Dem | 2006 |
| 31st | Robert Dutton | Rep | 2008 |
| 32nd | Nell Soto Term limited. Elected to California State Assembly, 61st District | Dem | 2006 |
| 33rd | Dick Ackerman | Rep | 2008 |
| 34th | Joe Dunn Term limited | Dem | 2006 |
| 35th | John Campbell Tom Harman ★ | Rep | 2008 |
| 36th | Dennis Hollingsworth | Rep | 2006 |
| 37th | Jim Battin | Rep | 2008 |
| 38th | Bill Morrow Term limited | Rep | 2006 |
| 39th | Christine Kehoe | Dem | 2008 |
| 40th | Denise Moreno Ducheny | Dem | 2006 |
★
Senators, 2003-2004 Session
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | Democrats: 25 |
★ | Republicans: 15 |
The party affiliation and district numbers of Senators are listed after their names in this list.
'President Pro Tem': John L. Burton (D-3)
'Majority Leader': Don Perata (D-9)
'Minority Leader': Jim Brulte (R-31) to May 2004; Dick Ackerman (R-33) from May 2004
★ Sam Aanestad
★ Dick Ackerman
★ Richard Alarcón
★ Dede Alpert
★ Roy Ashburn
★ Jim Battin
★ Debra Bowen
★ Jim Brulte
★ John L. Burton
★ Gilbert Cedillo
★ Wesley Chesbro
★ Jeff Denham
★ Denise Moreno Ducheny
★ Joe Dunn
★ Martha Escutia
★ Liz Figueroa
★ Dean Florez
★ Dennis Hollingsworth
★ Ross Johnson
★ Betty Karnette
★ William "Pete" Knight
★ Sheila Kuehl
★ Michael Machado
★ Bob Margett
★ Tom McClintock
★ Bruce McPherson
★ Bill Morrow
★ Kevin Murray
★ Thomas "Rico" Oller
★ Deborah Ortiz
★ Don Perata
★ Charles Poochigian
★ Gloria Romero
★ Jack Scott
★ Byron Sher
★ Nell Soto
★ Jackie Speier
★ Tom Torlakson
★ John Vasconcellos
★ Edward Vincent
Senators, 2001-2002 Session
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
★ | Democrats: 26 |
★ | Republicans: 14 |
| District | Name | Party |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Rico Oller | Rep |
| 2nd | Wesley Chesbro | Dem |
| 3rd | John Burton | Dem |
| 4th | Maurice Johannessen | Rep |
| 5th | Michael Machado | Dem |
| 6th | Deborah Ortiz | Dem |
| 7th | Tom Torlakson | Dem |
| 8th | Jackie Speier | Dem |
| 9th | Don Perata | Dem |
| 10th | Liz Figueroa | Dem |
| 11th | Byron Sher | Dem |
| 12th | Dick Monteith | Rep |
| 13th | John Vasconcellos | Dem |
| 14th | Charles Poochigian | Rep |
| 15th | Bruce McPherson | Rep |
| 16th | Jim Costa | Dem |
| 17th | Pete Knight | Rep |
| 18th | Jack O'Connell | Dem |
| 19th | Tom McClintock | Rep |
| 20th | Richard Alarcón | Dem |
| 21st | Jack Scott | Dem |
| 22nd | Richard Polanco | Dem |
| 23rd | Sheila Kuehl | Dem |
| 24th | Gloria Romero | Dem |
| 25th | Edward Vincent | Dem |
| 26th | Kevin Murray | Dem |
| 27th | Betty Karnette | Dem |
| 28th | Debra Bowen | Dem |
| 29th | Bob Margett | Rep |
| 30th | Martha Escutia | Dem |
| 31st | Jim Brulte | Rep |
| 32nd | Nell Soto | Dem |
| 33rd | Dick Ackerman | Rep |
| 34th | Joe Dunn | Dem |
| 35th | Ross Johnson | Rep |
| 36th | Ray Haynes | Rep |
| 37th | Jim Battin | Rep |
| 38th | Bill Morrow | Rep |
| 39th | Dede Alpert | Dem |
| 40th | Steve Peace | Dem |
See also
★ Bill (proposed law)
★ California State Senate Districts
★ California Senate elections, 2006
★ California State Legislature
★ Members of the California State Legislature
★ California State Assembly
★ Districts in California
★ California State Capitol
★ California State Capitol Museum
External links
★ California State Senate
★ Current State Senate Candidates
★ Map of Senate Districts
★ California Legislative District Maps (1911-Present)
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