Talk:Oregon State Senate

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Peteforsyth in topic Walkouts

Use of term "cabinet" problematic

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I don't think the use of the term cabinet is accurate in the context of the list of gubernatorial appointees in which it was included in this article. The issue of whether or not a cabinet even exists in Oregon is one which is debated by political scientists. The term "state cabinet" as it was used here was linked to the article Cabinet, which describes a cohesive group of senior advisors, usually of the chief executive's choosing. Since the Oregon State Treasurer and Secretary of State are chosen by state-wide election, and often oppose the policies of the Governor, it is rather a different situation than exists at the federal level. Many department and other agency heads which could be described as "cabinet level" are appointed by the legislature rather than the Governor.

It is true that the high level state office holders and bureaucrats in the present Kulongoski administration show more cohesiveness and cooperation than in the past, but not so much that the State Treasurer wanted to even be seen being sworn in with the rest of the bunch, and the situation could change within just a few election cycles.

I did some Google searching and could find almost no credible references to an Oregon cabinet except this article. The phrase is seldom used in the press, and when it is, it is inconsistent, sometimes referring only to the Governor, SOS & Treasurer, other times including the other statewide officers, and yet others including senior department heads.

Since the Kulongoski administration has pretty well succeeded in its efforts to rename state agencies according to a consistent scheme, where "cabinet level" offices head Departments, which are further subdivided into Divisions and Sections, each being distinguishable from advisory and governing Boards and Commissions (a few stray Bureaus) still remaining, I thought that changing the list to show Departments first, followed by other appointments made sense.

Hope that sufficiently explains my decision to change two words. Sheesh. -- "J-M" Jgilhousen 00:08, 17 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Term Limits in Oregon

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Citing the Oregonian's front page story, I rewrote the bit on Oregon senatorial term limits, which was a bit misleading as it appeared. The previous version seemed to imply that the Oregon Supreme Court had ruled term limits themselves unconstitutional, rather than the procedure by which they had been enacted. I was tempted to go into greater depth, but decided that further discussion on the subject was out of place in an article on the Senate, and belongs instead in either a separate article on "Term limits in Oregon" or on the 1992 ballot measure. -- "J-M" (Jgilhousen) 19:52, 3 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

update with 2007 session info

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This page needs to be updated. It's a pretty easy project - just replace Frank Shields with Rod Monroe, and Charlie Ringo with Brad Avakian (all Democrats.) Also replace Republican Charles Starr with R Larry George. Also, Ben Westlund was "R" till 2/14/06, "independent" for '06 special session on 4/20/06, and "D" after about 11/15/07. Avel Gordly announced her switch to Independent in July '06.[1]-Pete 09:01, 23 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

To wrap, that's been done. (not by me) -Duff 16:37, 5 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Sources

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Gordly+2008 Supplemental Session

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Gordly was still an independent during the 2007 and 2008 sessions, and I think the chart should reflect that. Also a couple anon contributors tried to change the 2007 lists (and on the House side as well), since there were some comings and goings, but that list should accurately reflect who was on the senate floor in '07. So we need to add a section on the changes since the last election. See the page history for the changes that were reverted (by me and by Aboutmovies, I believe). Katr67 (talk) 19:47, 9 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Images

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On Flickr:

  • [2]
  • [3] (possibly)
  • [4] (possibly)
  • [5] (possibly)
  • [6] (County chairs in 2009, some may have been elected to legislature since then)
  • [7] (unlikely)
  • [8] (unlikely)

On YouTube:

  • [9] (looks like official channel of Sen. Chip Shields, videos licensed under CC-BY)
  • [10] (most videos licensed under CC-BY)
  • [11] (most videos licensed under CC-BY)
  • [12] (most videos licensed under CC-BY)
  • [13] (some videos licensed under CC-BY)
  • [14] (licensed under CC-BY but most likely taken from another source)
  • [15] (channel uploads videos under CC-BY but most likely taken from another source)

MB298 (talk) 22:32, 1 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

Walkouts

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THis article (and related articles on recent legislative sessions) lack information about walkouts. This is a pretty important gap to fill. I'm going to work on filling this in, help welcome. -Pete Forsyth (talk) 02:28, 6 June 2023 (UTC)Reply