Want this question answered?
Richard C. McCormick was appointed to be the 2nd governor of the Territory of Arizona in July of 1866 at the age of 34.
No. John McCain was in the House of Representatives and then in the Senate. He was never a governor.
No. Seven Justices are appointed by the Governor to serve on the Arizona Supreme Court for a regular term of six years.
It was George W.P. Hunt who became the first Governor of Arizona (the state). For a number of decades, the Arizona Territory had its own Governor, the first of which was John A. Gurley, who was appointed by President Abraham Lincoln. Interestingly, Gurley died before he could reach the state and assume office there, so John Noble Goodwin was appointed to take his place. Where did this information come from? Use the link below and you'll see. It's all there.nina qinty
Arizona has 60 State Representatives and 8 US Representatives.
Arizona has eight US Representatives.
The Arizona State Legislature consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate. There are 30 members in the Arizona Senate and 60 members in the Arizona House of Representatives.
appointed
The Governor of each state or the Mayor of Washington DC is the one who signs the Certificate of Ascertainment, the official list of the electors appointed by the state or DC. In each state each ticket (each pair of a presidential candidate and his vice-presidential running mate) has its own slate of electors, a group of people totaling the full number of electors the state may appoint who are usually chosen by the political party and who have pledged to vote for the party's candidates. In most states and DC the ticket that receives the most popular votes statewide in the General Election gets their whole slate of electors appointed. In Maine and Nebraska only two electoral appointments in each state are based on the statewide popular vote, and each additional appointment is based on which ticket gets the most popular votes in each congressional district. Since adopting this method in 1972, however, Maine's two congressional districts have always voted the same, so all of Maine's votes go to one ticket in every election anyway. In fact, the only time that Maine has EVER split their presidential or vice-presidential electoral votes is when one of Maine's nine electors at the time voted for the Andrew Jackson/ John C. Calhoun ticket in 1828. Nebraska has been using this method since 1996 but has only actually split their votes once. In 2008 the McCain/Palin ticket got the most popular votes statewide and in two of Nebraska's three congressional districts. In the other district the Obama/Biden ticket got the most popular votes. So the Governor appointed four electors from the Republican slate of electors and one from the Democratic slate.
Former Arizona Governor Jack Richard Williams appointed Sandra Day O'Connor to a seat on the Arizona State Senate in 1969. She was subsequently reelected, and served on the Senate until 1975, the last two years as Senate Majority Leader and Senate Republican Leader. Former Arizona Governor Bruce Babbit appointed O'Connor to the Arizona Court of Appeals in 1979, where she served until President Reagan appointed her to the US Supreme Court in 1981.
Nothing - except govern Arizona
The Secretary of State is second in power to Arizona's governor. The current Secretary of State for Arizona is Ken Bennett.