A state Senator is an elected member of the legislature, or law-making body, of his or her state of residence.
This is not to be confused with a US Senator, who is elected to represent his or her state of residence in the US Senate of the federal government, in Washington, DC.
Your asking a mixed question, confusing State Senators and US Senators.
There are 100 US Senators, and the 50 states each have their own senates (with different numbers of senators.)
Please rethink your question and ask it a bit differently.
There are fifty states in the United States, and each state has two senators. It does not matter whether the state is big (like California) or small (like Rhode Island); your state sends two senators to serve in congress, meaning that the Senate has a total of 100 senators.
a state senator is the dictator of a state.
State senators help make state laws. Their constituency is smaller than a federal Senator, but larger than a state representative.
By popular vote of the citizens of his district.
Yes, it is one of the requirements. If a senator does not live in the state they represent, then they cannot become a senator.
A senator represents the entire population of a state
He was a state senator from Illinois, and then a U.S. senator from that state.
Each U. S. Senator represents his/her whole state.
to represent each state
Charles Sumner was a Massachusetts Senator.
Joseph McCarthy was a United States Senator representing the state of Wisconsin.
illinois
Illinois.
He was a senator from Illinois.
yes they should live in the same state they represent
He represents the people of his state. There are two for each state.