No, the State of Texas does not allow voters to recall their Governor. Within the United States, only eighteen states and the District of Columbia allow for the recall of state officials. Most of these states do not require specific grounds for recall, and the recall is performed through election. In Texas the Governor may still be removed through impeachment, which is a legal process whereby the state legislature brings charges against the Governor, and the state senate acts as a jury with the power to remove them from office. The last impeachment of a Governor in the United States was of Rob Blagojevich, the former Governor of Illinois, on January 14th, 2009. Texas does not provide for the recall of local officials either, although this is more common, with at least 29 states providing for recall elections at the level of local jurisdictions.
Can Pa recall their Governor
the recall of a governor reflects what? The system of checks and balances.
You cannot.
No
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, yes, Washington state allows the recall election of any statewide official holding public office. Washington state has specific required grounds for recall. The exact grounds are the " commission of some act or acts of malfeasance or misfeasance while in office, or who has violation of oath of office (Const. Art. I §33)." Once these grounds have been deemed met, a petition is circulated for 270 days and requires signatures of 25% of the votes in the last election for state Governor. If this triggers a recall election, only the question of whether or not the Governor should be recalled is asked. If the majority of cast ballots agree that the Governor should be recalled, the office is declared vacant. In Washington state a replacement is appointed by the county board of commissioners who select from a list submitted by a committee of the former Governor's political party.
lieutenant governor
No
No
lieutenant governor
lieutenant governor
13 states had there own governor and constitution in 1781