The Lieutenant Governor also shall serve as acting Governor when the Governor is disabled but is unable to communicate to the Lieutenant Governor the fact of his the Governor's inability to perform the duties of his the Governor's office. (b) The Lieutenant Governor shall serve as acting Governor when notified in writing by the Governor that the Governor will be temporarily unable to perform the duties of his the Governor's office.
If the Governor-elect fails to assume office for any other reason, the newly elected Lieutenant Governor shall become Lieutenant Governor and shall serve as acting Governor until the Governor-elect assumes office or until the office becomes vacant.
(a) If the Governor-elect is disqualified, resigns, or dies, the Lieutenant Governor-elect shall become Governor for the full term. The following underlined text would be added, and struck-through text would be deleted: Note: Use your mouse to scroll over the below text to see the full text. The measure would amend Articles II, III, IV, V, and XVII of the Maryland Constitution. Against the Constitutional Amendment Ĭonstitutional changes See also: Articles II, III, IV, V, and XVII (Amending Article Il, Section 6, Article II1, Sections 5, 30 and 52, Article IV, Sections 1, 3, 3A, 4B, 5A, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, and 41E, Article V, Section 6, and Article XVII, Section 3 to the Maryland Constitution) Under the new law, judges serving on the Court of Appeals will be justices of the Supreme Court of Maryland and the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals will be the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Maryland. The ballot title for Question 1 is as follows:Ĭhanges the names of Maryland's appellate courts from the Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court of Maryland and from the Court of Special Appeals to the Appellate Court of Maryland. That same confusion persists among Marylanders." On April 6, 2021, the Maryland State Senate approved the amendment with a vote of 40-7.Ĭhief Judge of the Court of Appeals Mary Ellen Barbera: "There is confusion from beyond the borders of our state as lawyers, law students and litigants research, contact and even file papers with the wrong court. HB 885 was approved in the state House in a vote of 125-10 with six absent or not voting on March 21, 2021. This amendment was introduced as House Bill 885 (HB 885) on January 29, 2021, by Delegate Ron Watson (D). To put a legislatively referred constitutional amendment before voters, a 60% vote is required in both the Maryland State Senate and the Maryland House of Representatives. The sponsor of the House version of the amendment was Delegate Ron Watson (D), and the sponsor of the Senate version of the amendment was Senator Douglas Peters (D). How did Question 1 get on the ballot? See also: Path to the ballot Maryland and New York are the only states that do not refer to their state's top court as the supreme court. It would also change the gendered language to gender-neutral in the articles of the Maryland Constitution that would be amended. It would change the name of a Judge of the Court of Appeals to be a Justice of the Supreme Court of Maryland and the name of the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals to be the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Maryland. Question 1 would rename the Maryland Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court of Maryland and the Maryland Court of Special Appeals to the Appellate Court of Maryland.
Overview What would Question 1 change about the Courts of Appeals and Special Appeals? See also: Text of measure
6.3 Referred amendments on the ballot in Maryland.1.2 How did Question 1 get on the ballot?.1.1 What would Question 1 change about the Courts of Appeals and Special Appeals?.