List of lieutenant governors of Vermont
The lieutenant governor of Vermont is elected for a two-year term and chosen separately from the governor. The Vermont lieutenant governor's main responsibilities include acting as governor when the governor is out of state or incapacitated, presiding over the Vermont Senate, casting tie-breaking votes in the Senate when required, and acceding to the governorship in case of a vacancy. As a member of the state senate's Committee on Committees, the lieutenant governor plays a role in determining committee assignments for individual senators, as well as selecting committee chairs, vice chairs, and clerks.
The incumbent Lieutenant Governor is John S. Rodgers, a Republican who was first elected in 2024.
Election
The lieutenant governor of Vermont is elected to a two-year term in even-numbered years, as with the governor, but they are elected on separate tickets, and may be from different parties. The most recent lieutenant gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2024.When no candidate receives a majority of the votes, the General Assembly holds a contingent election from among the top three vote-getters. In every such election since the election of T. Garry Buckley in 1976, the General Assembly has chosen the candidate who received a plurality of votes, including in the 2024 election.
Mountain rule
From the founding of the Republican Party in the 1850s until the 1960s only Republicans won general elections for Vermont's statewide offices. One method that made this possible was imposition of the "Mountain Rule." Under the provisions of the Mountain Rule, one U.S. Senator was a resident of the east side of the Green Mountains and one resided on the west side, and the governorship and lieutenant governorship alternated between residents of the east and west side. Nominees for governor and lieutenant governor were allowed two one-year terms, and later one two-year term. For nearly 100 years likely Republican candidates for office in Vermont agreed to abide by the Mountain Rule in the interests of party unity.Several factors led to the eventual weakening of the Mountain Rule, including: the longtime political dispute between the Proctor and Aiken-Gibson wings of the party; primaries rather than conventions to select nominees; the direct election of U.S. Senators; and several active third parties, including the Progressives, the Prohibition Party, and the Local Option movement. In the 1960s the rise of the Vermont Democratic Party and the construction of Interstate 89 also contributed to the end of the Mountain Rule. Though I-89 is a north–south route, it traverses Vermont from east to west and changed the way Vermonters view how the state is divided.