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Hawaii Territorial Legislature

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The Hawaii Territorial Legislature was the legislative body of the Territory of Hawaii from 1900 to 1959 (when Hawaii became a state).

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7-628: The Hawaii Territorial Legislature was established on April 30, 1900, by the Hawaiian Organic Act which established the Territory of Hawaii as part of the United States . The Hawaii Territorial Legislature was established on April 30, 1900, by the Hawaiian Organic Act which annexed the Republic of Hawaii into the United States and established it as the Territory of Hawaii . All laws created by

14-644: The Republic of Hawaii were retained, except for those "inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of the United States" or with the provisions of the Organic Act; various laws of the Republic of Hawaii were explicitly repealed in the text of the Organic Act. The Hawaii Territorial Legislature was a bicameral body comprising a Senate and a House of Representatives . Positions in both chambers were elected . Each had

21-667: The Territorial Legislature. However, the Organic Act required that members of the legislature be male citizens of the United States. In 1922, the United States Congress passed a bill to modify the Organic Act to allow women to hold office. The first woman in the Hawaii Territorial Legislature was Rosalie Keliʻinoi , elected to the Territorial House of Representatives in 1925. Elsie Wilcox became

28-522: The Territory of Hawaii had 51 members (30 members until February 18, 1959), elected to two-year terms. There were eighteen representative districts, which were each entitled to elect somewhere from one to six representatives. Representatives were required to be United States citizens who were older than 25, eligible to vote, and had lived in Hawaii for three years. The Hawaii Territorial Legislature adjourned for

35-461: The first woman elected to the Territorial Senate in 1933. The Senate of the Territory of Hawaii had 25 members (15 members until February 18, 1959), elected for four-year terms. Members, required to be United States citizens who were older than 30, eligible to vote, and had lived in Hawaii for three years, were initially elected from six senatorial districts: The House of Representatives of

42-647: The legislature. Those held in even-numbered years, called "budget sessions", were restricted to matters related to the budget , elections, and impeachment of officials. Sessions began on the third Wednesday in February. The Hawaii Territorial Legislature convened at ʻIolani Palace . Very soon after the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1920, which allowed women to vote in elections, women began seeking election to

49-416: The power to select its own officers and design its procedural rules. A quorum was defined as the majority of the members of a given chamber, and a vote by a quorum was sufficient for "the conduct of ordinary business", but a simple majority was required for the passage of laws. Legislative sessions were required to be held in odd-numbered years, and could be held in even-numbered years at the discretion of

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