英文互译镜像站

List of current United States governors by age

Last updated

The following is a list of current United States governors by age. This list includes the 50 state governors, the five territorial governors, as well as the mayor of Washington, D.C. in office as of January 21, 2026.

Contents

State governors

StateGovernorDate of birthDate of inaugurationAge at inaugurationTime in officeCurrent ageParty
Alabama Kay Ivey October 15, 1944April 10, 201772 years, 177 days8 years, 286 days81 years, 98 days Republican
Alaska Mike Dunleavy May 5, 1961December 3, 201857 years, 212 days7 years, 49 days64 years, 261 days
Arizona Katie Hobbs December 28, 1969January 2, 202353 years, 5 days3 years, 19 days56 years, 24 days Democratic
Arkansas Sarah Huckabee Sanders August 13, 1982January 10, 202340 years, 150 days3 years, 11 days43 years, 161 days Republican
California Gavin Newsom October 10, 1967January 7, 201951 years, 89 days7 years, 14 days58 years, 103 days Democratic
Colorado Jared Polis May 12, 1975January 8, 201943 years, 241 days7 years, 13 days50 years, 254 days
Connecticut Ned Lamont January 3, 1954January 9, 201965 years, 6 days7 years, 12 days72 years, 18 days
Delaware Matt Meyer September 29, 1971January 21, 202553 years, 114 days1 year, 0 days54 years, 114 days
Florida Ron DeSantis September 14, 1978January 8, 201940 years, 116 days7 years, 13 days47 years, 129 days Republican
Georgia Brian Kemp November 2, 1963January 14, 201955 years, 73 days7 years, 7 days62 years, 80 days
Hawaii Josh Green February 11, 1970December 5, 202252 years, 297 days3 years, 47 days55 years, 344 days Democratic
Idaho Brad Little February 15, 1954January 7, 201964 years, 326 days7 years, 15 days71 years, 340 days Republican
Illinois J. B. Pritzker January 19, 1965January 14, 201953 years, 360 days7 years, 7 days61 years, 2 days Democratic
Indiana Mike Braun March 24, 1954January 13, 202570 years, 295 days1 year, 8 days71 years, 303 days Republican
Iowa Kim Reynolds August 4, 1959May 24, 201757 years, 293 days8 years, 242 days66 years, 170 days
Kansas Laura Kelly January 24, 1950January 14, 201968 years, 355 days7 years, 7 days75 years, 362 days Democratic
Kentucky Andy Beshear November 29, 1977December 10, 201942 years, 11 days6 years, 42 days48 years, 53 days Democratic
Louisiana Jeff Landry December 23, 1970January 8, 202453 years, 16 days2 years, 13 days55 years, 29 days Republican
Maine Janet Mills December 30, 1947January 2, 201971 years, 3 days7 years, 19 days78 years, 22 days Democratic
Maryland Wes Moore October 15, 1978January 18, 202344 years, 95 days3 years, 3 days47 years, 98 days
Massachusetts Maura Healey February 8, 1971January 5, 202351 years, 331 days3 years, 16 days54 years, 347 days
Michigan Gretchen Whitmer August 23, 1971January 1, 201947 years, 131 days7 years, 20 days54 years, 151 days
Minnesota Tim Walz April 6, 1964January 7, 201954 years, 276 days7 years, 14 days61 years, 290 days Democratic–Farmer–Labor [a]
Mississippi Tate Reeves June 5, 1974January 14, 202045 years, 223 days6 years, 7 days51 years, 230 days Republican
Missouri Mike Kehoe January 17, 1962January 13, 202562 years, 362 days1 year, 8 days64 years, 4 days
Montana Greg Gianforte April 17, 1961January 4, 202159 years, 262 days5 years, 17 days64 years, 279 days
Nebraska Jim Pillen December 31, 1955January 5, 202367 years, 5 days3 years, 16 days70 years, 21 days
Nevada Joe Lombardo November 8, 1962January 2, 202360 years, 55 days3 years, 19 days63 years, 74 days
New Hampshire Kelly Ayotte June 27, 1968January 9, 202556 years, 196 days1 year, 12 days57 years, 208 days
New Jersey Mikie Sherrill January 19, 1972January 20, 202654 years, 1 day1 day54 years, 2 days Democratic
New Mexico Michelle Lujan Grisham October 24, 1959January 1, 201959 years, 69 days7 years, 20 days66 years, 89 days
New York Kathy Hochul August 27, 1958August 24, 202162 years, 362 days4 years, 150 days67 years, 147 days
North Carolina Josh Stein September 13, 1966January 1, 202558 years, 110 days1 year, 20 days59 years, 130 days
North Dakota Kelly Armstrong October 8, 1976December 15, 202448 years, 68 days1 year, 37 days49 years, 105 days Republican
Ohio Mike DeWine January 5, 1947January 14, 201972 years, 9 days7 years, 7 days79 years, 16 days
Oklahoma Kevin Stitt December 28, 1972January 14, 201946 years, 17 days7 years, 7 days53 years, 24 days
Oregon Tina Kotek September 30, 1966January 9, 202356 years, 101 days3 years, 12 days59 years, 113 days Democratic
Pennsylvania Josh Shapiro June 20, 1973January 17, 202349 years, 211 days3 years, 4 days52 years, 215 days
Rhode Island Dan McKee June 16, 1951March 2, 202169 years, 259 days4 years, 325 days74 years, 219 days
South Carolina Henry McMaster May 27, 1947January 24, 201769 years, 242 days8 years, 362 days78 years, 239 days Republican
South Dakota Larry Rhoden February 5, 1959January 25, 202565 years, 355 days361 days66 years, 350 days
Tennessee Bill Lee October 9, 1959January 19, 201959 years, 102 days7 years, 2 days66 years, 104 days
Texas Greg Abbott November 13, 1957January 20, 201557 years, 68 days11 years, 1 day68 years, 69 days
Utah Spencer Cox July 11, 1975January 4, 202145 years, 177 days5 years, 17 days50 years, 194 days
Vermont Phil Scott August 4, 1958January 5, 201758 years, 154 days9 years, 16 days67 years, 170 days
Virginia Abigail Spanberger August 7, 1979January 17, 202646 years, 163 days4 days46 years, 167 days Democratic
Washington Bob Ferguson February 23, 1965January 15, 202559 years, 327 days1 year, 6 days60 years, 332 days
West Virginia Patrick Morrisey December 21, 1967January 13, 202557 years, 23 days1 year, 8 days58 years, 31 days Republican
Wisconsin Tony Evers November 5, 1951January 7, 201967 years, 63 days7 years, 14 days74 years, 77 days Democratic
Wyoming Mark Gordon March 14, 1957January 7, 201961 years, 299 days7 years, 14 days68 years, 313 days Republican

Territorial governors

TerritoryGovernorDate of birthDate of inaugurationAge at inaugurationTime in officeCurrent ageParty
American Samoa Pula Nikolao Pula December 31, 1955January 3, 202569 years, 3 days1 year, 18 days Republican
Guam Lou Leon Guerrero November 8, 1950January 7, 201968 years, 60 days7 years, 14 days75 years, 74 days Democratic
Northern Mariana Islands David M. Apatang July 10, 1948July 23, 202577 years, 13 days182 days77 years, 195 days Independent
Puerto Rico Jenniffer González-Colón August 5, 1976January 2, 202548 years, 150 days1 year, 19 days49 years, 169 days New Progressive
U.S. Virgin Islands Albert Bryan February 21, 1968January 7, 201950 years, 320 days7 years, 14 days57 years, 334 days Democratic

Federal district mayor

The District of Columbia is a federal district that elects a mayor that has similar powers to those of a state or territorial governor. [2] The cities of Washington and Georgetown within the district elected their own mayors until 1871, when their governments were consolidated into a reorganized District of Columbia by a congressional act. [3] The district's chief executive from 1871 to 1874 was a governor appointed by the president of the United States; the office was replaced by a board of commissioners with three members appointed by the president—two residents and a representative from the United States Army Corps of Engineers. [3] [4] The Board of Commissioners was originally a temporary body but was made permanent in 1878 with one member selected to serve as the Board President, in effect the city's chief executive. [5] The system was replaced in 1967 by a single mayor–commissioner and home rule in the District of Columbia was fully restored in 1975 under a reorganized government led by an elected mayor. [6]

DistrictMayorDate of birthDate of inaugurationAge at inaugurationTime in officeCurrent ageParty
District of Columbia Muriel Bowser August 2, 1972January 2, 201542 years, 153 days11 years, 19 days53 years, 172 days Democratic

Demographics of state governors

Note: The following information for currently serving state governors is correct as of 2021.

See also

Notes

  1. The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party is affiliated with the national Democratic Party. [1]

References

  1. Erlandson, Henry (January 25, 2020). "Why is Minnesota's Democratic Party called the DFL?". Star Tribune . Minneapolis. Archived from the original on January 30, 2024. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
  2. Nirappil, Fenit (June 21, 2017). "Can a change of titles make DC seem more stately? Ask Gov. Bowser" . The Washington Post . Archived from the original on December 17, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2024.
  3. 1 2 Governing the District of Columbia: Overview and Timeline (Report). Congressional Research Service. January 29, 2024. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
  4. Davis, Henry E. (December 29, 1899). "The Political Development of the District of Columbia". Proceedings of the Washington Academy of Sciences. 1: 215. JSTOR   24526084.
  5. Frommer, Frederic (June 21, 2022). "D.C. elected its own mayors in the 1800s — until Congress stepped in" . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on March 24, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2024.
  6. Martin, Douglas (October 28, 2003). "Walter Washington, 88, Former Mayor of Washington, Dies". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
伪原创镜像站 量子镜像站群 网站复制工具 一键镜像站群 自动镜像站群