[1] The districts largely correspond to the boundaries of the state's 14 counties with adjustments to ensure equality of representation.
[6][7][8] The lieutenant governor of Vermont serves as the president of the Senate, but casts a vote only if required to break a tie.
[13] This panel consists of the lieutenant governor, the president pro tempore and one member chosen by the full Senate.
[22] Previous secretaries include Ernest W. Gibson Jr., Murdock A. Campbell, and Franklin S. Billings Jr.[22] Vermont had a unicameral legislature until 1836; most of the functions normally performed by an upper legislative house were the responsibility of the governor and council.
Bell;[50] Fletcher D. Proctor;[51] George H. Prouty;[52] John A. Mead;[53] Allen M. Fletcher;[54] Charles W. Gates;[55] Percival W. Clement;[56] Redfield Proctor Jr.;[57] John E. Weeks;[58] Stanley C. Wilson;[59] Charles Manley Smith;[60] William H. Wills;[61] Mortimer R. Proctor;[62] Lee E. Emerson;[63] Joseph B. Johnson;[64] Philip H. Hoff (post-governorship);[65] Peter Shumlin;[66] and Phil Scott (incumbent).
[67] Vermont's lieutenant governors who served in the state senate include: Waitstill R. Ranney, Leonard Sargeant, William C. Kittredge, Jefferson P. Kidder, Burnham Martin, Levi Underwood, Abraham B. Gardner, Stephen Thomas, George N. Dale, Russell S. Taft, Lyman G. Hinckley, Eben Pomeroy Colton, Henry A. Fletcher, Farrand Stewart Stranahan, Zophar Mansur, Nelson W. Fisk, Henry C. Bates, Martin F. Allen, Zed S. Stanton, Charles H. Stearns, Leighton P. Slack, Hale K. Darling, Roger W. Hulburd, Abram W. Foote, Walter K. Farnsworth, Consuelo N. Bailey, Robert S. Babcock, T. Garry Buckley, Barbara Snelling (post-lieutenant governorship), Doug Racine, David Zuckerman, and John S. Rodgers (incumbent).
U.S. senators include Samuel S. Phelps,[68] George F. Edmunds,[69] Jonathan Ross,[70] Porter H. Dale,[71] Frank C. Partridge,[72] Ernest Willard Gibson,[73] Jim Jeffords,[74] and Peter Welch (incumbent).
Foster,[81] William Hebard,[82] Andrew Tracy,[83] William W. Grout,[84] Kittredge Haskins,[85] Frank Plumley,[86] Alvah Sabin,[87] Homer Elihu Royce,[88] Worthington Curtis Smith,[89] Bradley Barlow,[90] Augustus Young,[91] Richard W. Mallary,[92] Peter Plympton Smith,[93] and Becca Balint (incumbent).