State Auditor of Mississippi

The state auditor of Mississippi is an elected official in the executive branch of Mississippi's state government. The duty of the state auditor is to ensure accountability in the use of funds appropriated by the state legislature by inspecting and reporting on the expenditure of the public funds.[1]

State Auditor of Mississippi
Incumbent
Shad White

since July 17, 2018
Term lengthFour years, renewable, no term limits
Inaugural holderJohn R. Girault
Formation1817
Websiteosa.state.ms.us

To be elected state auditor, a person must be at least 25 years old and must have been a resident of Mississippi for at least five years at the time of the election.[2] It has been an elected position since the 1832 Constitution of Mississippi, which specified a two-year term;[3] prior to this, the state auditor was appointed annually by the governor of Mississippi.[4] The 1868 Constitution expanded the term to four years.[5]

The fourth Constitution of Mississippi, ratified in 1890, made the state auditor ineligible to hold consecutive terms, and barred the state auditor and state treasurer from immediately succeeding each other.[6][7] This measure was implemented as an effort to prevent collusion between the two officeholders, after a series of embezzlements and misuses of public funds during the Reconstruction era.[8] A 1966 constitutional amendment lifted the prohibitions, making the state auditor eligible to serve consecutive terms.[9] In 1986, the Constitution Committee of the Mississippi House voted to approve a proposal to limit the state auditor to a ten-year tenure,[10] but the measure was rejected by the full House after initially being passed by the state senate.[11]

Shad White is the incumbent state auditor of Mississippi as of 2022. He assumed office on July 17, 2018.[12]

List of auditors

Source: Mississippi Official & Statistical Register[13]

Territorial auditors (1798–1817)

  • Charles B. Howell
  • Beverly R. Grayson
  • Park Walton

State auditors (1817–present)

# NameTerm of office
1 John R. Girault1817–1819
2 John Richards1819–1822
3 Hiram G. Runnels1822–1830
4 Thomas B. J. Hadley1830–1833
5 John H. Mallory1833–1837
6 A. B. Saunders1837–1842
7 J. E. Matthews1842–1847
8 George T. Swann1847–1851
9 Daniel R. Russell1851–1855
10 Madison McAfee1855–1859
11 E. R. Burt1859–1861
12 A. B. Dilworth1861–1862
13 A. J. Gillespie1862–1865
14 Thomas T. Swann1865–1869
15 Henry Musgrove1869–1874
16 William H. Gibbs1874–1876
17 Sylvester Gwin1878–1886
18 W. W. Stone1886–1896
19 W. D. Holder1896–1900
20 William Qualls Cole1900–1904
21 T. M. Henry1904–1908
22 Elias Jefferson Smith1908–1912
23 Duncan Lafayette Thompson1912–1916
24 Robert A. Wilson1916–1920
25 W. J. Miller1920–1924
26 George Dumah Riley1924–1928
27 Carl C. White1928–1932
28 Joe S. Price1932–1936
29 Carl Craig1936–1940
30 J. M. Causey1940–1944
31 Bert J. Barnett1944–1948
32 Carl Craig1948–1952
33 William Donelson Neal1952–1956
34 E. Boyd Golding1956–1960
35 William Donelson Neal1960–1964
36 William Hampton King1964–1984
37 Ray Mabus1984–1988
38 Pete Johnson1988–1992
39 Steven A. Patterson1992–1996
40 Phil Bryant1996–2008
41 Stacey Pickering2008–2018
42 Shad White2018–present

References

Constitutions
Specific
  1. "Auditor: Accountability not partisan". Clarion-Ledger. June 17, 2007. p. 61. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  2. MS Const. art. V, § 134.
  3. MS Const. (1832) art. V, § 20.
  4. MS Const. (1816) art. IV, § 25.
  5. MS Const. (1868) art. V, § 20.
  6. MS Const. (1890) art. V, § 134.
  7. "[untitled]". The Mississippi Enterprise. October 10, 1890. p. 4. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  8. "Amendment Would Change 1890 Constitution On State Auditor". Columbian-Progress. October 27, 1966. p. 15. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  9. "Mississippi's amendments gather heavy urban votes". Hattiesburg American. November 9, 1966. p. 1. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  10. "Treasurer succession recommended". Clarksdale Press Register. January 30, 1986. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  11. "Legislature OKs amendment to let treasurers succeed selves". Clarion-Ledger. February 12, 1986. p. 15. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  12. Pettus, Emily Wagster (July 17, 2018). "Shad White takes oath as new state auditor in Mississippi". Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  13. "Historical & Statistical Information". 2016–2020 Mississippi Official & Statistical Register (PDF). Mississippi Secretary of State. 2017. pp. 718–719. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
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