Untitled Document
| Name: |
Victor C. Rivers |
| City: |
Anchorage |
| District: |
18 |
| Occupation: |
Engineer |
| Born: |
January 15, 1905 - Seattle, Washington |
| Death: |
September 25, 1959 - Anchorage, Alaska |
| Alaska Resident: |
1906 - 1959 |
| Convention Posts: |
- Chair, Committee on Executive Branch
- Member, Committee on Local Government
- Member, Advisory Committee on Committees
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Quote from the Constitutional Convention:
"Mr. President, it seems to me that some of the discussion could be improved
as to quality and the use of words... Now, the question at stake is just how
strong do you want the strong executive? Do you want the absolute one-headed
form of government with one single elected official at the head of it, or do
you want a certain amount of additional elected representatives put there by
the vote of the people? We had a lot of discussion on that in the Committee.
The ideal of the strong executive is the absolute executive, but there again
if you will look back at our founding fathers with absolutism ruling, they had
a great many problems and a great many difficulties. So for that reason they
diffused all the powers of state down through many elected officials. They got
a great deal of democracy out of that process but they didn't get much efficiency.
Now we are trying to arrive at a situation where we get both a fair amount
of democracy and a fair amount of efficiency. The question is to decide how
strong do you want the strong executive? Do you want somebody also being groomed
in the process of administrative government heads, such as this secretary of
state who can succeed to the governorship, who will be qualified by experience,
and if he does a good job will probably be eligible from the voters' point of
view to become governor? Many people in this body think we should have more
than two elected officials; some think we should have three or four. There is
a good question there as to how many the people would like to have, but I believe
that every time you start centralizing in the form of appointive power in the
hands of one person, you take something away from the essential idea and principle
of democracy...
I believe that there should be somebody else, second in command and elected
by all of the people, who could take over the succession, and who would in the
same process be training himself and becoming eligible to succeed the chief
executive by election of the people."
-Delegate Victor Rivers, Day 52 of the Constitutional Convention, speaking
on the strong executive model in the Alaska Constitution. Delegate Rivers, who
chaired the Committee on the Executive Branch, was uncomfortable with the enormous
power given to the governor in the constitution. While he campaigned for more
elected executive officers throughout the convention, the constitution states
that the Governor and Secretary of State (title changed to Lieutenant Governor
in 1970) will be the only elected executive officers of the state.
| Education: |
University of Washington, Northwestern University, McKinley
College of Engineering |
| Public Offices and Organizations: |
- Mayor, City of Fairbanks
- Territorial Senate - 1937-41, 47-51, 57-59
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