Title 48 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - VIRGIN ISLANDS [1954] › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - EXECUTIVE BRANCH › § 1591
The people elect a Governor and a Lieutenant Governor together on one ticket. Each must win a majority of votes. If no ticket gets a majority, a run-off between the top two tickets is held 14 days later. The first election was on November 3, 1970. Starting in 1974, elections are held every four years at the general election. Terms are four years and begin on the first Monday in January after the election. A person who wins two full, back-to-back terms as Governor must wait one full term before running again. To run, a person must be a voter, a U.S. citizen and a bona fide resident of the Virgin Islands for the five years right before the election, and must be at least 30 when taking office. The Governor’s official home is Government House on Saint Thomas, and while on Saint Croix the Governor may use Government House there. The Governor runs the executive branch and oversees all local departments and agencies. The Governor can grant pardons or reduce punishments for violations of local law, veto bills as allowed by law, appoint and remove executive officers and employees (except where other laws say otherwise), and formally commission officers he appoints. The Governor must enforce local laws and applicable U.S. laws. In disasters, invasion, rebellion, or imminent danger, the Governor can call on citizens to help keep order, call out the militia, or ask the senior U.S. military or naval commander in the Virgin Islands or Puerto Rico for help. If needed for public safety during invasion or rebellion, the Governor can declare martial law; the legislature must meet right away and may overturn that declaration by a two-thirds vote. The Governor must prepare and send a comprehensive annual financial report to Congress and the Secretary of the Interior within 120 days after the fiscal year ends, following national accounting standards and including required statistics. The Governor can issue executive orders and rules that do not conflict with law, suggest bills to the legislature, and state views on legislative matters. The office of Lieutenant Governor is created, and the Lieutenant Governor has duties given by the Governor or by law.
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Territories and Insular Possessions — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
48 U.S.C. § 1591
Title 48 — Territories and Insular Possessions
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73