election would be held fourteen days later between the two highest teams. C. The terms of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor would begin on the first Monday of January following the election. A person, after having served as Governor for two full successive terms, would not be eligible to hold the office again until one full term had intervened. D. Qualifications for Governor and Lieutenant Governor called for being an eligible voter, having been for five consecutive years immediately before the election a citizen of the United States and a bona fide resident of the Virgin Islands, and being at least 30 years of age at the time of taking office. E. In the case of a permanent vacancy in the office of Lieutenant Governor, the Governor would appoint a new Lieutenant Governor, with the approval of the Legislature. F. A bill that had been vetoed by the Governor became law after a two-thirds legislative override of the Governor's veto. (Thus, the Presidential veto of local legislation was abolished.) G. The Governor was still required to make annual reports of governmental transactions to the Secretary of the Interior. However, the salaries of the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and other Virgin Islands officials and employees were all to be set and paid by the local government. H. The Governor could be removed from office by a special recall election. I. Several parts of the Constitution of the United States that had not previously been extended to the Islands were made applicable. The right of the people of the Virgin Islands to elect a governor of their own choosing, instead of a governor who was a Presidential appointee, had been the desire of a sizable number of Virgin Islands' residents since the early 1950s. Advanced Virgin Islands' political thinkers, such as Rothschild Francis, had actually