- Current members of the United States Congress
The
110th United States Congress consists of 540 elected officials from 50 states, four territories, and theDistrict of Columbia . It is the federallegislature of the United States of America, continuing an unbroken chain dating back to the 1st Congress in 1789.The
lower house , the House of Representatives, has 435 members and five non-voting delegates, and itsupper house , the Senate, has 100 members.Demographics
In the Senate, there are 16 women, the highest number in history (
Barbara Boxer , D-CA;Maria Cantwell , D-WA;Hillary Clinton , D-NY;Susan Collins , R-ME;Elizabeth Dole , R-NC;Dianne Feinstein , D-CA;Kay Bailey Hutchinson , R-TX;Amy Klobuchar , D-MN;Mary Landrieu , D-LA;Blanche Lincoln , D-AR;Claire McCaskill , D-MO;Barbara Mikulski , D-MD;Lisa Murkowski , R-AK;Patty Murray , D-WA;Olympia Snowe , R-ME;Debbie Stabenow , D-MI). There are 13Jew s, threeHispanics (Mel Martinez , R-FL;Bob Menendez , D-NJ;Ken Salazar , D-CO) twoAsian Americans (Daniel Akaka , D-HI;Daniel Inouye , D-HI), oneArab American (John Sununu, R-NH), and oneAfrican American (Barack Obama , D-IL). The average age of senators in 2007 is 62 years.Fact|date=September 2008 The oldest senator in 2007 is President pro temporeRobert Byrd (90); the youngest is John Sununu (44).The 110th Congress includes the most religiously-diverse House in history, including the first Muslims (Keith Ellison, D-MN and
André Carson , D-IN), the firstBuddhist s (Mazie Hirono , D-HI andHank Johnson , D-GA), 30 Jews, and one atheist (Pete Stark , D-CA). There are 42 African Americans (including two non-voting delegates) and 74 female representatives. There are also 27 Hispanics, four Asian Americans (Mazie Hirono , D-HI;Michael Honda , D-CA;Doris Matsui , D-CA; andDavid Wu , D-OR), and one Native American (Tom Cole , R-OK). There is one gay man (Barney Frank , D-MA) and one lesbian (Tammy Baldwin , D-WI).Religious demographics
As of June 2008, the top five denominations in the Congress are
Roman Catholic (29.3%),Baptist (11.1%),Methodist (10.2%), Jewish (7.8%), andPresbyterian (7.6%). Protestant denominations have held a large majority throughout congressional history, reflecting American's traditional demographics. 58.0% of seats are currently held by members of Protestant denominations. Catholics have also been in Congress from the beginning and have seen continuous representation since then. Charles Carroll was in theContinental Congress and was appointed to the Senate in 1789.Daniel Carroll ofMaryland andThomas Fitzsimons ofPennsylvania were Catholics in the first sesion of the House of Representatives.Gabriel Richard became the firstCatholic priest in Congress in 1823.Quaker s have also served in Congress since its inception, withPhilemon Dickinson in the Senate and a pair of House members inLambert Cadwalader andJohn Hathorn . Quaker representation has not been continuous, and only one member of the current Congress belongs to the group, RepresentativeRush Holt . In 1995 Congresswomen Sheila Jackson-Lee became the first Seventh-day Adventist to be elected to Congress. There has not been any other representation of the Adventist church since her election.In 1844,
Lewis Charles Levin became the firstJew to be elected to Congress. In 1845,David Levy Yulee was the chosen as the first Jewish member of the Senate, although he later became a convert to Christianity. Jews have been continuously represented in the House since the election ofIsidor Rayner in 1887. Since the election ofHerbert Lehman to the Senate in 1948, the upper house has also contained at least one Jewish member. A record 42 Jews currently serve in Congress.Not until 1966 was a member of an
Orthodox faith elected to Congress.Nick Galifianakis became the first member of this group to serve in the legislature. In 1977,Paul Sarbanes became the first US Senator of Orthodox beliefs. This group, despite having a relatively small number of adherents, has been continuously represented in both houses since the intitial elections. SenatorOlympia Snowe , as well as RepresentativesJohn Sarbanes ,Zack Space ,Gus Bilirakis , andNiki Tsongas are current members of Congress that followGreek Orthodox y, while RepresentativeMelissa Bean adheres toSerbian Orthodox y.Dalip Singh Saund , who elected in 1956 and served until 1963, was the first, and so far only, Sikh in Congress. [cite news |url=http://www.pbs.org/rootsinthesand/i_dalip1.html |publisher=PBS |title=Roots in the Sand - Dalip Saund |date=2000-07-28 |accessdate=2008-05-05] In 2007, Keith Ellison ofMinnesota became the first practicing Muslim to become a member of the United States Congress; he was joined byAndré Carson ofIndiana following a special election on 11 March 2008.Mazie Hirono ofHawai'i andHank Johnson of Georgia became the first twoBuddhists to be elected to the United States Congress onNovember 7 2006 . Johnson is a member of theSoka Gakkai sect, and Hirono (albeit non practicing) is a member of theJodo Shinshu sect.Members of the
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) have been in Congress sinceUtah was established as a territory in 1851. DelegateJohn Milton Bernhisel became the first Mormon in Congress that same year. When Utah received statehood in 1895,Clarence Emir Allen became the first representative of a state that practiced the Mormon faith, and since then Mormons have had continuous representation in the lower House.Frank J. Cannon became the first Latter-day Saint member of the Senate, also in 1895. However, after he left office the next year, Mormons did not return to the Senate until 1905, whenGeorge Sutherland started a string of continuous representation for the group. Currently eleven representatives and five senators are part of this religious group.As of a statement in March 2007,
California Rep.Pete Stark became the publicly-statedatheist in the history of Congress. He was formerly of theUnitarian Universalist faith. [cite news |url=/ |publisher=msnbc |title=Rep. Stark applauded for atheist outlook |date=2007-03-13 |accessdate=2008-05-05] Numerous members of Congress throughout history have also declined to list an official religion, including 10 current representatives.Gender
see also|Women in the United States Senate "and
Women in the United States House of Representatives "As of 2007 , 83.7% of Congress is male and 16.3% is female.cite web
url=http://www.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm
title=Women in Parliaments: World Classification
publisher=Inter-Parliamentary Union
accessdate=2007-04-06] The global average for female representation at the parliamentary level in 2007 was 17.0%. [cite web
url=http://www.ipu.org/wmn-e/world.htm
title=Women in Parliaments: World Average
publisher=Inter-Parliamentary Union
accessdate=2007-04-06]Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to Congress, in 1916. Women could not vote or be elected in most of the United States until the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified in 1920.Rebecca Felton was the first woman to become a Senator in 1922, serving for a brief two-day period when she was appointed to fill a vacancy left by Georgia SenatorThomas E. Watson . The first woman to win a race for Senate wasHattie Caraway , who won a special election in January 1932 to fulfill her late husband's Senate term of office. Caraway subsequently won the scheduled November 1932 election, eventually serving two more full terms.In the early days following the legalization of national womens' suffrage, most women elected to Congress were chosen as replacements for deceased husbands. Prior to the 1960s, most female members of Congress were either involved in this process of "widow's succession" or were members of influential political families. Elected to the House in 1965,
Patsy Mink became the first non-white woman to enter Congress (she is ofJapanese American heritage). Until 1992, a year that saw the election of four new female senators, the US Senate had never had more than three women serving at a time.Nancy Pelosi became the first female leader of a major party when she took over the position ofHouse Minority Leader in 2002, and she is currently (since 2007) the first woman to serve asSpeaker of the House .In the
109th United States Congress , there were 70 women serving theU.S. House and 14 in theU.S. Senate , which was the highest number of women to hold Congressional office in the United States up until that time. [cite web
url=http://www.senate.gov/reference/resources/pdf/RL30261.pdf
title=Women in the United States Congress: 1917-2006
publisher=Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
accessdate=2007-04-06] Those numbers went up in the110th Congress , with 74 women in the House [cite web
url=http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/memberfaq.html
title=Member FAQs: How many women are currently serving in Congress?
publisher=Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
accessdate=2007-04-06] and 16 in the Senate. [cite web
url=http://www.senate.gov/reference/reference_index_subjects/Women_in_Congress_vrd.htm
title=Women in the Senate
publisher=Secretary of the United States Senate
accessdate=2007-04-06]exual orientation
There have been five openly gay members in the history of Congress.
Gerry Studds (elected in 1972) became the first openly gay man when he acknowledged his homosexuality in 1983.Barney Frank (elected in 1980) is currently the only openly gay male in Congress; he first spoke publicly about his sexual orientation in 1987. Steve Gunderson, elected in 1980 and outed in 1994, andJim Kolbe , elected in 1984 and outed in 1996, are two other previous members of Congress that were openly gay. Current congresswomanTammy Baldwin is the first and so far only open lesbian woman to win election to Congress. In 1998, she became the first ever gay person to win election to Congress as a non-incumbent. Former California representativeMichael Huffington isbisexual , but did not come out until after his term had ended.Occupational background
Senators come from a variety of occupational backgrounds. 215 members (159 in the House and 58 in the Senate) have worked in some aspect of law during their career, whether as an attorney, paralegal, policy analyst, or bureaucratic official, with 180 members of the House and 58 of the Senate holding
Juris Doctor degrees. 189 members (162 in the House and 26 in the Senate) have worked in some segment of private sector business, with 18 members holdingMBA degrees. 82 representatives and 14 senators have worked in education, whether as a teacher or school administrator. 109 Congress members have served as political aides at some level, including 10 working as congressional pages and 16 working as members of theWhite House staff.24 members of Congress have worked in the medical field, including 12
M.D. s, 3nurses , 2dentist s, 2veterinarian s, 1psychologist , 1psychiatrist , 1optometrist , and 1pharmacist . 15 members are former law enforcement specialists, including 5sheriff s, 4police officer s, 2state trooper s, 2probation officer s, 1FBI agent, and 1border patrol agent. 9 scientists serve in Congress, including 4chemist s, 3physicist s, 1biologist , and 1biomedical engineer . 6 members of Congress areordained minister s, while 5 arecertified public accountant s.Several members of Congress were nationally famous prior to entering politics, namely
Hall of Fame MLB pitcherJim Bunning , andNFL quarterback Heath Shuler . Other congressmen have held a variety of jobs ranging fromsocial worker tomortician toriverboat captain.Race/ethnicity
African Americans currently make up about 13% of the US population, but have historically been underrepresented in Congress. Currently 42 members (9.5%) of the House are black, while
Barack Obama is the only African American member of the Senate. Until the emancipation of enslaved African Americans after theCivil War and the passage of theCivil Rights Act of 1866 , blacks were generally barred from voting. As a result of these new laws,Joseph Rainey andJefferson F. Long won election to Congress in majority-black districts andHiram Rhodes Revels was appointed as senator from Mississippi (then a majority-black state) in 1870. However, the end ofReconstruction in 1876 marked a weakening of black rights and by 1901, whenGeorge Henry White left the House after losing a reelection bid, there were no African Americans left in Congress.In 1929,
Oscar Stanton de Priest became the first African American congressman in the modern era. He and his successor,Arthur W. Mitchell , spent their tenure as the only African Americans in Congress while representing a majority-black House district inChicago . In 1970, a year that saw the election of four black freshman congressman, black membership in the House reached double-digits.Shirley Chisholm became the first African American female member of Congress when she won a 1968 election in New York, whileAndrew Young of Georgia became the first modern African American congressman from the South after he won election in 1972.Only five African Americans have served in the U.S. Senate. Hiram Revels and
Blanche Bruce both served during Reconstruction in then majority-black Mississippi. In the modern era,Edward Brooke (served 1967-79),Carol Moseley Braun (served 1993-99 as the first black female senator), and Barack Obama (2005-present) are the only blacks to have served in the upper house.Representation of Hispanics is somewhat complex, particularly because of the different ways to define membership in this group. Hispanics represent over 14% of the U.S. population, while the Senate is 3% Hispanic and the House is approximately 5% (25 members) Hispanic. Considering that Hispanics make up only 4% of American voters, Hispanic political incorporation has been relatively high compared with previous immigrant groups. The
Congressional Hispanic Caucus [http://www.napolitano.house.gov/chc/] has 21 members.Joseph Marion Hernández , a Spanish American, was the first Hispanic in Congress. He was a Whig Party territorial representative forFlorida in 1822. The first to represent a state wasRomualdo Pacheco , who representedCalifornia in 1877. In 1929,Octaviano Ambrosio Larrazolo became the first Hispanic to be elected to the United States Senate.Ileana Ros-Lehtinen , a Cuban American first elected in 1989, was the first Hispanic woman in Congress. While Hispanic women have served in House, none have been elected to the Senate.Unlike black Americans, Hispanics never were legally barred from the polls and in New Mexico and California, Hispanics were a large and influential minority. Since the election of
Dennis Chavez andJoachim O. Fernández to the House in 1931, Hispanics have continuously been represented in Congress. Most Hispanic members of Congress, including all elected prior to 1970, were ofMexican descent.Herman Badillo won election in 1970 to become the firstPuerto Rican in Congress, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen was elected in 1989 as the firstCuban American congresswoman, andRichard Pombo won a seat in 1993 as the firstPortuguese American member of congress.Prior to 2005, only three Hispanics have won a term in the U.S. Senate. These members were Octaviano Larrazola (served 1928-29), Dennis Chavez (formerly of the House, and served 1935-62), and
Joseph Montoya (also formerly a House member, serve 1964-77), all of Mexican descent. However, two Hispanics won Senate seats in 2004,Ken Salazar andMel Martinez (the first Cuban American senator), andBob Menendez was appointed in 2006.Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders also have a high level of political incorporation in terms of their actual voting population. But, as a result this group's historically low voting rates, overall political incorporation of the general population is relatively low. Although the population of this group has increased in size by 600% in 30 years due to immigration, heavy naturalization and voter outreach efforts have provided this primarily foreign-born community with less than 1% of voters but 1.25% of congressional population. However, since they represent 4.4% of the total population in the United States, this 1.25% still represents less than one-third of the total Asian American and Pacific Islander population. There are six members of this group in the House and two in the Senate. Senator
Daniel Inouye and RepresentativesMike Honda ,Doris Matsui , andMazie Hirono are allJapanese Americans . SenatorDaniel Akaka is a Native Hawaiian, while DelegateEni Faleomavaega is aSamoan . Bobby Scott of Virginia, who is also half black, hasFilipino American ancestry.Robert William Wilcox , aNative Hawaiian who served as Hawaiian territorial delegate from 1900 to 1903, was the first Pacific Islander chosen to serve in Congress.Dalip Singh Saund (served 1957-63) was the firstSouth Asia n American in Congress and is one of only twoIndian Americans to be elected to the legislature.Hiram Fong , who served three decades in the Senate from 1959 to 1977, remains the soleChinese American member to have ever entered Congress.Daniel Inouye (serving since 1959) was the first Japanese American in the House and later the first in Senate.Patsy Mink (served 1965-77 and again from 1990-2002) was the first Asian American woman in Congress. Daniel Akaka (serving since 1977) is thus far the only native Hawaiian to serve in either the House or the Senate.Jay Kim , who was born inSeoul and served from 1993-99, remains as the onlyKorean American to have entered Congress, while current congressman David Wu became the firstTaiwanese American representative in 1999. Bobby Scott, elected in 1993, is the only member of Congress to have Filipino ancestry.Only five members of the U.S. Senate have been of Asian American or Pacific Islander backgrounds. Four of these politicians have been from Hawaii, with senators Hiram Fong,
Spark Matsunaga , and Daniel Akaka providing a continuous hold for this ethnic group on a Class I seat from that state since its inception.Daniel Inouye has held the state's other senate seat for all but four years of statehood.Samuel Hayakawa (in office 1977-83) of California is the only other Asian to have served in the upper house. Hayakawa is actually ofJapanese Canadian decent, but worked as a college professor in the United States.Jewish Americans (29 members of the House and 13 members of Senate) have a level of political incorporation that is much greater than their voting population would suggest (2% of the population).
Compared with the primarily European American, African American, Latino, and Asian/Pacific American communities, American Indians, comprising 1.5% of the population, are the most underrepresented group.
Tom Cole , aChickasaw , is the only registered American Indian currently in the House. Tracking Native American members of Congress is complex, since many people of mixed blood are not registered as part of the American Indian population.Charles Curtis , who was three-quarters Native American and had ancestries from a variety of different tribes, was elected in 1892 as the first U.S. representative from this group. Curtis accomplished several other firsts during his political tenure. He became the first American Indian to serve in the US Senate (in office 1907-13 and 1915-29), to lead a major party (served as RepublicanSenate Majority Leader from 1925-29), and to obtain the office ofVice President .Several of the nation's major tribes have been represented in Congress in limited number.
Charles David Carter (served 1907-27) was the firstChoctaw in Congress;William Wirt Hastings (served 1915-35) was the firstCherokee in the legislature;Ben Reifel (seved 1961-71) was the firstSioux to win election to the body. Other than Curtis, only a few members of the U.S. Senate have been American Indians. Robert Latham Owen (served 1907-25) andBen Nighthorse Campbell (served 1993-2005 after several previous terms in the House and the firstCheyenne in Congress) are the others to have earned that distinction.Middle Eastern Americans also have typically low levels of voting incorporation, except among a particular voting group. As a whole, Middle Eastern Americans are not measured by the U.S. Census, which, combined with differences in the definition of this group, makes measuring its percentage of the population difficult. Estimates place about 1.8% of the nation's population to be of the origin. However, nearly all Middle Eastern members of Congress have been from one group,
Lebanese American s.George Kasem became the first Lebanese congressman when he won his first and only term in 1958. SinceAbraham Kazen took office in 1977 (served until 1985), Lebanese Americans have been consistently represented in Congress. Currently there are four Lebanese members of the House:Nick Rahall ,Ray LaHood ,Charles Boustany , andDarrell Issa .Five members of the U.S. Senate have been of Middle Eastern decent, with all five coming from
Arab American backgrounds and four holding Lebanese decent.James Abourezk , who served from 1973 to 1979, became the first Lebanese American member of the upper house.George Mitchell (served 1980-95), who is half Lebanese, became the first Middle Eastern American party leader, as he served asSenate Majority Leader from 1989 to 1995.James Abdnor (served 1981 to 1987) andSpencer Abraham (1995-2001) also were Lebanese American senators. John Sununu, a senator since 2003, is the first member of Congress ofPalestinian American decent.Currently there is one foreign-born U.S. Senator,
Mel Martinez of Florida, who was born inCuba . There are seven current representatives who were born overseas:Lincoln Diaz-Balart ,Ileana Ros-Lehtinen , andAlbio Sires from Cuba;Ciro Rodriguez fromMexico ;Mazie Hirono fromJapan ;David Wu fromTaiwan ; andPete Hoekstra from theNetherlands , who in total comprise 1.6% of the House. This figure does not include three members who were born overseas to U.S. citizen parents.Elections
Elections for all House seats and 33 Senate seats were held on
November 7 ,2006 across the country. Following 12 years under Republican control, the Democratic Party became the majority in both houses, regaining control of the House for the first time since 1994 and the Senate for the first time since 2002.enate
Leadership
Members
Delegates
Notes
:note label|Thomas|A|AJohn Barrasso was appointed by Wyoming Governor
Dave Freudenthal onJune 25 ,2007 afterCraig L. Thomas died onJune 4 ,2007 .:note label|Millender-McDonald|B|BLaura Richardson replacedJuanita Millender-McDonald , who died onApril 22 ,2007 , onAugust 21 ,2007 after a special election.:note label|Norwood|C|CPaul Broun replacedCharlie Norwood , who died onFebruary 3 ,2007 , onJuly 25 ,2007 after a special election.:note label|Hastert|D|DDennis Hastert resignedNovember 26 ,2007 and was replaced by a special election by Bill Foster.:note label|Meehan|E|ENiki Tsongas replacedMarty Meehan who resigned onJuly 7 ,2007 , onOctober 18 ,2007 after a special election.:note label|Carson|F|FJulia Carson died onDecember 15 ,2007 , and was replaced by a special election byAndré Carson .:note label|Gillmor|G|GBob Latta replacedPaul Gillmor , who died onSeptember 5 ,2007 , onDecember 13 ,2007 , after a special election.:note label|Wicker|H|HTrent Lott resigned from his Senete seat onDecember 18 ,2007 .Mississippi GovernorHaley Barbour appointed CongressmanRoger Wicker onDecember 31 ,2007 to replace him. Wicker was replaced byTravis Childers after a special election.:note label|Jindal|I|IBobby Jindal resignedJanuary 14 ,2008 and was replaced bySteve Scalise after a special election.:note label|Baker|J|JRichard Baker resigned onFebruary 2 ,2008 and was replaced byDon Cazayoux after a special election.:note label|Lantos|K|KTom Lantos died onFebruary 11 ,2008 and was replaced byJackie Speier after a special election.:note label|Tubbs|L|LStephanie Tubbs Jones died onAugust 10 ,2008 .References
ources
* [http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/congress/chron.html Hispanic Americans in Congress]
* [http://www.thisnation.com/congress-facts.html This Nation]
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