In the 109th Congress, the House Select Committee on Homeland Security was established on June 19, 2002, pursuant to H. Res. 449 (adopted by voice vote). The committee was composed of nine members of the House: Rep. Armey, chair; Rep. DeLay; Rep. Watts of Oklahoma; Rep. Pryce of Ohio; Rep. Portman; Rep. Pelosi; Rep. Frost; Rep. Menendez; and Rep. DeLauro. The mandate of the Select Committee in the 107th Congress was to “develop recommendations and report to the House on such matters that relate to the establishment of a department of
homeland security.” The Select Committee accomplished its mandate on November 22, 2002, when the House concurred in the Senate amendment to H.R. 5005 by unanimous consent and cleared H.R. 5005 for the president. The bill was presented to the president on November 22, 2002, and was signed on November 25, 2002, becoming Public Law number 107-296, the "
Homeland Security Act of 2002". The termination date of the House Select Committee on Homeland Security was “after final disposition of a bill including the final disposition of any veto message on such bill,” which occurred on November 25, 2002. The second select committee was formed in 2003 at the beginning of the 108th Congress as a
select committee with
Rep. Christopher Cox of
California as its chair and
Jim Turner of
Texas as its
ranking member. The creation of the committee was necessitated by the creation of the
Department of Homeland Security. As an executive branch department, the newly formed Department of Homeland Security required congressional counterparts to facilitate legislative action and oversight. The committee was made permanent when it was elevated to
standing status by a vote of the House of Representatives on January 4, 2005, on the opening day of the
109th Congress, again with Rep. Chris Cox as its first permanent chair. Rep.
Bennie Thompson of
Mississippi was the committee's first permanent ranking member. After Cox resigned from Congress in July 2005 to become the Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Rep.
Peter King of
New York served as chair for the remainder of the 109th Congress. As Congress switched parties at the beginning of the 110th Congress, Rep. Thompson became the chair of the committee and Rep. King the ranking member. House control switched parties again at the beginning of the 112th Congress in 2011, and King again became the chair, and Thompson the ranking member. As the House switched parties at the beginning of the 116th Congress, Thompson again assumed the chair. The committee continues to operate in a bipartisan manner, passing almost all of its legislation out of the committee unanimously. == Hearings ==