U.S. Senate (2017–present)
115th Congress (2017–2019) in the
U.S. Capitol's
Old Senate Chamber on January 3, 2017 Kennedy was sworn in as
Louisiana's junior U.S. Senator on January 3, 2017. He had resigned his position as state treasurer earlier that day. In June 2017, Kennedy "grilled"
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos in a hearing before the Appropriations subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Service, Education and Related Agencies. In the exchange, he contrasted the lack of school choice available to younger pupils in many rural areas of the country with the numerous brands of mayonnaise available at grocery stores: "Now I can go down to my overpriced Capitol Hill grocery this afternoon and choose among about six different types of mayonnaise. How come I can't do that for my kid?" Kennedy asked. The remark attracted national attention. DeVos replied that the Trump administration budget proposal would give parents and students more power and opportunity so that American education could again become "the envy of the world". Kennedy served as a volunteer substitute teacher for more than a decade in Louisiana public schools to better understand issues in the education system. He attracted comment for his manner in the Senate. A January 2018
Huffington Post article reported: "Since being elected to the Senate a year ago, Kennedy ... has made a name for himself on
Capitol Hill with his wit, humor and penchant for folksy expressions―a notable feat in a place where jargon and arcane procedure tend to reign supreme". Kennedy received widespread media attention after he crossed party lines to oppose the appointment of three of Trump's
U.S. District Court judicial nominees who Kennedy believed were not qualified:
Jeff Mateer,
Brett Talley, and
Matthew S. Petersen. The
White House withdrew all three nominations. On December 13, 2017, during Petersen's confirmation hearing before the
Senate Judiciary Committee, Kennedy asked Petersen about basic legal procedure, whether he knew what the
Daubert standard was, and what a
motion in limine was. Petersen struggled to answer. Kennedy also voted against the nomination of
Gregory G. Katsas to the D.C. Circuit, but Katsas was confirmed. On April 7, 2017, Kennedy voted to confirm
Neil Gorsuch to the
United States Supreme Court. Kennedy participated in Gorsuch's confirmation as a member of the Judiciary Committee. During the confirmation process, Kennedy said, “Neil Gorsuch is obviously very well-qualified based on his education and background, but I want to know what’s in his heart. I want to know what he thinks about past Supreme Court decisions and how the justices reached those decisions. I want to know whether he thinks personal preferences have a role in the judicial decision-making. I want to know if he knows the name of the person who cleans his office. Also, I'm rather fond of the U.S. Constitution, and I want to make sure he is, too." On October 6, 2018, Kennedy voted to confirm
Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. As a member of the Judiciary Committee, Kennedy participated in Kavanaugh's contentious nomination hearing after
Christine Blasey Ford accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault. Kennedy criticized the hearing, saying, "No fair-minded American can believe that he's not qualified—he went to Yale Law School; he didn't get his law degree from Costco. He has a total command of Supreme Court precedent. I think he’s a legal rock star." Kennedy broke from Republicans during the hearing to call for the
FBI's investigation into Ford's allegations to be made public. In March 2018, after a dog died in an overhead bin while flying
United Airlines, Kennedy said he would file a bill to "prohibit airlines from putting animals in overhead bins" and added that officials "would face significant fines" if they did not comply. That month, he introduced the Welfare Of Our Furry Friends (WOOFF) Act, but the bill died in committee. In July 2018, Kennedy and several other Republican members of Congress met with Russian government officials in Moscow. During the meetings, the two sides discussed election interference, upholding nuclear arms treaties, maintaining peace in
Syria, and respecting
Ukrainian sovereignty. The delegation was criticized for visiting the country during
Fourth of July celebrations and for holding the talks just days after an
incident in the United Kingdom in which a couple were poisoned by a suspected Russian nerve agent. On October 12, 2018, the Senate voted to pass Kennedy's Rural Business Investment Program Advisers Relief Act of 2018. The bill removes compliance costs on a venture capital program aimed at stimulating business in rural America. It became law in 2019. On December 18, 2018, Kennedy voted against the First Step Act, a criminal justice reform bill that reduced the prison sentences of some federal inmates. He said, "I voted against this bill because the most important goal of the criminal justice system for American families is justice. This bill is backwards. It favors criminals over victims. It forgets that the ultimate goal is justice. We’ve seen what’s happened with so-called criminal justice reform in Louisiana. People are literally getting killed." On October 5, 2018, Kennedy introduced a Small Business Administration Disaster Loan bill to stop the agency from dropping SBA loan limits from $25,000 to $14,000 to ensure businesses have funds to rebuild following
natural disasters. The bill passed the Senate with unanimous consent. President Trump signed it into law on November 29, 2018. On November 15, 2018, Kennedy introduced the National Flood Insurance Program Extension Act, a bill that amended the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 to reauthorize the
National Flood Insurance Program until June 1, 2019, to avoid a lapse in the program. The bill passed the Senate with unanimous consent and passed the House with a vote of 315–48. Trump signed the bill into law on December 21, 2018. In 2018, Kennedy worked with Senator
Joe Manchin on the Justice Against Corruption on K Street (JACK) Act. The bill was named after
Jack Abramoff, a lobbyist who was convicted of fraud, corruption, and conspiracy. Kennedy said, "This idea is simple: If you have been convicted of a felony like bribery, extortion, embezzlement or tax evasion, you should have to disclose that when registering to become a lobbyist. Political leaders and businesses need to know the backgrounds of those who are trying to influence public policy." The bill passed the Senate on December 20, 2018, and was signed into law in 2019. In February 2020, JACK Act disclosures revealed that lobbyists with criminal histories collected $3.1 million. Leading up to the
2019 election, Kennedy was mentioned as a prospective candidate for governor in the
jungle primary against incumbent
John Bel Edwards, but on December 3, 2018, he said he preferred to remain in the Senate and would not run for governor.
116th Congress (2019–2021) In March 2019, Kennedy introduced the
Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, which Trump signed into law on December 18, 2020. The law prohibits any company from listing on an American stock exchange if it refuses to allow the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to audit its annual private audit for three consecutive years. It also requires companies to disclose whether they are owned by a foreign government. In 2019, Kennedy again introduced a bill to extend the National Flood Insurance Program. It extended the program through June 14, 2019, rather than lapsing on May 31. The bill passed the Senate on May 23, 2019, and was signed into law. , January 2019 In 2019, Kennedy called on the
Treasury Department to establish a website where citizens could find out whether they had unclaimed Treasury savings bonds. He established a similar website for the state of Louisiana when he was treasurer. After Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death in 2020, Kennedy supported Trump's nomination of
Amy Coney Barrett to fill the Supreme Court vacancy. Kennedy voted to confirm Barrett, and said in an interview on
Tucker Carlson Tonight, "you would have to be barking mad to think that she is not qualified". After her confirmation on October 26, he applauded it as a "victory for our founders". On March 26, 2020, Kennedy voted for the first COVID-19 stimulus package, the CARES Act, saying, "This virus poses a unique health risk, and we know that poverty can also threaten lives. Understanding that, I voted today to protect the well-being of Louisianans now and into the future by investing in medical services, families, workers and businesses." In July 2020, Kennedy voted for the second COVID-19 relief package, saying, "I’m very conservative fiscally, as I think most of you know, but people are in pain and the size of the American economy is just extraordinary. This is the largest economy in all of human history, and government just shut down, just shut it down, and a lot of people have gotten hurt, through no fault of their own, and we need to help them without wasting any money." Kennedy helped draft the Water Resources Development Act of 2020, a bill that determines which projects the
Army Corps of Engineers will build. With few options, Louisiana agreed to let the Corps build a flood protection system for the New Orleans region that meets the standards for national flood insurance. He added a provision that allowed Louisiana to renegotiate a loan agreement with the Corps for a flood protection system that saved Louisiana taxpayers $1.3 billion. In 2020, Kennedy helped secure natural disaster aid for Louisiana after
Hurricane Laura hit the state. He toured the damaged coastline near Lake Charles, Louisiana, with President Trump, and Trump later issued a major disaster declaration for the state. In the aftermath of Hurricane Laura and
Hurricane Delta, Kennedy introduced a bill to recognize the linemen who worked to help the state recover from the storms. The bill would revise the
Department of Homeland Security's definition of "emergency response providers" to add utility line technicians. After
Hurricane Zeta hit Louisiana, Kennedy led the effort to get the internet restored in Louisiana after prolonged outages. He sent letters to Cox and
AT&T urging them to put "more elbow grease" into restoring internet to the state and to be transparent with customers about the estimated timelines for getting service back. On March 10, 2021, the Center for Effective Lawmaking ranked Kennedy as one of the ten most effective Republican senators of the 116th Congress, and the most effective Republican senator in the areas of commerce, education, and trade.
117th Congress (2021–2023) After the
2020 presidential election, Kennedy and 11 other Republican senators said they would object to certain states' electoral votes in the
2021 United States Electoral College vote count on January 6, 2021, unless the vote was audited. He was participating in the certification when Trump supporters
stormed the United States Capitol. Kennedy called the attack "despicable and shameful" and called for the rioters "to go to jail and pay for the destruction they caused." When the Capitol was secured and Congress returned to complete the certification, he objected to the certification of Arizona's electoral votes. On February 9, 2021, Kennedy voted against
Trump's second impeachment. Kennedy said the impeachment effort was unconstitutional because Trump was no longer president. He called the impeachment process "a thinly veiled effort by the uber-elites in our country, who look down on most Americans, to denigrate further those people who chose to vote for President Trump and not vote for President Biden." On March 6, 2021, Kennedy voted against the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, a COVID-19 recovery package. He said he voted against it because it was "an orgy of pork", adding, "This is not a coronavirus bill, not the way it's been portrayed". On May 28, 2021, Kennedy voted against the
January 6 commission House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi proposed to investigate the January 6 attack. The commission failed to gain traction, but the House later successfully established the
January 6 committee as an alternative. On June 22, 2021, the Senate passed the Accelerating Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, a bill by Kennedy that moves up the deadline for a bill passed in 2019 that required U.S. markets to delist any foreign company that refused to allow the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board to inspect its audits. Kennedy said, "When foreign companies flout America's security laws, they put Americans' retirement plans and savings at risk. China is bent on exploiting American investors, so we need more accountability for foreign companies using American capital, and we need it now." On July 29, 2021, President
Joe Biden signed into law the DUMP Opioids Act, Kennedy's eighth piece of legislation to become law in his first term as a U.S. senator. Kennedy has authored more bills signed into law than any first-term senator from Louisiana except
Newton Blanchard. On August 8, 2021, Kennedy voted against the
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, saying, "I realized pretty quickly that if you look up 'stupid stuff' in the dictionary, there's a picture of this bill. They told us it was a real infrastructure bill. It's not; only 23% of the bill is real infrastructure. The rest is Green New Deal and welfare. They told us the bill was paid for; it isn't. We're gonna have to borrow maybe up to $400 billion to pay for it. They told us there were no tax increases. There are; my state's gonna have to pay $1.3 billion in new taxes on our petrochemical industry. They told us … the Democrats were really wary of this bill and that if we passed this bill, it would make it harder for them to pass their $5 trillion tax and spending binge reconciliation bill. Well, if that's true, how come every Democrat voted for this infrastructure bill? And finally, they told us that it's not going to add to inflation, but it will." On September 27, 2021, Kennedy introduced the Unclaimed Savings Bond Act of 2021 to require the Treasury Department to speed the process of returning unclaimed savings bonds to the American people, continuing work he had done as state treasurer. He said the Treasury was sitting on more than $26 billion in unclaimed bonds. President Biden signed an executive order based on Kennedy's efforts. In November 2021, while questioning
Saule Omarova, the nominee for
Comptroller of the Currency, Kennedy mockingly said: "I don’t mean any disrespect. I don’t know whether to call you professor or comrade". This came after an exchange between Omarova and Kennedy about her upbringing in the USSR and her former connections to communist groups. Senator
Sherrod Brown interrupted Kennedy's line of questioning, accused him of engaging in character assassination. On April 7, 2022, Kennedy voted against
Ketanji Brown Jackson's nomination to the Supreme Court to succeed
Stephen Breyer, who was retiring. At the hearing, he said that he "found Judge Jackson to be smart, well-versed in the law, and extraordinarily deft and artful in her ability to speak at length without saying anything of substance on critical questions—especially the limits of judicial power and the importance of judicial restraint", adding, "I don't agree with the judge on where, based on her opinions, she draws the limits of judicial power, and I don't think she places as great an importance as I do on judicial restraint in a Madisonian system of checks and balances and separation of powers, and, for that reason, I will be voting no." On July 27, 2022, Kennedy voted against the Chips and Science Act, a bill regarding semiconductor production. He called the bill "a subsidy to Big Tech", adding, "These are extraordinary American companies that Congress just helped, but they're very profitable, and the supply of chips is growing now. My concern is the amount of money. For that amount, we could have doubled the R&D tax credit for every company in America." On August 7, 2022, Kennedy voted against the
Inflation Reduction Act, calling it a "massive tax-and-spending bill". While the bill was being amended, Kennedy attempted to include an amendment he drafted with Senator
Raphael Warnock to cap the price of insulin at $35 per month; the amendment did not receive the 60 votes needed to be included. In 2021, Kennedy opposed FEMA's effort to restructure its NFIP flood insurance program after changes the agency made caused insurance rates to skyrocket in Louisiana, prompting 8.5% of families to drop federal coverage. Kennedy said FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 was "robbing Louisiana families of the flood protection they need for their homes". He has asked FEMA officials to disclose the algorithm used in Risk Rating 2.0 so it can demonstrate why rates increased 128% in Louisiana, but Millman, the firm that developed Risk Rating 2.0, and FEMA have refused to disclose the algorithm as of 2024. Kennedy introduced the Flood Insurance Pricing Transparency Act to try to force FEMA to disclose the information.
118th Congress (2023–2025) By late 2022, there was again speculation that Kennedy might run for governor in the
2023 election, when Edwards would be
term limited, but he ended the rumors on the second day of the
118th Congress by announcing he again would prefer to stay in the Senate. On January 25, 2023, Kennedy quizzed Biden's judicial nominee
Charnelle Bjelkengren on basic questions about the
Constitution of the United States, whether she could state the functions of
Articles V and
II, and whether she could define
purposivism and the
independent state legislature theory. Bjelkengren failed to answer all four questions. After the hearing, Kennedy told a local reporter at
NBC News, "Some of these nominees that have been forced in the last two years have no business being anywhere near a federal bench—they don't have any business being anywhere near a park bench." In May 2023, Kennedy sparked a diplomatic row with Mexico after he said, "Without the people of America, Mexico, figuratively speaking, would be eating cat food out of a can and living in a tent", while asking DEA Administrator
Anne Milgram why the U.S. was not asking Mexico to partner more effectively with the U.S. to stop the flow of fentanyl over the border. Kennedy introduced a bill to classify drug cartels as terrorist organizations because they traffic
fentanyl, a drug that killed more than 70,000 Americans in 2022. He also introduced a bill in 2023 to increase the prison sentences for fentanyl dealers, saying, "You have to have 400 grams. . . to face a mandatory 10-year sentence. Four hundred grams will kill 200,000 people dead as a doornail. Shreveport, Louisiana, is home to 184,000 people. So, a dealer could [have] 400 grams—an amount that could kill every man, woman, and child in Shreveport—in order to get a mandatory 10-year sentence." Senate Democrats blocked the bill, citing concerns over incarceration rates. In 2023, Kennedy and Senator
Kyrsten Sinema introduced a bill to install a special inspector general to track the money the U.S. sends Ukraine to fight its war with Russia, like the inspector general tasked with tracking money in Afghanistan. Kennedy and Sinema said of the bill, "One of the best ways we can avoid escalation (and bring this conflict to a close) is by ensuring that the investments America has already made pay off instead of being wasted, lost or diverted." A vote to add the bill to the National Defense Authorization Act failed. Kennedy was among the 31 Senate Republicans who voted against final passage of the
Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023. In September 2023, Kennedy read explicit passages from ''
All Boys Aren't Blue and Gender Queer'' during a Senate judiciary hearing on book banning. When he asked whether the books should be available to children, Senator
Dick Durbin replied, "No one is advocating for sexually explicit content to be available in an elementary school library or a children's section of a library." In October 2023, Kennedy negotiated the passage of a bill that protected the rights of veterans who have the Department of Veterans Affairs help them manage their financial benefits to own guns. Before the bill, the VA reported veterans who needed financial assistance to the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System without due process. The bill passed as an amendment to a larger Veterans Affairs package. Kennedy introduced a
Congressional Review Act resolution of disapproval against a rule promulgated by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that would have required extensive disclosures of personal information by small business owners who sought loans, including information about their sexuality. The House and Senate passed the resolution, but President Biden vetoed it. In March 2024, Kennedy had a viral exchange with professional cross-country skier
Gus Schumacher. Schumacher was on a panel of experts to discuss climate change during a hearing before the
Senate Budget Committee. He advocated for policies to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, but when Kennedy asked Schumacher how much carbon was in the atmosphere, he did not know. In an April 2024 Morning Consult poll, Kennedy was rated among the top ten most popular senators. In May 2024, Kennedy quashed the judicial nomination of U.S. Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn by questioning her about the sexual harassment that resulted from her decision to allow an inmate who claimed to be transgender to transfer to a women's prison. Kennedy's derailment of Netburn's nomination was the first time the Democratic-led Senate Judiciary Committee rejected one of President Biden's nominees. Kennedy introduced a bill to extend the statute of limitations for victims of sexual harassment who worked for the FDIC after an independent investigation found that the agency had a culture where harassment was commonplace. As a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Kennedy has secured millions in federal funding for Louisiana, including several million-dollar FEMA grants to fund hurricane recovery efforts after Hurricane Laura in 2020. In the 2024 appropriations package, Kennedy also secured millions to improve the Boggs Lock and Dam on the J. Bennett Johnston Waterway. On September 17, 2024, in a hearing on
rising racially motivated hate crimes in the United States, Kennedy claimed that pro-Palestinian figures promoted
antisemitism. He asked Maya Berry, the incumbent executive director of the
Arab American Institute, about her stance on
Hamas,
Hezbollah, and the
Iranian regime. He also asked Berry whether she still supported the
UNWRA amid claims that the organization "participated" in the
October 7 massacres. Berry said: "I think it's exceptionally disappointing you're looking at an Arab American witness before you and saying you support Hamas. I do not support Hamas." Kennedy repeated the same questions, and Berry responded, "The introduction of foreign policy is not how we keep Arab Americans or Jewish Americans or Muslim Americans or Black people or Asian Americans—anybody—safe. This has been regrettably a real disappointment but very much an indication of the danger to our democratic institutions that we're in now." Kennedy's concluding remark to Berry was "You should hide your head in a bag." Kennedy's words drew backlash from political figures, including
Dick Durbin. In September, Kennedy helped secure an extension of the
National Flood Insurance Program before Hurricanes
Helene and
Milton. Without the extension, funding for the flood insurance program would have lapsed on September 30.
119th Congress (2025–2027) ; November 6, 2025. In October 2025, Kennedy published a book,
How to Test Negative for Stupid: And Why Washington Never Will, which held the top spot on
The New York Times Best Seller list for three weeks and remained in the top 10 for 13 weeks. The book sold nearly half a million copies by January 2026. On November 6, 2025, Kennedy introduced two bills that would prevent members of Congress from getting paid during a government shutdown. His proposals came as the
then-current shutdown was on track to potentially become the longest in U.S. history, leading to federal workers missing paychecks.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Appropriations •
Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies •
Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies •
Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development •
Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government •
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs •
Subcommittee on Economic Policy •
Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection •
Subcommittee on Housing, Transportation, and Community Development •
Committee on the Budget •
Committee on the Judiciary •
Subcommittee on Border Security and Immigration •
Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism •
Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law •
Subcommittee on Intellectual Property •
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship Caucuses •
Senate Republican Conference •
Congressional Coalition on Adoption •
Rare Disease Caucus ==Political positions==