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119th United States Congress

The 119th United States Congress is the current meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It convened on January 3, 2025, for the last 17 days of Joe Biden's presidency and will continue during the first two years of Donald Trump's second presidency.

History
In the 2024 elections, the Republican Party retained control of the House of Representatives and gained control of the Senate, while Republican nominee Donald Trump won the presidential election, securing a second non-consecutive term. The results of the election were attributed to economic conditions of voters and concerns over immigration, particularly the Mexico–United States border crisis. The Senate flipped to a 53–47 Republican majority, and in their leadership elections, Senator John Thune of South Dakota was elected to succeed Mitch McConnell, who had been in power for 18 years. The House assumed a 220–215 Republican majority, among the narrowest controlling majorities in House history with the 65th Congress. Mike Johnson was re-elected as speaker on the first ballot after initially not receiving enough votes on the roll call, with the vote remaining open until enough members changed votes to support him. On January 6, a joint session convened to count the presidential Electoral College votes. The proceedings were peaceful, four years after the January 6 Capitol attack, in which supporters of Trump entered the Capitol and disrupted Joe Biden's certification as president. In response to the attack and Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election, Congress has passed revisions to the Electoral Count Act that prevent the vice president from altering the results and significantly raises the bar for certification objections. Comprising 80% of the membership of the House of Representatives and 89% of the Senate, Baby boomers and Generation X remained the largest generations represented in Congress after having comprised more than 80% of the membership of both chambers since at least the 115th United States Congress and Baby boomers alone comprising the majority of the House of Representatives and the Senate since the 106th United States Congress and the 111th United States Congress respectively. ==Major events==
Major events
takes the oath of office as the 47th president of the United States to a joint session of Congress, with Vice President JD Vance and House Speaker Mike Johnson. , with Vice President Vance and House Speaker Johnson. addressing the Congress, with Vice President Vance and House Speaker Mike Johnson • January 3, 2025, 12 p.m. EST: Congress convenes. Members-elect of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives are sworn in. Mike Johnson (R) is re-elected as speaker on the first ballot after initially not receiving enough votes on the roll call, with Ralph Norman and Keith Self changing their votes to support him. • January 6, 2025: A joint session to count the presidential Electoral College votes is held. • January 9, 2025: The funeral of former president Jimmy Carter takes place. • January 20, 2025: The second inauguration of Donald Trump takes place. The Republicans gain a trifecta. • January 24, 2025: Vice President JD Vance casts the tie-breaking vote to confirm Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense. This was the second time in United States history that a cabinet confirmation was tied in the Senate and required a tie-breaking vote. The first was when Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote to confirm Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education in Trump's first term. • March 4, 2025: President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress. • March 5, 2025: Representative Sylvester Turner (D) of Texas dies. • March 6, 2025: The House votes 224–198 (2 present) to censure Representative Al Green (D) of Texas for repeatedly disrupting (by speaking out of turn) President Donald Trump's address to a joint session of Congress. • March 13, 2025: Representative Raúl Grijalva (D) of Arizona dies. • March 31 – April 1, 2025: Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey breaks the record for the longest Senate speech, protesting President Donald Trump's agenda. • May 21, 2025: Representative Gerry Connolly (D) of Virginia dies. • July 3, 2025: House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York breaks the record for the longest House magic minute speech while speaking against the "One Big Beautiful Bill". • July 20, 2025: Representative Mark Green (R) of Tennessee resigns. • October 1 – November 12, 2025: The federal government shuts down as a result of Congress not approving a budget. • November 20, 2025: Representative Mikie Sherrill (D) of New Jersey resigns after winning the 2025 New Jersey gubernatorial election. • January 5, 2026: Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) of Georgia resigns. • January 6, 2026: Representative Doug LaMalfa (R) of California dies. • January 31 – February 3, 2026: The federal government partially shuts down as a result of Congress not approving a budget. • February 14 – April 30, 2026: A second shutdown affecting only the Department of Homeland Security as a result of Congress not approving a budget. • February 24, 2026: President Trump delivers the 2026 State of the Union Address. • March 9, 2026: Representative Kevin Kiley of California leaves the Republican Party and registers as an Independent. • March 23, 2026: Senator Markwayne Mullin from Oklahoma resigns after being confirmed as Secretary of Homeland Security. • April 14, 2026: Following allegations of sexual misconduct, Representatives Tony Gonzales (R) of Texas and Eric Swalwell (D) of California resign. • April 21, 2026: Representative Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D) of Florida resigned following the House Ethics Committee and a grand jury finding her guilty for financial fraud. • April 22, 2026: Representative David Scott (D) of Georgia dies. • April 28, 2026: King Charles III addressed a joint session of Congress, becoming the first British monarch to do so since his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in 1991. ==Major legislation==
Major legislation
Enacted into law on January 29, 2025 into law on May 19, 2025 into law on July 4, 2025 • January 29, 2025: Laken Riley Act, • March 15, 2025: Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Other Extensions Act, • May 19, 2025: TAKE IT DOWN Act, • June 12, 2025: Aerial Firefighting Enhancement Act of 2025, • July 4, 2025: One Big Beautiful Bill Act, • July 7, 2025: Alaska Native Settlement Trust Eligibility Act, • July 7, 2025: Alaska Native Village Municipal Lands Restoration Act of 2025, • July 15, 2025: Apex Area Technical Corrections Act, • July 15, 2025: Salem Maritime National Historical Park Redesignation and Boundary Study Act, • July 16, 2025: HALT Fentanyl Act, • July 18, 2025: GENIUS Act, • July 24, 2025: Rescissions Act of 2025, • July 24, 2025: Filing Relief for Natural Disasters Act, • July 24, 2025: Jocelyn Nungaray National Wildlife Refuge Act, • July 30, 2025: VA Home Loan Program Reform Act, • August 14, 2025: ACES Act of 2025, • August 14, 2025: PRO Veterans Act of 2025, • August 19, 2025: Maintaining American Superiority by Improving Export Control Transparency Act, • September 5, 2025: Homebuyers Privacy Protection Act, • November 12, 2025: Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, • November 19, 2025: Epstein Files Transparency Act, • December 18, 2025: National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026, • February 3, 2026: Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, Proposed (but not enacted) ;Passed in Congress, but vetoed by President • : Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act, 2026 • : Miccosukee Reserved Area Amendments Act, 2026 ;Bills passed in the House waiting for the Senate • : Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act • : Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act • : Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act • : Protecting American Energy Production Act • : Halt All Lethal Trafficking of Fentanyl Act • : Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act • : Preventing Violence Against Women by Illegal Aliens Act • : United States-Taiwan Expedited Double-Tax Relief Act • : Agent Raul Gonzalez Officer Safety Act • : MEGOBARI Act • : Midnight Rules Relief Act • : Tennessee Valley Authority Salary Transparency Act • : Federal Disaster Assistance Coordination Act • : Post-Disaster Assistance Online Accountability Act • : Promoting Opportunities to Widen Electrical Resilience Act of 2025 • : Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act • : Hershel Woody Williams National Medal of Honor Monument Location Act • : Modernizing Access to our Public Waters Act of 2025 • : Securities and Exchange Commission Real Estate Leasing Authority Revocation Act • : Amtrak Executive Bonus Disclosure Act • : Lake Winnibigoshish Land Exchange Act of 2025 • : Accurately Counting Risk Elimination Solutions Act • : Supporting the Health of Aquatic systems through Research Knowledge and Enhanced Dialogue Act of 2025 • : Disabled Veterans Housing Support Act • : Eastern Band of Cherokee Historic Lands Reacquisition Act • : Special Interest Alien Reporting Act of 2025 • : Gulf of America Act • : Cost-Share Accountability Act of 2025 • : Continued Rapid Ohia Death Response Act of 2025 • : Chinese Currency Accountability Act of 2025 • : Semiquincentennial Congressional Time Capsule Act • : Fix Our Forests Act • : Subterranean Border Defense Act • : Recruiting Families Using Data Act of 2025 • : Vietnam Veterans Liver Fluke Cancer Study Act • : China Exchange Rate Transparency Act of 2023 • : Medal of Honor Act • : DHS Biodetection Improvement Act • : Strategic Homeland Intelligence and Enforcement Legislation to Defend Against the CCP Act • : Mathematical and Statistical Modeling Education Act • : Protect Small Businesses from Excessive Paperwork Act of 2025 • : Investing in Main Street Act of 2025 • : Mail Traffic Deaths Reporting Act of 2025 • : Nutria Eradication and Control Reauthorization Act of 2025 • : DOE and SBA Research Act • : Rural Small Business Resilience Act • : Small Business Procurement and Utilization Reform Act of 2025 • : Assisting Small Businesses Not Fraudsters Act • : Successful Entrepreneurship for Reservists and Veterans Act • : Small Business Advocacy Improvements Act of 2025 • : 9/11 Memorial and Museum Act • : Emergency Wildfire Fighting Technology Act of 2025 • : Safe and Smart Federal Purchasing Act • : TSA Commuting Fairness Act • : Federal Contractor Cybersecurity Vulnerability Reduction Act of 2025 • : Deliver for Veterans Act • : Research Security and Accountability in DHS Act • : Chronic Disease Flexible Coverage Act • : Housing Unhoused Disabled Veterans Act • : Fairness for Servicemembers and their Families Act of 2025 • : Credit Union Board Modernization Act • : Montgomery GI Bill Selected Reserves Tuition Fairness Act of 2025 • : Emerging Innovative Border Technologies Act • : National Taxpayer Advocate Enhancement Act of 2025 • : Internal Revenue Service Math and Taxpayer Help Act • : Clear Communication for Veterans Claims Act • : Defending Education Transparency and Ending Rogue Regimes Engaging in Nefarious Transactions Act • : Electronic Filing and Payment Fairness Act • : Recovery of Stolen Checks Act • : Pandemic Unemployment Fraud Enforcement Act • : Decoupling from Foreign Adversarial Battery Dependence Act • : United States Research Protection Act • : Commercial Remote Sensing Amendment Act of 2025 • : DOE and USDA Interagency Research Act • : DOE and NSF Interagency Research Act • : DOE and NASA Interagency Research Coordination Act • : Securing the Cities Improvement Act • : Disaster Related Extension of Deadlines Act • : Guidance Out Of Darkness Act • : No Rogue Rulings Act • : Innovative Mitigation Partnerships for Asphalt and Concrete Technologies Act • : Producing Advanced Technologies for Homeland Security Act • : Strategic Ports Reporting Act • : Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act • : No Wrong Door for Veterans Act • : Mental Health in Aviation Act of 2025 • : Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 ;Bills proposed in the House • : Women's Health Protection Act • : John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act • : Equality Act • : Paycheck Fairness Act • : Bipartisan Background Checks Act • : Richard L. Trumka Protecting the Right to Organize Act of 2025 • : Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act (ordered by committee to be amended on March 25, 2025) • : Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act • : Matthew Lawrence Perna Act of 2025 • : English Language Unity Act of 2025 • : STABLE Act of 2025 • : Protect Children's Innocence Act of 2025 • : No Tax on Home Sales Act • : Clear Skies Act • : 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act ;Bills passed in the Senate waiting for the House • : Local Access to Courts Act • : No Tax On Tips Act • : Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2025 • : Justice for Murder Victims Act • : District of Columbia Local Funds Act, 2025 ;Bills proposed in the Senate • : Sunshine Protection Act • : White Oak Resiliency Act of 2025 • : Background Check Expansion Act • : CAREER Act of 2025 • : Federal Prisons Accountability Act of 2025 • : Richard L. Trumka Protecting the Right to Organize Act of 2025 • : No Tax On Overtime Act • : Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act • : Sanctioning Russia Act • : Trade Review Act • : Equality Act • : Mammoth Cave National Park Boundary Adjustment Act of 2025 • : Women's Health Protection Act • : Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2026 ;Bills in Conference Committee • : Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026 ==Major resolutions==
Major resolutions
Adopted • : Setting the Rules of the House this Congress, with changes from the previous Congress. • : Censuring Al Green for disrupting the President's speech to a joint session of Congress. • : Allowing the Capitol rotunda to be used for Jimmy Carter's lying in state. • : Executive resolution authorizing the en bloc consideration in Executive Session of certain nominations on the Executive Calendar. Proposed • : Expunging the first impeachment of Donald Trump. • : Expunging the second impeachment of Donald Trump. • H.Res. 353: Impeaching Donald Trump (proposal by Shri Thanedar) • H.Res. 537: Impeaching Donald Trump (proposal by Al Green) • H.Res. 1155: Proposed to establish a commission on invoking the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution ==Party summary==
Party summary
: Resignations and new members are discussed in the "Changes in membership" section: Senate party summary House party summary ==Leadership==
Leadership
Note: Democrats refer to themselves as a "caucus"; Republicans refer to themselves as a "conference". Senate leadership Senate presiding officersPresident of the Senate: • Kamala Harris (D) – until January 20, 2025 • JD Vance (R) – since January 20, 2025 • President pro tempore: Chuck Grassley (R) Senate majority (Republican) leadershipMajority Leader: John Thune (SD) • Counselors: Steve Daines (MT), Markwayne Mullin (OK) (Until March 24, 2026), John Cornyn (TX), and Marsha Blackburn (TN) • Majority Whip: John Barrasso (WY) • Chair of the Senate Republican Conference: Tom Cotton (AR) • Chair of the Senate Republican Policy Committee: Shelley Moore Capito (WV) • Vice Chair of the Senate Republican Conference: James Lankford (OK) • Chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee: Tim Scott (SC) • Chair of the Senate Republican Steering Committee: Rick Scott (FL) • Chief Deputy Whip: Mike Crapo (ID) • Deputy whips: Jim Banks (IN), Marsha Blackburn (TN), Katie Britt (AL), John Cornyn (TX), Deb Fischer (NE), Markwayne Mullin (OK) (Until March 24, 2026), Dan Sullivan (AK), Thom Tillis (NC), and Todd Young (IN) • Minority Whip: Dick Durbin (IL) • Chair of the Senate Democratic Steering and Policy Committee: Amy Klobuchar (MN) • Chair of the Strategic Communications Committee: Cory Booker (NJ) • Vice chairs of the Senate Democratic Caucus: Elizabeth Warren (MA) and Mark Warner (VA) • Chair of the Senate Democratic Outreach Committee: Bernie Sanders (VT) • Secretary of the Senate Democratic Caucus: Tammy Baldwin (WI) • Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee: Kirsten Gillibrand (NY) • Vice Chair of the Senate Democratic Outreach Committee: Catherine Cortez Masto (NV) • Deputy Secretaries of the Senate Democratic Caucus: Brian Schatz (HI) and Chris Murphy (CT) • Vice Chair of the Senate Democratic Steering and Policy Committee: Jeanne Shaheen (NH) • Vice Chair of the Strategic Communications Committee: Tina Smith (MN) • Chief Deputy Whip: Brian Schatz (HI) • Deputy whips: Ben Ray Luján (NM), Jeff Merkley (OR), Jacky Rosen (NV), and Lisa Blunt Rochester (DE) • Majority Whip: Tom Emmer () • Chair of the House Republican Conference: Lisa McClain () • Chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee: Richard Hudson () • Chair of the House Republican Policy Committee: Kevin Hern () • Vice Chair of the House Republican Conference: Blake Moore () • Secretary of the House Republican Conference: Erin Houchin () • Chair of House Republican Leadership: Elise Stefanik () • Chief Deputy Whip: Guy Reschenthaler () • Sophomore Elected Leadership Committee representative: Russell Fry () • Freshman Elected Leadership Committee representative: Riley Moore () House minority (Democratic) leadershipMinority Leader and Chair of the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee: Hakeem Jeffries () • Minority Whip: Katherine Clark () • Chair of the House Democratic Caucus: Pete Aguilar () • Assistant Democratic Leader: Joe Neguse () • Vice Chair of the House Democratic Caucus: Ted Lieu () • Chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee: Suzan DelBene () • Chair of the House Democratic Policy and Communications Committee: Debbie Dingell () • Co-chairs of the House Democratic Policy and Communications Committee: Maxwell Frost (), Lori Trahan (), and Lauren Underwood () • Junior Caucus Leadership representative: Robert Garcia () • Battleground Leadership representative: Susie Lee () • Freshman Class Leadership representative: Luz Rivas () • Co-chairs of the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee: Nanette Barragán (), Robin Kelly (), and Debbie Wasserman Schultz () ==Members==
Members
Senators The numbers refer to their Senate classes. All class 1 seats were contested in the November 2024 elections. In this Congress, class 1 means their term commenced in the current Congress, requiring re-election in 2030; class 2 means their term ends with this Congress, requiring re-election in 2026; and class 3 means their term began in the last Congress, requiring re-election in 2028. ====Alabama==== : 2. Tommy Tuberville (R) : 3. Katie Britt (R) ====Alaska==== : 2. Dan Sullivan (R) : 3. Lisa Murkowski (R) ====Arizona==== : 1. Ruben Gallego (D) : 3. Mark Kelly (D) ====Arkansas==== : 2. Tom Cotton (R) : 3. John Boozman (R) ====California==== : 1. Adam Schiff (D) : 3. Alex Padilla (D) ====Colorado==== : 2. John Hickenlooper (D) : 3. Michael Bennet (D) ====Connecticut==== : 1. Chris Murphy (D) : 3. Richard Blumenthal (D) ====Delaware==== : 1. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D) : 2. Chris Coons (D) ====Florida==== : 1. Rick Scott (R) : 3. Marco Rubio (R) :: Ashley Moody (R) ====Georgia==== : 2. Jon Ossoff (D) : 3. Raphael Warnock (D) ====Hawaii==== : 1. Mazie Hirono (D) : 3. Brian Schatz (D) ====Idaho==== : 2. Jim Risch (R) : 3. Mike Crapo (R) ====Illinois==== : 2. Dick Durbin (D) : 3. Tammy Duckworth (D) ====Indiana==== : 1. Jim Banks (R) : 3. Todd Young (R) ====Iowa==== : 2. Joni Ernst (R) : 3. Chuck Grassley (R) ====Kansas==== : 2. Roger Marshall (R) : 3. Jerry Moran (R) ====Kentucky==== : 2. Mitch McConnell (R) : 3. Rand Paul (R) ====Louisiana==== : 2. Bill Cassidy (R) : 3. John Kennedy (R) ====Maine==== : 1. Angus King (I) : 2. Susan Collins (R) ====Maryland==== : 1. Angela Alsobrooks (D) : 3. Chris Van Hollen (D) ====Massachusetts==== : 1. Elizabeth Warren (D) : 2. Ed Markey (D) ====Michigan==== : 1. Elissa Slotkin (D) : 2. Gary Peters (D) ====Minnesota==== : 1. Amy Klobuchar (DFL) : 2. Tina Smith (DFL) ====Mississippi==== : 1. Roger Wicker (R) : 2. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) ====Missouri==== : 1. Josh Hawley (R) : 3. Eric Schmitt (R) ====Montana==== : 1. Tim Sheehy (R) : 2. Steve Daines (R) ====Nebraska==== : 1. Deb Fischer (R) : 2. Pete Ricketts (R) ====Nevada==== : 1. Jacky Rosen (D) : 3. Catherine Cortez Masto (D) ====New Hampshire==== : 2. Jeanne Shaheen (D) : 3. Maggie Hassan (D) ====New Jersey==== : 1. Andy Kim (D) : 2. Cory Booker (D) ====New Mexico==== : 1. Martin Heinrich (D) : 2. Ben Ray Luján (D) ====New York==== : 1. Kirsten Gillibrand (D) : 3. Chuck Schumer (D) ====North Carolina==== : 2. Thom Tillis (R) : 3. Ted Budd (R) ====North Dakota==== : 1. Kevin Cramer (R) : 3. John Hoeven (R) ====Ohio==== : 1. Bernie Moreno (R) : 3. JD Vance (R) :: Jon Husted (R) ====Oklahoma==== : 2. Markwayne Mullin (R) :: Alan Armstrong (R) : 3. James Lankford (R) ====Oregon==== : 2. Jeff Merkley (D) : 3. Ron Wyden (D) ====Pennsylvania==== : 1. David McCormick (R) : 3. John Fetterman (D) ====Rhode Island==== : 1. Sheldon Whitehouse (D) : 2. Jack Reed (D) ====South Carolina==== : 2. Lindsey Graham (R) : 3. Tim Scott (R) ====South Dakota==== : 2. Mike Rounds (R) : 3. John Thune (R) ====Tennessee==== : 1. Marsha Blackburn (R) : 2. Bill Hagerty (R) ====Texas==== : 1. Ted Cruz (R) : 2. John Cornyn (R) ====Utah==== : 1. John Curtis (R) : 3. Mike Lee (R) ====Vermont==== : 1. Bernie Sanders (I) : 3. Peter Welch (D) ====Virginia==== : 1. Tim Kaine (D) : 2. Mark Warner (D) ====Washington==== : 1. Maria Cantwell (D) : 3. Patty Murray (D) ====West Virginia==== : 1. Jim Justice (R) : 2. Shelley Moore Capito (R) ====Wisconsin==== : 1. Tammy Baldwin (D) : 3. Ron Johnson (R) ====Wyoming==== : 1. John Barrasso (R) : 2. Cynthia Lummis (R) Representatives All seats were filled by election in November 2024, or special elections thereafter as noted below. ====Alabama==== : . Barry Moore (R) : . Shomari Figures (D) : . Mike Rogers (R) : . Robert Aderholt (R) : . Dale Strong (R) : . Gary Palmer (R) : . Terri Sewell (D) ====Alaska==== : . Nick Begich III (R) ====Arizona==== : . David Schweikert (R) : . Eli Crane (R) : . Yassamin Ansari (D) : . Greg Stanton (D) : . Andy Biggs (R) : . Juan Ciscomani (R) : . Raúl Grijalva (D) :: Adelita Grijalva (D) : . Abraham Hamadeh (R) : . Paul Gosar (R) ====Arkansas==== : . Rick Crawford (R) : . French Hill (R) : . Steve Womack (R) : . Bruce Westerman (R) ====California==== : . Doug LaMalfa (R) :: Vacant : . Jared Huffman (D) : . Kevin Kiley (R, then I) : . Mike Thompson (D) : . Tom McClintock (R) : . Ami Bera (D) : . Doris Matsui (D) : . John Garamendi (D) : . Josh Harder (D) : . Mark DeSaulnier (D) : . Nancy Pelosi (D) : . Lateefah Simon (D) : . Adam Gray (D) : . Eric Swalwell (D) :: Vacant : . Kevin Mullin (D) : . Sam Liccardo (D) : . Ro Khanna (D) : . Zoe Lofgren (D) : . Jimmy Panetta (D) : . Vince Fong (R) : . Jim Costa (D) : . David Valadao (R) : . Jay Obernolte (R) : . Salud Carbajal (D) : . Raul Ruiz (D) : . Julia Brownley (D) : . George T. Whitesides (D) : . Judy Chu (D) : . Luz Rivas (D) : . Laura Friedman (D) : . Gil Cisneros (D) : . Brad Sherman (D) : . Pete Aguilar (D) : . Jimmy Gomez (D) : . Norma Torres (D) : . Ted Lieu (D) : . Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D) : . Linda Sánchez (D) : . Mark Takano (D) : . Young Kim (R) : . Ken Calvert (R) : . Robert Garcia (D) : . Maxine Waters (D) : . Nanette Barragán (D) : . Derek Tran (D) : . Lou Correa (D) : . Dave Min (D) : . Darrell Issa (R) : . Mike Levin (D) : . Scott Peters (D) : . Sara Jacobs (D) : . Juan Vargas (D) ====Colorado==== : . Diana DeGette (D) : . Joe Neguse (D) : . Jeff Hurd (R) : . Lauren Boebert (R) : . Jeff Crank (R) : . Jason Crow (D) : . Brittany Pettersen (D) : . Gabe Evans (R) ====Connecticut==== : . John B. Larson (D) : . Joe Courtney (D) : . Rosa DeLauro (D) : . Jim Himes (D) : . Jahana Hayes (D) ====Delaware==== : . Sarah McBride (D) ====Florida==== : . Jimmy Patronis (R) : . Neal Dunn (R) : . Kat Cammack (R) : . Aaron Bean (R) : . John Rutherford (R) : . Mike Waltz (R) :: Randy Fine (R) : . Cory Mills (R) : . Mike Haridopolos (R) : . Darren Soto (D) : . Maxwell Frost (D) : . Daniel Webster (R) : . Gus Bilirakis (R) : . Anna Paulina Luna (R) : . Kathy Castor (D) : . Laurel Lee (R) : . Vern Buchanan (R) : . Greg Steube (R) : . Scott Franklin (R) : . Byron Donalds (R) : . Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D) :: Vacant : . Brian Mast (R) : . Lois Frankel (D) : . Jared Moskowitz (D) : . Frederica Wilson (D) : . Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D) : . Mario Díaz-Balart (R) : . María Elvira Salazar (R) : . Carlos A. Giménez (R) ====Georgia==== : . Buddy Carter (R) : . Sanford Bishop (D) : . Brian Jack (R) : . Hank Johnson (D) : . Nikema Williams (D) : . Lucy McBath (D) : . Rich McCormick (R) : . Austin Scott (R) : . Andrew Clyde (R) : . Mike Collins (R) : . Barry Loudermilk (R) : . Rick Allen (R) : . David Scott (D) :: Vacant : . Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) :: Clay Fuller (R) ====Hawaii==== : . Ed Case (D) : . Jill Tokuda (D) ====Idaho==== : . Russ Fulcher (R) : . Mike Simpson (R) ====Illinois==== : . Jonathan Jackson (D) : . Robin Kelly (D) : . Delia Ramirez (D) : . Chuy García (D) : . Mike Quigley (D) : . Sean Casten (D) : . Danny Davis (D) : . Raja Krishnamoorthi (D) : . Jan Schakowsky (D) : . Brad Schneider (D) : . Bill Foster (D) : . Mike Bost (R) : . Nikki Budzinski (D) : . Lauren Underwood (D) : . Mary Miller (R) : . Darin LaHood (R) : . Eric Sorensen (D) ====Indiana==== : . Frank J. Mrvan (D) : . Rudy Yakym (R) : . Marlin Stutzman (R) : . Jim Baird (R) : . Victoria Spartz (R) : . Jefferson Shreve (R) : . André Carson (D) : . Mark Messmer (R) : . Erin Houchin (R) ====Iowa==== : . Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R) : . Ashley Hinson (R) : . Zach Nunn (R) : . Randy Feenstra (R) ====Kansas==== : . Tracey Mann (R) : . Derek Schmidt (R) : . Sharice Davids (D) : . Ron Estes (R) ====Kentucky==== : . James Comer (R) : . Brett Guthrie (R) : . Morgan McGarvey (D) : . Thomas Massie (R) : . Hal Rogers (R) : . Andy Barr (R) ====Louisiana==== : . Steve Scalise (R) : . Troy Carter (D) : . Clay Higgins (R) : . Mike Johnson (R) : . Julia Letlow (R) : . Cleo Fields (D) ====Maine==== : . Chellie Pingree (D) : . Jared Golden (D) ====Maryland==== : . Andy Harris (R) : . Johnny Olszewski (D) : . Sarah Elfreth (D) : . Glenn Ivey (D) : . Steny Hoyer (D) : . April McClain Delaney (D) : . Kweisi Mfume (D) : . Jamie Raskin (D) ====Massachusetts==== : . Richard Neal (D) : . Jim McGovern (D) : . Lori Trahan (D) : . Jake Auchincloss (D) : . Katherine Clark (D) : . Seth Moulton (D) : . Ayanna Pressley (D) : . Stephen Lynch (D) : . Bill Keating (D) ====Michigan==== : . Jack Bergman (R) : . John Moolenaar (R) : . Hillary Scholten (D) : . Bill Huizenga (R) : . Tim Walberg (R) : . Debbie Dingell (D) : . Tom Barrett (R) : . Kristen McDonald Rivet (D) : . Lisa McClain (R) : . John James (R) : . Haley Stevens (D) : . Rashida Tlaib (D) : . Shri Thanedar (D) ====Minnesota==== : . Brad Finstad (R) : . Angie Craig (DFL) : . Kelly Morrison (DFL) : . Betty McCollum (DFL) : . Ilhan Omar (DFL) : . Tom Emmer (R) : . Michelle Fischbach (R) : . Pete Stauber (R) ====Mississippi==== : . Trent Kelly (R) : . Bennie Thompson (D) : . Michael Guest (R) : . Mike Ezell (R) ====Missouri==== : . Wesley Bell (D) : . Ann Wagner (R) : . Bob Onder (R) : . Mark Alford (R) : . Emanuel Cleaver (D) : . Sam Graves (R) : . Eric Burlison (R) : . Jason Smith (R) ====Montana==== : . Ryan Zinke (R) : . Troy Downing (R) ====Nebraska==== : . Mike Flood (R) : . Don Bacon (R) : . Adrian Smith (R) ====Nevada==== : . Dina Titus (D) : . Mark Amodei (R) : . Susie Lee (D) : . Steven Horsford (D) ====New Hampshire==== : . Chris Pappas (D) : . Maggie Goodlander (D) ====New Jersey==== : . Donald Norcross (D) : . Jeff Van Drew (R) : . Herb Conaway (D) : . Chris Smith (R) : . Josh Gottheimer (D) : . Frank Pallone (D) : . Thomas Kean Jr. (R) : . Rob Menendez (D) : . Nellie Pou (D) : . LaMonica McIver (D) : . Mikie Sherrill (D) :: Analilia Mejia (D) : . Bonnie Watson Coleman (D) ====New Mexico==== : . Melanie Stansbury (D) : . Gabe Vasquez (D) : . Teresa Leger Fernandez (D) ====New York==== : . Nick LaLota (R) : . Andrew Garbarino (R) : . Tom Suozzi (D) : . Laura Gillen (D) : . Gregory Meeks (D) : . Grace Meng (D) : . Nydia Velázquez (D) : . Hakeem Jeffries (D) : . Yvette Clarke (D) : . Dan Goldman (D) : . Nicole Malliotakis (R) : . Jerry Nadler (D) : . Adriano Espaillat (D) : . Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) : . Ritchie Torres (D) : . George Latimer (D) : . Mike Lawler (R) : . Pat Ryan (D) : . Josh Riley (D) : . Paul Tonko (D) : . Elise Stefanik (R) : . John Mannion (D) : . Nick Langworthy (R) : . Claudia Tenney (R) : . Joseph Morelle (D) : . Tim Kennedy (D) ====North Carolina==== : . Don Davis (D) : . Deborah Ross (D) : . Greg Murphy (R) : . Valerie Foushee (D) : . Virginia Foxx (R) : . Addison McDowell (R) : . David Rouzer (R) : . Mark Harris (R) : . Richard Hudson (R) : . Pat Harrigan (R) : . Chuck Edwards (R) : . Alma Adams (D) : . Brad Knott (R) : . Tim Moore (R) ====North Dakota==== : . Julie Fedorchak (R) ====Ohio==== : . Greg Landsman (D) : . David Taylor (R) : . Joyce Beatty (D) : . Jim Jordan (R) : . Bob Latta (R) : . Michael Rulli (R) : . Max Miller (R) : . Warren Davidson (R) : . Marcy Kaptur (D) : . Mike Turner (R) : . Shontel Brown (D) : . Troy Balderson (R) : . Emilia Sykes (D) : . David Joyce (R) : . Mike Carey (R) ====Oklahoma==== : . Kevin Hern (R) : . Josh Brecheen (R) : . Frank Lucas (R) : . Tom Cole (R) : . Stephanie Bice (R) ====Oregon==== : . Suzanne Bonamici (D) : . Cliff Bentz (R) : . Maxine Dexter (D) : . Val Hoyle (D) : . Janelle Bynum (D) : . Andrea Salinas (D) ====Pennsylvania==== : . Brian Fitzpatrick (R) : . Brendan Boyle (D) : . Dwight Evans (D) : . Madeleine Dean (D) : . Mary Gay Scanlon (D) : . Chrissy Houlahan (D) : . Ryan Mackenzie (R) : . Rob Bresnahan (R) : . Dan Meuser (R) : . Scott Perry (R) : . Lloyd Smucker (R) : . Summer Lee (D) : . John Joyce (R) : . Guy Reschenthaler (R) : . Glenn Thompson (R) : . Mike Kelly (R) : . Chris Deluzio (D) ====Rhode Island==== : . Gabe Amo (D) : . Seth Magaziner (D) ====South Carolina==== : . Nancy Mace (R) : . Joe Wilson (R) : . Sheri Biggs (R) : . William Timmons (R) : . Ralph Norman (R) : . Jim Clyburn (D) : . Russell Fry (R) ====South Dakota==== : . Dusty Johnson (R) ====Tennessee==== : . Diana Harshbarger (R) : . Tim Burchett (R) : . Chuck Fleischmann (R) : . Scott DesJarlais (R) : . Andy Ogles (R) : . John Rose (R) : . Mark Green (R) :: Matt Van Epps (R) : . David Kustoff (R) : . Steve Cohen (D) ====Texas==== : . Nathaniel Moran (R) : . Dan Crenshaw (R) : . Keith Self (R) : . Pat Fallon (R) : . Lance Gooden (R) : . Jake Ellzey (R) : . Lizzie Fletcher (D) : . Morgan Luttrell (R) : . Al Green (D) : . Michael McCaul (R) : . August Pfluger (R) : . Craig Goldman (R) : . Ronny Jackson (R) : . Randy Weber (R) : . Monica De La Cruz (R) : . Veronica Escobar (D) : . Pete Sessions (R) : . Sylvester Turner (D) :: Christian Menefee (D) : . Jodey Arrington (R) : . Joaquin Castro (D) : . Chip Roy (R) : . Troy Nehls (R) : . Tony Gonzales (R) :: Vacant : . Beth Van Duyne (R) : . Roger Williams (R) : . Brandon Gill (R) : . Michael Cloud (R) : . Henry Cuellar (D) : . Sylvia Garcia (D) : . Jasmine Crockett (D) : . John Carter (R) : . Julie Johnson (D) : . Marc Veasey (D) : . Vicente Gonzalez (D) : . Greg Casar (D) : . Brian Babin (R) : . Lloyd Doggett (D) : . Wesley Hunt (R) ====Utah==== : . Blake Moore (R) : . Celeste Maloy (R) : . Mike Kennedy (R) : . Burgess Owens (R) ====Vermont==== : . Becca Balint (D) ====Virginia==== : . Rob Wittman (R) : . Jen Kiggans (R) : . Bobby Scott (D) : . Jennifer McClellan (D) : . John McGuire (R) : . Ben Cline (R) : . Eugene Vindman (D) : . Don Beyer (D) : . Morgan Griffith (R) : . Suhas Subramanyam (D) : . Gerry Connolly (D) :: James Walkinshaw (D) ====Washington==== : . Suzan DelBene (D) : . Rick Larsen (D) : . Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D) : . Dan Newhouse (R) : . Michael Baumgartner (R) : . Emily Randall (D) : . Pramila Jayapal (D) : . Kim Schrier (D) : . Adam Smith (D) : . Marilyn Strickland (D) ====West Virginia==== : . Carol Miller (R) : . Riley Moore (R) ====Wisconsin==== : . Bryan Steil (R) : . Mark Pocan (D) : . Derrick Van Orden (R) : . Gwen Moore (D) : . Scott Fitzgerald (R) : . Glenn Grothman (R) : . Tom Tiffany (R) : . Tony Wied (R) ====Wyoming==== : . Harriet Hageman (R) Non-voting members : : Amata Coleman Radewagen (R) : : Eleanor Holmes Norton (D) : : James Moylan (R) : : Kimberlyn King-Hinds (R) : : Pablo Hernández Rivera (PPD/D) : : Stacey Plaskett (D) ==Changes in membership==
Changes in membership
Senate membership changes House membership changes ==Committees==
Committees
Senate committees House committees Joint committees ==Senior staff==
Senior staff
;Officers • Architect of the Capitol: Thomas Austin • Attending Physician: Brian P. Monahan ;Organizations • Capitol Police: Michael G. Sullivan • Congressional Budget Office: Phillip SwagelGovernment Accountability Office: Orice Williams Brown (acting) • Government Printing Office: Hugh HalpernLibrary of Congress: Robert Newlen (acting) • Congressional Research Service: Karen DonfriedCopyright Office: VacantFederal Research Division: Annie Rorem • Law Library of Congress: Aslihan Bulut Senate senior staff ;Officers • Secretary: Jackie BarberSergeant at Arms and Doorkeeper: Jennifer HemingwayParliamentarian: Elizabeth MacDonough • Party Secretary for the Majority: Robert Duncan (R) • Party Secretary for the Minority: Gary B. Myrick (D) • Chaplain: Barry Black ;Officials • Curator: Melinda Smith • Historian: Katherine Scott • Librarian: Meghan Dunn House senior staff ;Officers • Chaplain: Margaret G. KibbenChief Administrative Officer: Anne Binsted (acting) • Clerk: Kevin McCumberSergeant at Arms: William McFarland ;Officials • General Counsel: Matthew BerryHistorian: Matthew Wasniewski • Inspector General: Christen J. Stevenson • Parliamentarian: Jason Smith • Reading Clerks: Susan Cole (R) and Tylease Alli (D) ;Organizations • Office of Congressional Conduct: Omar AshmawyOffice of Interparliamentary Affairs: Kate Knudson • Office of the Law Revision Counsel: Ralph Seep • Office of the Legislative Counsel: Warren Burke • Office of the Whistleblower Ombuds: Shanna Devine • Office of Congressional Workplace Rights: Martin Crane ==Elections==
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