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92nd United States Congress

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(Redirected from 92nd Congress) 1971–1973 U.S. Congress

92nd United States Congress
91st ←→ 93rd
United States Capitol (c. 1970)

January 3, 1971 – January 3, 1973
Members100 senators
435 representatives
Senate majorityDemocratic
Senate PresidentSpiro Agnew (R)
House majorityDemocratic
House SpeakerCarl Albert (D)
Sessions
1st: January 21, 1971 – December 17, 1971
2nd: January 18, 1972 – October 18, 1972

The 92nd United States Congress was a 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 met in Washington, D.C., from January 3, 1971, to January 3, 1973, during the third and fourth years of Richard Nixon's presidency.

The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the 1960 census. Both chambers maintained a Democratic majority.

Major events

Main articles: 1971 in the United States, 1972 in the United States, and 1973 in the United States

Passing legislation on revenue-sharing was a key event of the congress. President Richard Nixon had it listed on his list of top policies to cover for the year. Nixon signed the bill into law at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. The law gained support from many state and local officials including: San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto whose city received $27 million in revenue-sharing money in the first year. Alioto said that many projects that would not have been possible could now be done, "That will effectively enable us to meet those programs which up to now because of very tough budgeting we've had to trench."

Major legislation

Main article: List of United States federal legislation

Constitutional amendments

See also: List of amendments to the United States Constitution
  • March 23, 1971: Approved an amendment to the United States Constitution prohibiting the states and the federal government from using age as a reason for denying the right to vote to citizens of the United States who are at least eighteen years old, and submitted it to the state legislatures for ratification
  • March 22, 1972: Approved an amendment to the Constitution designed to guarantee equal rights for women, and submitted it to the state legislatures for ratification
    • This amendment, commonly known as the Equal Rights Amendment, was later rendered inoperative, as it was not ratified within the seven–year time frame set by Congress (nor the later time extension granted)

Party summary

The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the Changes in membership section.

Senate

Party standings on the opening day of the 92nd Congress   54 Democratic Senators   1 Independent Senator, caucusing with Democrats   44 Republican Senators   1 Conservative Senator, caucusing with Republicans
Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic
(D)
Republican
(R)
Other
(O)
End of previous congress 59 41 0 100 0
Begin 54 44 2 100 0
End
Final voting share 54.0% 44.0% 2.0%
Beginning of next congress 56 42 2 100 0

House of Representatives

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic
(D)
Republican
(R)
End of previous congress 242 189 431 4
Begin 254 180 434 1
End 252 178 4305
Final voting share 58.6% 41.4%
Beginning of next congress 241 192 433 2

Leadership

Senate

Majority (Democratic) leadership

Minority (Republican) leadership

House of Representatives

Majority (Democratic) leadership

Minority (Republican) leadership

Caucuses

Members

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed in order of class, and representatives are listed by district.

Senate

Senators are popularly elected statewide every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election. In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term began with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1976; Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1972; and Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1974.

Alabama

▌2. John J. Sparkman (D)
▌3. James Allen (D)

Alaska

▌2. Ted Stevens (R)
▌3. Mike Gravel (D)

Arizona

▌1. Paul Fannin (R)
▌3. Barry Goldwater (R)

Arkansas

▌2. John L. McClellan (D)
▌3. J. William Fulbright (D)

California

▌1. John V. Tunney (D)
▌3. Alan Cranston (D)

Colorado

▌2. Gordon Allott (R)
▌3. Peter H. Dominick (R)

Connecticut

▌1. Lowell Weicker (R)
▌3. Abraham Ribicoff (D)

Delaware

▌1. William Roth (R)
▌2. J. Caleb Boggs (R)

Florida

▌1. Lawton Chiles (D)
▌3. Edward Gurney (R)

Georgia

▌2. Richard Russell Jr. (D), until January 21, 1971
David H. Gambrell (D), February 1, 1971 – November 7, 1972
Sam Nunn (D), from November 7, 1972
▌3. Herman Talmadge (D)

Hawaii

▌1. Hiram Fong (R)
▌3. Daniel Inouye (D)

Idaho

▌2. Leonard B. Jordan (R)
▌3. Frank Church (D)

Illinois

▌2. Charles H. Percy (R)
▌3. Adlai Stevenson III (D)

Indiana

▌1. Vance Hartke (D)
▌3. Birch Bayh (D)

Iowa

▌2. Jack Miller (R)
▌3. Harold Hughes (D)

Kansas

▌2. James B. Pearson (R)
▌3. Bob Dole (R)

Kentucky

▌2. John Sherman Cooper (R)
▌3. Marlow Cook (R)

Louisiana

▌2. Allen J. Ellender (D), until July 27, 1972
Elaine Edwards (D), August 1, 1972 – November 13, 1972
J. Bennett Johnston (D), from November 14, 1972
▌3. Russell B. Long (D)

Maine

▌1. Edmund Muskie (D)
▌2. Margaret Chase Smith (R)

Maryland

▌1. J. Glenn Beall Jr. (R)
▌3. Charles Mathias (R)

Massachusetts

▌1. Ted Kennedy (D)
▌2. Edward Brooke (R)

Michigan

▌1. Philip Hart (D)
▌2. Robert P. Griffin (R)

Minnesota

▌1. Hubert Humphrey (DFL)
▌2. Walter Mondale (DFL)

Mississippi

▌1. John C. Stennis (D)
▌2. James Eastland (D)

Missouri

▌1. Stuart Symington (D)
▌3. Thomas Eagleton (D)

Montana

▌1. Mike Mansfield (D)
▌2. Lee Metcalf (D)

Nebraska

▌1. Roman Hruska (R)
▌2. Carl Curtis (R)

Nevada

▌1. Howard Cannon (D)
▌3. Alan Bible (D)

New Hampshire

▌2. Thomas J. McIntyre (D)
▌3. Norris Cotton (R)

New Jersey

▌1. Harrison A. Williams (D)
▌2. Clifford P. Case (R)

New Mexico

▌1. Joseph Montoya (D)
▌2. Clinton P. Anderson (D)

New York

▌1. James L. Buckley (C)
▌3. Jacob Javits (R)

North Carolina

▌2. B. Everett Jordan (D)
▌3. Sam Ervin (D)

North Dakota

▌1. Quentin Burdick (D-NPL)
▌3. Milton Young (R)

Ohio

▌3. William B. Saxbe (R)
▌1. Robert Taft Jr. (R)

Oklahoma

▌2. Fred R. Harris (D)
▌3. Henry Bellmon (R)

Oregon

▌2. Mark Hatfield (R)
▌3. Bob Packwood (R)

Pennsylvania

▌1. Hugh Scott (R)
▌3. Richard Schweiker (R)

Rhode Island

▌1. John Pastore (D)
▌2. Claiborne Pell (D)

South Carolina

▌2. Strom Thurmond (R)
▌3. Fritz Hollings (D)

South Dakota

▌2. Karl E. Mundt (R)
▌3. George McGovern (D)

Tennessee

▌1. Bill Brock (R)
▌2. Howard Baker (R)

Texas

▌1. Lloyd Bentsen (D)
▌2. John Tower (R)

Utah

▌1. Frank Moss (D)
▌3. Wallace F. Bennett (R)

Vermont

▌1. Winston L. Prouty (R), until September 10, 1971
Robert Stafford (R), from September 16, 1971
▌3. George Aiken (R)

Virginia

▌1. Harry F. Byrd Jr. (ID)
▌2. William B. Spong Jr. (D)

Washington

▌1. Henry M. Jackson (D)
▌3. Warren G. Magnuson (D)

West Virginia

▌1. Robert Byrd (D)
▌2. Jennings Randolph (D)

Wisconsin

▌1. William Proxmire (D)
▌3. Gaylord Nelson (D)

Wyoming

▌1. Gale W. McGee (D)
▌2. Clifford Hansen (R)
Makeup of the U.S. Senate at the start of this Congress, color-coded by party. Note: The orange stripes in New York and the green stripes in Virginia denote Conservative James Buckley and Independent Harry F. Byrd Jr., respectively.
Senate majority leadershipRobert ByrdDemocratic whip
Robert Byrd Senate minority leadershipHugh ScottRepublican leader
Hugh ScottRobert P. GriffinRepublican whip
Robert P. Griffin

House of Representatives

The names of members of the House of Representatives are preceded by their district numbers.

Alabama

(5–3 Democratic)

1. Jack Edwards (R)
2. William Louis Dickinson (R)
3. George W. Andrews (D), until December 25, 1971
Elizabeth B. Andrews (D), from April 4, 1972
4. Bill Nichols (D)
5. Walter Flowers (D)
6. John Hall Buchanan Jr. (R)
7. Tom Bevill (D)
8. Robert E. Jones Jr. (D)

Alaska

(1 Democrat)

At-large. Nick Begich (D), until December 29, 1972

Arizona

(2–1 Republican)

1. John Jacob Rhodes (R)
2. Mo Udall (D)
3. Sam Steiger (R)

Arkansas

(3–1 Democratic)

1. William Vollie Alexander Jr. (D)
2. Wilbur Mills (D)
3. John Paul Hammerschmidt (R)
4. David Pryor (D)

California

(20–18 Democratic)

1. Donald H. Clausen (R)
2. Harold T. Johnson (D)
3. John E. Moss (D)
4. Robert L. Leggett (D)
5. Phillip Burton (D)
6. William S. Mailliard (R)
7. Ron Dellums (D)
8. George P. Miller (D)
9. Don Edwards (D)
10. Charles Gubser (R)
11. Pete McCloskey (R)
12. Burt Talcott (R)
13. Charles M. Teague (R)
14. Jerome Waldie (D)
15. John J. McFall (D)
16. B. F. Sisk (D)
17. Glenn M. Anderson (D)
18. Bob Mathias (R)
19. Chester E. Holifield (D)
20. H. Allen Smith (R)
21. Augustus Hawkins (D)
22. James C. Corman (D)
23. Del M. Clawson (R)
24. John H. Rousselot (R)
25. Charles E. Wiggins (R)
26. Thomas M. Rees (D)
27. Barry Goldwater Jr. (R)
28. Alphonzo E. Bell Jr. (R)
29. George E. Danielson (D)
30. Edward R. Roybal (D)
31. Charles H. Wilson (D)
32. Craig Hosmer (R)
33. Jerry Pettis (R)
34. Richard T. Hanna (D)
35. John G. Schmitz (R)
36. Bob Wilson (R)
37. Lionel Van Deerlin (D)
38. Victor Veysey (R)

Colorado

(2–2 split)

1. Mike McKevitt (R)
2. Donald G. Brotzman (R)
3. Frank Evans (D)
4. Wayne N. Aspinall (D)

Connecticut

(4–2 Democratic)

1. William R. Cotter (D)
2. Robert H. Steele (R)
3. Robert Giaimo (D)
4. Stewart McKinney (R)
5. John S. Monagan (D)
6. Ella Grasso (D)

Delaware

(1 Republican)

At-large. Pete du Pont (R)

Florida

(9–3 Democratic)

1. Robert L. F. Sikes (D)
2. Don Fuqua (D)
3. Charles E. Bennett (D)
4. Bill Chappell (D)
5. Louis Frey Jr. (R)
6. Sam Gibbons (D)
7. James A. Haley (D)
8. Bill Young (R)
9. Paul Rogers (D)
10. J. Herbert Burke (R)
11. Claude Pepper (D)
12. Dante Fascell (D)

Georgia

(8–2 Democratic)

1. George Elliott Hagan (D)
2. Dawson Mathis (D)
3. Jack Brinkley (D)
4. Benjamin B. Blackburn (R)
5. Fletcher Thompson (R)
6. John Flynt (D)
7. John William Davis (D)
8. W. S. Stuckey Jr. (D)
9. Phillip M. Landrum (D)
10. Robert Grier Stephens Jr. (D)

Hawaii

(2 Democrats)

1. Spark Matsunaga (D)
2. Patsy Mink (D)

Idaho

(2 Republicans)

1. James A. McClure (R)
2. Orval H. Hansen (R)

Illinois

(12–12 split)

1. Ralph Metcalfe (D)
2. Abner J. Mikva (D)
3. Morgan F. Murphy (D)
4. Ed Derwinski (R)
5. John C. Kluczynski (D)
6. George W. Collins (D), until December 8, 1972
7. Frank Annunzio (D)
8. Dan Rostenkowski (D)
9. Sidney R. Yates (D)
10. Harold R. Collier (R)
11. Roman Pucinski (D)
12. Robert McClory (R)
13. Phil Crane (R)
14. John N. Erlenborn (R)
15. Charlotte Thompson Reid (R), until October 7, 1971
Cliffard D. Carlson (R), from April 4, 1972
16. John B. Anderson (R)
17. Leslie C. Arends (R)
18. Robert H. Michel (R)
19. Tom Railsback (R)
20. Paul Findley (R)
21. Kenneth J. Gray (D)
22. William L. Springer (R)
23. George E. Shipley (D)
24. Melvin Price (D)

Indiana

(6–5 Republican)

1. Ray Madden (D)
2. Earl Landgrebe (R)
3. John Brademas (D)
4. J. Edward Roush (D)
5. Elwood Hillis (R)
6. William G. Bray (R)
7. John T. Myers (R)
8. Roger H. Zion (R)
9. Lee H. Hamilton (D)
10. David W. Dennis (R)
11. Andrew Jacobs Jr. (D)

Iowa

(5–2 Republican)

1. Fred Schwengel (R)
2. John Culver (D)
3. H. R. Gross (R)
4. John Henry Kyl (R)
5. Neal Edward Smith (D)
6. Wiley Mayne (R)
7. William J. Scherle (R)

Kansas

(4–1 Republican)

1. Keith Sebelius (R)
2. William R. Roy (D)
3. Larry Winn (R)
4. Garner E. Shriver (R)
5. Joe Skubitz (R)

Kentucky

(5–2 Democratic)

1. Frank Stubblefield (D)
2. William Natcher (D)
3. Romano Mazzoli (D)
4. Gene Snyder (R)
5. Tim Lee Carter (R)
6. John C. Watts (D), until September 24, 1971
William P. Curlin Jr. (D), from December 4, 1971
7. Carl D. Perkins (D)

Louisiana

(8 Democrats)

1. F. Edward Hébert (D)
2. Hale Boggs (D), until December 29, 1972
3. Patrick T. Caffery (D)
4. Joe Waggonner (D)
5. Otto Passman (D)
6. John Rarick (D)
7. Edwin Edwards (D), until May 9, 1972
John Breaux (D), from September 30, 1972
8. Speedy Long (D)

Maine

(2 Democrats)

1. Peter Kyros (D)
2. William Hathaway (D)

Maryland

(5–3 Democratic)

1. Rogers Morton (R), until January 29, 1971
William Oswald Mills (R), from May 25, 1971
2. Clarence Long (D)
3. Edward Garmatz (D)
4. Paul Sarbanes (D)
5. Lawrence Hogan (R)
6. Goodloe Byron (D)
7. Parren Mitchell (D)
8. Gilbert Gude (R)

Massachusetts

(8–4 Democratic)

1. Silvio O. Conte (R)
2. Edward Boland (D)
3. Robert Drinan (D)
4. Harold Donohue (D)
5. F. Bradford Morse (R), until May 1, 1972
6. Michael J. Harrington (D)
7. Torbert Macdonald (D)
8. Tip O'Neill (D)
9. Louise Day Hicks (D)
10. Margaret Heckler (R)
11. James A. Burke (D)
12. Hastings Keith (R)

Michigan

(12–7 Republican)

1. John Conyers (D)
2. Marvin L. Esch (R)
3. Garry E. Brown (R)
4. J. Edward Hutchinson (R)
5. Gerald Ford (R)
6. Charles E. Chamberlain (R)
7. Donald Riegle (R)
8. R. James Harvey (R)
9. Guy Vander Jagt (R)
10. Elford Albin Cederberg (R)
11. Philip Ruppe (R)
12. James G. O'Hara (D)
13. Charles Diggs (D)
14. Lucien Nedzi (D)
15. William D. Ford (D)
16. John D. Dingell Jr. (D)
17. Martha Griffiths (D)
18. William Broomfield (R)
19. Jack H. McDonald (R)

Minnesota

(4–4 split)

1. Al Quie (R)
2. Ancher Nelsen (R)
3. Bill Frenzel (R)
4. Joseph Karth (DFL)
5. Donald M. Fraser (DFL)
6. John M. Zwach (R)
7. Robert Bergland (DFL)
8. John Blatnik (DFL)

Mississippi

(5 Democrats)

1. Thomas Abernethy (D)
2. Jamie L. Whitten (D)
3. Charles H. Griffin (D)
4. Sonny Montgomery (D)
5. William M. Colmer (D)

Missouri

(9–1 Democratic)

1. Bill Clay (D)
2. James W. Symington (D)
3. Leonor Sullivan (D)
4. William J. Randall (D)
5. Richard Walker Bolling (D)
6. William Raleigh Hull Jr. (D)
7. Durward Gorham Hall (R)
8. Richard Howard Ichord Jr. (D)
9. William L. Hungate (D)
10. Bill Burlison (D)

Montana

(1–1 split)

1. Richard G. Shoup (R)
2. John Melcher (D)

Nebraska

(3 Republicans)

1. Charles Thone (R)
2. John Y. McCollister (R)
3. David Martin (R)

Nevada

(1 Democrat)

At-large. Walter S. Baring Jr. (D)

New Hampshire

(2 Republicans)

1. Louis C. Wyman (R)
2. James Colgate Cleveland (R)

New Jersey

(9–6 Democratic)

1. John E. Hunt (R)
2. Charles W. Sandman Jr. (R)
3. James J. Howard (D)
4. Frank Thompson (D)
5. Peter Frelinghuysen Jr. (R)
6. Edwin B. Forsythe (R)
7. William B. Widnall (R)
8. Robert A. Roe (D)
9. Henry Helstoski (D)
10. Peter W. Rodino (D)
11. Joseph Minish (D)
12. Florence P. Dwyer (R)
13. Cornelius Gallagher (D)
14. Dominick V. Daniels (D)
15. Edward J. Patten (D)

New Mexico

(1–1 split)

1. Manuel Lujan Jr. (R)
2. Harold L. Runnels (D)

New York

(24–17 Democratic)

1. Otis G. Pike (D)
2. James R. Grover Jr. (R)
3. Lester L. Wolff (D)
4. John W. Wydler (R)
5. Norman F. Lent (R)
6. Seymour Halpern (R)
7. Joseph P. Addabbo (D)
8. Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal (D)
9. James J. Delaney (D)
10. Emanuel Celler (D)
11. Frank J. Brasco (D)
12. Shirley Chisholm (D)
13. Bertram L. Podell (D)
14. John J. Rooney (D)
15. Hugh Carey (D)
16. John M. Murphy (D)
17. Ed Koch (D)
18. Charles Rangel (D)
19. Bella Abzug (D)
20. William Fitts Ryan (D), until September 17, 1972
21. James H. Scheuer (D)
22. Herman Badillo (D)
23. Jonathan Brewster Bingham (D)
24. Mario Biaggi (D)
25. Peter A. Peyser (R)
▌▌26. Ogden Reid (R) to (D), March 22, 1972
27. John G. Dow (D)
28. Hamilton Fish IV (R)
29. Samuel S. Stratton (D)
30. Carleton J. King (R)
31. Robert C. McEwen (R)
32. Alexander Pirnie (R)
33. Howard W. Robison (R)
34. John H. Terry (R)
35. James M. Hanley (D)
36. Frank Horton (R)
37. Barber Conable (R)
38. James F. Hastings (R)
39. Jack Kemp (R)
40. Henry P. Smith III (R)
41. Thaddeus J. Dulski (D)

North Carolina

(7–4 Democratic)

1. Walter B. Jones Sr. (D)
2. Lawrence H. Fountain (D)
3. David N. Henderson (D)
4. Nick Galifianakis (D)
5. Wilmer Mizell (R)
6. L. Richardson Preyer (D)
7. Alton Lennon (D)
8. Earl B. Ruth (R)
9. Charles R. Jonas (R)
10. Jim Broyhill (R)
11. Roy A. Taylor (D)

North Dakota

(1–1 split)

1. Mark Andrews (R)
2. Arthur A. Link (D-NPL)

Ohio

(17–7 Republican)

1. William J. Keating (R)
2. Donald D. Clancy (R)
3. Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R)
4. William Moore McCulloch (R)
5. Del Latta (R)
6. Bill Harsha (R)
7. Bud Brown (R)
8. Jackson Edward Betts (R)
9. Thomas L. Ashley (D)
10. Clarence E. Miller (R)
11. J. William Stanton (R)
12. Samuel L. Devine (R)
13. Charles Adams Mosher (R)
14. John F. Seiberling (D)
15. Chalmers Wylie (R)
16. Frank T. Bow (R), until November 13, 1972
17. John M. Ashbrook (R)
18. Wayne Hays (D)
19. Charles J. Carney (D)
20. James V. Stanton (D)
21. Louis Stokes (D)
22. Charles Vanik (D)
23. William Edwin Minshall Jr. (R)
24. Walter E. Powell (R)

Oklahoma

(4–2 Democratic)

1. Page Belcher (R)
2. Ed Edmondson (D)
3. Carl Albert (D)
4. Tom Steed (D)
5. John Jarman (D)
6. John Newbold Camp (R)

Oregon

(2–2 split)

1. Wendell Wyatt (R)
2. Al Ullman (D)
3. Edith Green (D)
4. John R. Dellenback (R)

Pennsylvania

(14–13 Democratic)

1. William A. Barrett (D)
2. Robert N. C. Nix Sr. (D)
3. James A. Byrne (D)
4. Joshua Eilberg (D)
5. William J. Green III (D)
6. Gus Yatron (D)
7. Lawrence G. Williams (R)
8. Edward G. Biester Jr. (R)
9. John H. Ware III (R)
10. Joseph M. McDade (R)
11. Dan Flood (D)
12. J. Irving Whalley (R)
13. Lawrence Coughlin (R)
14. William S. Moorhead (D)
15. Fred B. Rooney (D)
16. Edwin Duing Eshleman (R)
17. Herman T. Schneebeli (R)
18. Robert J. Corbett (R), until April 25, 1971
John Heinz (R), from November 2, 1971
19. George Atlee Goodling (R)
20. Joseph M. Gaydos (D)
21. John Herman Dent (D)
22. John P. Saylor (R)
23. Albert W. Johnson (R)
24. Joseph P. Vigorito (D)
25. Frank M. Clark (D)
26. Thomas E. Morgan (D)
27. James G. Fulton (R), until October 6, 1971
William Sheldrick Conover (R), from April 25, 1972

Rhode Island

(2 Democrats)

1. Fernand St Germain (D)
2. Robert Tiernan (D)

South Carolina

(5–1 Democratic)

1. Mendel Jackson Davis (D), from April 27, 1971
2. Floyd Spence (R)
3. William Jennings Bryan Dorn (D)
4. James Mann (D)
5. Thomas S. Gettys (D)
6. John L. McMillan (D)

South Dakota

(2 Democrats)

1. Frank E. Denholm (D)
2. James Abourezk (D)

Tennessee

(5–4 Democratic)

1. Jimmy Quillen (R)
2. John Duncan Sr. (R)
3. LaMar Baker (R)
4. Joe L. Evins (D)
5. Richard Fulton (D)
6. William Anderson (D)
7. Ray Blanton (D)
8. Ed Jones (D)
9. Dan Kuykendall (R)

Texas

(20–3 Democratic)

1. Wright Patman (D)
2. John Dowdy (D)
3. James M. Collins (R)
4. Ray Roberts (D)
5. Earle Cabell (D)
6. Olin E. Teague (D)
7. Bill Archer (R)
8. Robert C. Eckhardt (D)
9. Jack Brooks (D)
10. J. J. Pickle (D)
11. William R. Poage (D)
12. Jim Wright (D)
13. Graham B. Purcell Jr. (D)
14. John Andrew Young (D)
15. Kika de la Garza (D)
16. Richard Crawford White (D)
17. Omar Burleson (D)
18. Bob Price (R)
19. George H. Mahon (D)
20. Henry B. González (D)
21. O. C. Fisher (D)
22. Robert R. Casey (D)
23. Abraham Kazen (D)

Utah

(1–1 split)

1. K. Gunn McKay (D)
2. Sherman P. Lloyd (R)

Vermont

(1 Republican)

At-large. Robert Stafford (R), until September 16, 1971
Richard W. Mallary (R), from January 7, 1972

Virginia

(6–4 Republican)

1. Thomas N. Downing (D)
2. G. William Whitehurst (R)
3. David E. Satterfield III (D)
4. Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D)
5. Dan Daniel (D)
6. Richard Harding Poff (R), until August 29, 1972
M. Caldwell Butler (R), from November 7, 1972
7. J. Kenneth Robinson (R)
8. William L. Scott (R)
9. William C. Wampler (R)
10. Joel Broyhill (R)

Washington

(6–1 Democratic)

1. Thomas Pelly (R)
2. Lloyd Meeds (D)
3. Julia Butler Hansen (D)
4. Mike McCormack (D)
5. Tom Foley (D)
6. Floyd Hicks (D)
7. Brock Adams (D)

West Virginia

(5 Democrats)

1. Bob Mollohan (D)
2. Harley Orrin Staggers (D)
3. John M. Slack Jr. (D)
4. Ken Hechler (D)
5. James Kee (D)

Wisconsin

(5–5 split)

1. Les Aspin (D)
2. Robert Kastenmeier (D)
3. Vernon Wallace Thomson (R)
4. Clement J. Zablocki (D)
5. Henry S. Reuss (D)
6. William A. Steiger (R)
7. Dave Obey (D)
8. John W. Byrnes (R)
9. Glenn Robert Davis (R)
10. Alvin O'Konski (R)

Wyoming

(1 Democrat)

At-large. Teno Roncalio (D)

Non-voting members

(2 Democrats)

District of Columbia. Walter Fauntroy (D), from March 23, 1971
Puerto Rico. Jorge Luis Córdova (Resident Commissioner) (PNP)
House majority leadershipHale BoggsDemocratic leader
Hale BoggsTip O'NeillDemocratic whip
Tip O'Neill House minority leadershipGerald FordRepublican leader
Gerald FordLeslie C. ArendsRepublican whip
Leslie C. Arends

Changes in membership

The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.

Senate

  • Replacements: 5
  • Deaths: 3
  • Resignations: 0
  • Total seats with changes: 3
See also: List of special elections to the United States Senate
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation
Georgia
(2)
Richard Russell Jr. (D) Died January 21, 1971 David H. Gambrell (D) February 1, 1971
Vermont
(1)
Winston L. Prouty (R) Died September 10, 1971 Robert Stafford (R) September 16, 1971
Louisiana
(2)
Allen J. Ellender (D) Died July 27, 1972 Elaine S. Edwards (D) August 1, 1972
Georgia
(2)
David H. Gambrell (D) Successor elected November 7, 1972 Sam Nunn (D) November 8, 1972
Louisiana
(2)
Elaine S. Edwards (D) Successor elected November 13, 1972 J. Bennett Johnston (D) November 14, 1972

House of Representatives

  • Replacements: 10
  • Deaths: 8
  • Resignations: 6
  • Total seats with changes: 16
See also: List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
House changes
District Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation
District of Columbia at-large Vacant District elected first delegate since the seat was re-established during previous congress Walter Fauntroy (D) March 23, 1971
South Carolina 1st Vacant Rep. L. Mendel Rivers died during previous congress Mendel Jackson Davis (D) April 27, 1971
Maryland 1st Rogers Morton (R) Resigned January 29, 1971, after being appointed United States Secretary of the Interior William Oswald Mills (R) May 25, 1971
Pennsylvania 18th Robert J. Corbett (R) Died April 25, 1971 John Heinz (R) November 2, 1971
Vermont at-large Robert Stafford (R) Resigned after being appointed to the US Senate September 16, 1971 Richard W. Mallary (R) January 7, 1972
Kentucky 6th John C. Watts (D) Died September 24, 1971 William P. Curlin Jr. (D) December 4, 1971
Pennsylvania 27th James G. Fulton (R) Died October 6, 1971 William Sheldrick Conover (R) April 25, 1972
Illinois 15th Charlotte Thompson Reid (R) Resigned October 7, 1971, after being appointed to the Federal Communications Commission Cliffard D. Carlson (R) April 4, 1972
Alabama 3rd George W. Andrews (D) Died December 25, 1971 Elizabeth B. Andrews (D) April 4, 1972
Massachusetts 5th F. Bradford Morse (R) Resigned May 1, 1972, after being appointed Undersecretary General for Political and General Assembly Affairs at the United Nations Vacant Not filled this congress
Louisiana 7th Edwin Edwards (D) Resigned after being elected Governor of Louisiana May 9, 1972 John Breaux (D) September 30, 1972
Virginia 6th Richard Harding Poff (R) Resigned after being appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court of Virginia M. Caldwell Butler (R) November 7, 1972
New York 20th William Fitts Ryan (D) Died September 17, 1972. Vacant Not filled this congress
Ohio 16th Frank T. Bow (R) Died November 13, 1972.
Illinois 6th George W. Collins (D) Died in a plane crash December 8, 1972.
Alaska at-large Nick Begich (D) He and Hale Boggs were lost in a plane crash October 16, 1972. Presumptive death certificate for Rep. Begich was issued December 29, 1972.

Committees

Lists of committees and their party leaders for members of the House and Senate committees can be found through the Official Congressional Directory at the bottom of this article. The directory after the pages of terms of service lists committees of the Senate, House (Standing with Subcommittees, Select and Special) and Joint and, after that, House/Senate committee assignments. On the committees section of the House and Senate in the Official Congressional Directory, the committee's members on the first row on the left side shows the chairman of the committee and on the right side shows the ranking member of the committee.

Senate

House of Representatives

Joint committees

Employees

Legislative branch agency directors

Senate

House of Representatives

Footnotes

  1. "1972 congress"
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.

See also

Notes

  1. Conservative Party of New York, Independent Democrat
  2. ^ The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) and the North Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party (D-NPL) are the Minnesota and North Dakota affiliates of the U.S. Democratic Party and are counted as Democrats.
  3. ^ When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References

External links

United States congresses (and year convened)
   
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