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List of members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus

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Below is a list of current and former members of the U.S. Congressional Progressive Caucus.

Current Senate members

Current House members

Arizona

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

Florida

Georgia

Hawaii

Illinois

Indiana

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Missouri

  • Cori Bush (MO-1, St. Louis) (Lost Renomination)

Nevada

New Jersey

New Mexico

New York

North Carolina

Ohio

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Tennessee

Texas

Vermont

Virginia

Washington

Wisconsin

Non-voting

Expected new members in the 119th United States Congress

9 non-incumbents that have been endorsed by the CPC PAC have been elected in the 2024 elections. With 9 current members not returning for the 119th Congress, the number of members of the Caucus is expected to remain the same as the final number of members of the previous congress.

Former members

There are a variety of reasons members have left the caucus:

Retirement, resignation, or death

Removal

Congresspeople defeated in an election to Congress (for either their current or another seat), or who have otherwise been prevented from continuing to hold office, are no longer members of congressional caucuses.

  • Thomas Andrews (ME-1) – defeated in run for Senate in 1994
  • Mike Capuano (MA-7) – defeated for re-nomination in 2018 by current caucus member Ayanna Pressley
  • Gil Cisneros (CA-39) – defeated for re-election in 2020
  • Hansen Clarke (MI-13) – defeated for re-nomination in 2012
  • Lacy Clay (MO-1) – defeated for re-nomination in 2020 by current caucus member Cori Bush
  • Donna Edwards (MD-4) – defeated in run for Senate in 2016
  • Chaka Fattah (PA-2) – defeated for re-nomination in 2016 by current caucus member Dwight Evans
  • Russ Feingold (WI Senate) – defeated for re-election in 2010
  • Alan Grayson (FL-8) (FL-9) – defeated in run for Senate in 2016
  • John Hall (NY-19) – defeated for re-election in 2010
  • Phil Hare (IL-17) – defeated for re-election in 2010
  • Mike Honda (CA-17) – defeated for re-election in 2016 by current caucus member Ro Khanna
  • Mondaire Jones (NY-17, Harrison) – defeated for renomination due to redistricting in 2022
  • Joe Kennedy III (MA-04) - defeated in run for Senate in 2020 (lost to incumbent Ed Markey)
  • Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (MI-13) – defeated for re-nomination in 2010
  • Dennis Kucinich (OH-10) – defeated for re-nomination in 2012
  • Andy Levin (MI-9) - defeated for re-nomination in a 2022 redistricting race
  • Carolyn Maloney (NY-12) - defeated for re-nomination in a 2022 redistricting race by current caucus member Jerry Nadler
  • Cynthia McKinney (GA-4) – defeated for re-nomination in 2006 by current caucus member Hank Johnson
  • Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (FL-26) - defeated for re-election in 2020
  • Marie Newman (IL-3, Western Springs) – lost renomination in 2022
  • Laura Richardson (CA-37) – defeated for re-election in 2012
  • Pete Stark (CA-13) – defeated for re-election in 2012
  • John Tierney (MA-6) – defeated for re-nomination in 2014
  • Albert Wynn (MD-4) – defeated for re-nomination in 2008

Promotion

Although the caucus has had membership from both houses of Congress, it has had much less presence in the Senate, and some representatives choose to leave the caucus when they become senators (or when seeking such office). Other representatives have left the caucus when joining House leadership. Members who have attained higher office outside of Congress, having left that body, are no longer in the caucus.

Other or unknown

References

  1. Grim, Ryan; Lacy, Akela (November 20, 2023). "Florida Democrat Who Voted to Censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib Quits Progressive Caucus". The Intercept.
  2. Timotija, Filip (20 February 2024). "New York Democrat leaves Congressional Progressive Caucus after splitting with members over Israel". The Hill.

External links

Ideological caucuses in the United States Congress
House
Republicans (217)
Democrats (213)
Bipartisan
Senate
Caucuses with no known membership as of the 117th Congress do not have memberships listed.
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