107th United States Congress

2001-2003 U.S. Congress

107th United States Congress
106th ←
→ 108th
United States Capitol (2002)

January 3, 2001 – January 3, 2003
Members100 senators
435 representatives
5 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityDemocratic
(until January 20, 2001)
Republican
(Jan 20, 2001 – Jun 6, 2001)
Democratic
(from June 6, 2001)
Senate PresidentAl Gore (D)[a]
(until January 20, 2001)
Dick Cheney (R)
(from January 20, 2001)
House majorityRepublican
House SpeakerDennis Hastert (R)
Sessions
1st: January 3, 2001 – December 20, 2001
2nd: January 23, 2002 – November 22, 2002
President George W. Bush signing the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 in the White House East Room on June 7, 2001
President George W. Bush signing the No Child Left Behind Act.
President George W. Bush signs the No Child Left Behind Act into law
President George W. Bush in October 2001, elucidating on the government's rationale behind the USA PATRIOT Act before signing into law.
President George W. Bush, surrounded by leaders of the House and Senate, announces the Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of United States Armed Forces Against Iraq, October 2, 2002.
Before the signing ceremony of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act, President George W. Bush met with Senator Paul Sarbanes, Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao and other dignitaries in the Blue Room at the White House on July 30, 2002

The 107th 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, 2001, to January 3, 2003, during the final weeks of the Clinton presidency and the first two years of the George W. Bush presidency. The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the 1990 United States census.

The House of Representatives had a Republican majority throughout the session, while the Senate was tied 50–50 for only the third time in history resulting in numerous changes in the majority. Vice President Al Gore gave Democrats a majority for 17 days, then a Republican majority after Dick Cheney became Vice President on January 20, 2001. Senator Jim Jeffords (R-VT) became an independent who caucused with the Democrats on June 6, 2001, giving the party a 51–49 majority for the rest of the Congress.

When Bush was sworn in as president on January 20, the Republicans held a federal trifecta for the first time since the 83rd Congress in 1955.

Major events

A rare even split in the United States Senate, the defection of a Senator, and the inauguration of a new Vice President, led to three changes in majorities.

Major legislation

Party summary

Senate

  • Senate membership
  • Final (from December 2, 2002)
    Final (from December 2, 2002)
  • January 3, 2001 – January 20, 2001
    January 3, 2001 – January 20, 2001
  • January 20, 2001 – June 6, 2001
    January 20, 2001 – June 6, 2001
  • June 6, 2001 – October 25, 2002
    June 6, 2001 – October 25, 2002
  • October 25, 2002 – November 4, 2002
    October 25, 2002 – November 4, 2002
  • November 4, 2002 – November 23, 2002
    November 4, 2002 – November 23, 2002
  • November 23, 2002 – November 30, 2002
    November 23, 2002 – November 30, 2002
  • November 30, 2002 – December 2, 2002
    November 30, 2002 – December 2, 2002
Party
(Shading indicates party control)
Total
Democratic
(D)
Independent
(I)
Independence
(IPM)
Republican
(R)
Vacant
caucused with
Democrats
End of
previous Congress
46 0 0 54 100 0
Begin[c] 50 0 0 50 100 0
January 20, 2001[d] 50 50
June 6, 2001[e] 50 1 49
October 25, 2002[f] 49 99 1
November 4, 2002[f] 1 100 0
November 23, 2002[g] 48 1 50
November 30, 2002[h] 49 99 1
December 2, 2002[h] 50 100 0
Final voting share 49% 1% 50%
Beginning of the
next Congress
48 1 0 51 100 0

House of Representatives

  Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total  
Democratic Independent Republican Vacant
caucused with
Democrats
caucused with
Republicans
End of previous Congress 208 1 1 222 432 3
Begin 211 1 1 221 434 1
January 31, 2001 220 433 2
March 30, 2001 210 432 3
May 15, 2001 221 433 2
May 28, 2001 209 432 3
June 5, 2001 210 433 2
June 19, 2001 222 434 1
August 5, 2001 221 433 2
August 16, 2001 220 432 3
September 6, 2001 219 431 4
October 16, 2001 211 220 433 2
November 20, 2001 221 434 1
December 18, 2001 222 435 0
July 24, 2002 210 434 1
August 1, 2002 0 223
September 9, 2002 209 433 2
September 28, 2002 208 432 3
November 30, 2002 209 433 2
Final voting share 48.5% 51.5%  
Beginning of the next Congress 205 1 0 229 435 0

Leadership

Senate

Senate President
Al Gore
Al Gore (D)
(until January 20, 2001)
Dick Cheney
Dick Cheney (R)
(from January 20, 2001)
Senate President pro tempore
Robert Byrd
Robert Byrd (D)
(until January 20, 2001)
(from June 6, 2001)
Strom Thurmond
Strom Thurmond (R)
(January 20 – June 6, 2001)

Republican leadership

Democratic leadership

House of Representatives

Speaker of the House

Majority (Republican) leadership

Minority (Democratic) leadership

Members

Skip to House of Representatives, below

Senate

Senators are listed by their class. In this Congress, Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, facing re-election in 2002; Class 3 meant their term began in the previous Congress, facing re-election in 2004; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, facing re-election in 2006.

Alabama

2. Jeff Sessions (R)
3. Richard Shelby (R)

Alaska

2. Ted Stevens (R)
3. Frank Murkowski (R), until December 2, 2002
Lisa Murkowski (R), from December 20, 2002

Arizona

1. Jon Kyl (R)
3. John McCain (R)

Arkansas

2. Tim Hutchinson (R)
3. Blanche Lincoln (D)

California

1. Dianne Feinstein (D)
3. Barbara Boxer (D)

Colorado

2. Wayne Allard (R)
3. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R)

Connecticut

1. Joe Lieberman (D)
3. Chris Dodd (D)

Delaware

1. Tom Carper (D)
2. Joe Biden (D)

Florida

1. Bill Nelson (D)
3. Bob Graham (D)

Georgia

2. Max Cleland (D)
3. Zell Miller (D)

Hawaii

1. Daniel Akaka (D)
3. Daniel Inouye (D)

Idaho

2. Larry Craig (R)
3. Mike Crapo (R)

Illinois

2. Richard Durbin (D)
3. Peter Fitzgerald (R)

Indiana

1. Richard Lugar (R)
3. Evan Bayh (D)

Iowa

2. Tom Harkin (D)
3. Chuck Grassley (R)

Kansas

2. Pat Roberts (R)
3. Sam Brownback (R)

Kentucky

2. Mitch McConnell (R)
3. Jim Bunning (R)

Louisiana

2. Mary Landrieu (D)
3. John Breaux (D)

Maine

1. Olympia Snowe (R)
2. Susan Collins (R)

Maryland

1. Paul Sarbanes (D)
3. Barbara Mikulski (D)

Massachusetts

1. Ted Kennedy (D)
2. John Kerry (D)

Michigan

1. Debbie Stabenow (D)
2. Carl Levin (D)

Minnesota

1. Mark Dayton (DFL)
2. Paul Wellstone (DFL), until October 25, 2002
Dean Barkley (IPM), from November 4, 2002

Mississippi

1. Trent Lott (R)
2. Thad Cochran (R)

Missouri

1. Jean Carnahan (D)[i], until November 23, 2002
Jim Talent (R), from November 23, 2002
3. Kit Bond (R)

Montana

1. Conrad Burns (R)
2. Max Baucus (D)

Nebraska

1. Ben Nelson (D)
2. Chuck Hagel (R)

Nevada

1. John Ensign (R)
3. Harry Reid (D)

New Hampshire

2. Bob Smith (R)
3. Judd Gregg (R)

New Jersey

1. Jon Corzine (D)
2. Robert Torricelli (D)

New Mexico

1. Jeff Bingaman (D)
2. Pete Domenici (R)

New York

1. Hillary Clinton (D)
3. Chuck Schumer (D)

North Carolina

2. Jesse Helms (R)
3. John Edwards (D)

North Dakota

1. Kent Conrad (D-NPL)
3. Byron Dorgan (D-NPL)

Ohio

1. Mike DeWine (R)
3. George Voinovich (R)

Oklahoma

2. James Inhofe (R)
3. Don Nickles (R)

Oregon

2. Gordon Smith (R)
3. Ron Wyden (D)

Pennsylvania

1. Rick Santorum (R)
3. Arlen Specter (R)

Rhode Island

1. Lincoln Chafee (R)
2. Jack Reed (D)

South Carolina

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

South Dakota

2. Tim Johnson (D)
3. Tom Daschle (D)

Tennessee

1. Bill Frist (R)
2. Fred Thompson (R)

Texas

1. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R)
2. Phil Gramm (R), until November 30, 2002
John Cornyn (R), from December 2, 2002

Utah

1. Orrin Hatch (R)
3. Bob Bennett (R)

Vermont

1. Jim Jeffords (R until June 6, 2001, then I)
3. Patrick Leahy (D)

Virginia

1. George Allen (R)
2. John Warner (R)

Washington

1. Maria Cantwell (D)
3. Patty Murray (D)

West Virginia

1. Robert Byrd (D)
2. Jay Rockefeller (D)

Wisconsin

1. Herb Kohl (D)
3. Russ Feingold (D)

Wyoming

1. Craig L. Thomas (R)
2. Mike Enzi (R)
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 107th Congress in January 2001
  2 Democrats
  1 Democrat and 1 Republican
  2 Republicans
Senate majority leadership
(Majority until January 20 and minority until June 6, 2001; majority thereafter)
Senate minority leadership
(Minority until January 20 and majority until June 6, 2001; minority thereafter)

House of Representatives

Congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself.

Alabama

1. Sonny Callahan (R)
2. Terry Everett (R)
3. Bob Riley (R)
4. Robert Aderholt (R)
5. Robert E. Cramer (D)
6. Spencer Bachus (R)
7. Earl Hilliard (D)

Alaska

At Large. Don Young (R)

Arizona

1. Jeff Flake (R)
2. Ed Pastor (D)
3. Bob Stump (R)
4. John Shadegg (R)
5. Jim Kolbe (R)
6. J. D. Hayworth (R)

Arkansas

1. Robert Marion Berry (D)
2. Vic Snyder (D)
3. Asa Hutchinson (R), until August 5, 2001
John Boozman (R), from November 20, 2001
4. Mike Ross (D)

California

1. Mike Thompson (D)
2. Wally Herger (R)
3. Doug Ose (R)
4. John Doolittle (R)
5. Bob Matsui (D)
6. Lynn Woolsey (D)
7. George Miller (D)
8. Nancy Pelosi (D)
9. Barbara Lee (D)
10. Ellen Tauscher (D)
11. Richard Pombo (R)
12. Tom Lantos (D)
13. Pete Stark (D)
14. Anna Eshoo (D)
15. Mike Honda (D)
16. Zoe Lofgren (D)
17. Sam Farr (D)
18. Gary Condit (D)
19. George Radanovich (R)
20. Cal Dooley (D)
21. Bill Thomas (R)
22. Lois Capps (D)
23. Elton Gallegly (R)
24. Brad Sherman (D)
25. Howard McKeon (R)
26. Howard Berman (D)
27. Adam Schiff (D)
28. David Dreier (R)
29. Henry Waxman (D)
30. Xavier Becerra (D)
31. Hilda Solis (D)
32. Diane Watson (D), from June 5, 2001
33. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D)
34. Grace Napolitano (D)
35. Maxine Waters (D)
36. Jane Harman (D)
37. Juanita Millender-McDonald (D)
38. Steve Horn (R)
39. Ed Royce (R)
40. Jerry Lewis (R)
41. Gary Miller (R)
42. Joe Baca (D)
43. Ken Calvert (R)
44. Mary Bono (R)
45. Dana Rohrabacher (R)
46. Loretta Sanchez (D)
47. Christopher Cox (R)
48. Darrell Issa (R)
49. Susan Davis (D)
50. Bob Filner (D)
51. Duke Cunningham (R)
52. Duncan L. Hunter (R)

Colorado

1. Diana DeGette (D)
2. Mark Udall (D)
3. Scott McInnis (R)
4. Bob Schaffer (R)
5. Joel Hefley (R)
6. Tom Tancredo (R)

Connecticut

1. John B. Larson (D)
2. Rob Simmons (R)
3. Rosa DeLauro (D)
4. Chris Shays (R)
5. James H. Maloney (D)
6. Nancy Johnson (R)

Delaware

At Large. Mike Castle (R)

Florida

1. Joe Scarborough (R), until September 6, 2001
Jeff Miller (R), from October 16, 2001
2. Allen Boyd (D)
3. Corrine Brown (D)
4. Ander Crenshaw (R)
5. Karen Thurman (D)
6. Cliff Stearns (R)
7. John Mica (R)
8. Ric Keller (R)
9. Michael Bilirakis (R)
10. Bill Young (R)
11. Jim Davis (D)
12. Adam Putnam (R)
13. Dan Miller (R)
14. Porter Goss (R)
15. Dave Weldon (R)
16. Mark Foley (R)
17. Carrie Meek (D)
18. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R)
19. Robert Wexler (D)
20. Peter Deutsch (D)
21. Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R)
22. Clay Shaw (R)
23. Alcee Hastings (D)

Georgia

1. Jack Kingston (R)
2. Sanford Bishop (D)
3. Mac Collins (R)
4. Cynthia McKinney (D)
5. John Lewis (D)
6. Johnny Isakson (R)
7. Bob Barr (R)
8. Saxby Chambliss (R)
9. Nathan Deal (R)
10. Charlie Norwood (R)
11. John Linder (R)

Hawaii

1. Neil Abercrombie (D)
2. Patsy Mink (D), until September 28, 2002
Ed Case (D), from November 30, 2002

Idaho

1. Butch Otter (R)
2. Mike Simpson (R)

Illinois

1. Bobby Rush (D)
2. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D)
3. Bill Lipinski (D)
4. Luis Gutierrez (D)
5. Rod Blagojevich (D)
6. Henry Hyde (R)
7. Danny K. Davis (D)
8. Philip Crane (R)
9. Jan Schakowsky (D)
10. Mark Kirk (R)
11. Jerry Weller (R)
12. Jerry Costello (D)
13. Judy Biggert (R)
14. Dennis Hastert (R)
15. Tim Johnson (R)
16. Don Manzullo (R)
17. Lane Evans (D)
18. Ray LaHood (R)
19. David D. Phelps (D)
20. John Shimkus (R)

Indiana

1. Pete Visclosky (D)
2. Mike Pence (R)
3. Tim Roemer (D)
4. Mark Souder (R)
5. Steve Buyer (R)
6. Dan Burton (R)
7. Brian D. Kerns (R)
8. John Hostettler (R)
9. Baron Hill (D)
10. Julia Carson (D)

Iowa

1. Jim Leach (R)
2. Jim Nussle (R)
3. Leonard Boswell (D)
4. Greg Ganske (R)
5. Tom Latham (R)

Kansas

1. Jerry Moran (R)
2. Jim Ryun (R)
3. Dennis Moore (D)
4. Todd Tiahrt (R)

Kentucky

1. Ed Whitfield (R)
2. Ron Lewis (R)
3. Anne Northup (R)
4. Ken Lucas (D)
5. Hal Rogers (R)
6. Ernie Fletcher (R)

Louisiana

1. David Vitter (R)
2. William J. Jefferson (D)
3. Billy Tauzin (R)
4. Jim McCrery (R)
5. John Cooksey (R)
6. Richard H. Baker (R)
7. Chris John (D)

Maine

1. Tom Allen (D)
2. John Baldacci (D)

Maryland

1. Wayne Gilchrest (R)
2. Bob Ehrlich (R)
3. Ben Cardin (D)
4. Albert Wynn (D)
5. Steny Hoyer (D)
6. Roscoe Bartlett (R)
7. Elijah Cummings (D)
8. Connie Morella (R)

Massachusetts

1. John Olver (D)
2. Richard Neal (D)
3. Jim McGovern (D)
4. Barney Frank (D)
5. Marty Meehan (D)
6. John F. Tierney (D)
7. Ed Markey (D)
8. Mike Capuano (D)
9. Joe Moakley (D) until May 28, 2001
Stephen Lynch (D), from October 16, 2001
10. Bill Delahunt (D)

Michigan

1. Bart Stupak (D)
2. Peter Hoekstra (R)
3. Vern Ehlers (R)
4. Dave Camp (R)
5. James A. Barcia (D)
6. Fred Upton (R)
7. Nick Smith (R)
8. Mike Rogers (R)
9. Dale Kildee (D)
10. David Bonior (D)
11. Joe Knollenberg (R)
12. Sander Levin (D)
13. Lynn Rivers (D)
14. John Conyers (D)
15. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (D)
16. John Dingell (D)

Minnesota

1. Gil Gutknecht (R)
2. Mark Kennedy (R)
3. Jim Ramstad (R)
4. Betty McCollum (DFL)
5. Martin Olav Sabo (DFL)
6. Bill Luther (DFL)
7. Collin Peterson (DFL)
8. Jim Oberstar (DFL)

Mississippi

1. Roger Wicker (R)
2. Bennie Thompson (D)
3. Chip Pickering (R)
4. Ronnie Shows (D)
5. Gene Taylor (D)


Missouri

1. Lacy Clay (D)
2. Todd Akin (R)
3. Dick Gephardt (D)
4. Ike Skelton (D)
5. Karen McCarthy (D)
6. Sam Graves (R)
7. Roy Blunt (R)
8. Jo Ann Emerson (R)
9. Kenny Hulshof (R)

Montana

At Large. Denny Rehberg (R)

Nebraska

1. Doug Bereuter (R)
2. Lee Terry (R)
3. Tom Osborne (R)

Nevada

1. Shelley Berkley (D)
2. Jim Gibbons (R)

New Hampshire

1. John E. Sununu (R)
2. Charles Bass (R)

New Jersey

1. Rob Andrews (D)
2. Frank LoBiondo (R)
3. Jim Saxton (R)
4. Chris Smith (R)
5. Marge Roukema (R)
6. Frank Pallone (D)
7. Mike Ferguson (R)
8. Bill Pascrell (D)
9. Steve Rothman (D)
10. Donald M. Payne (D)
11. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R)
12. Rush Holt Jr. (D)
13. Bob Menendez (D)

New Mexico

1. Heather Wilson (R)
2. Joe Skeen (R)
3. Tom Udall (D)

New York

1. Felix Grucci (R)
2. Steve Israel (D)
3. Peter T. King (R)
4. Carolyn McCarthy (D)
5. Gary Ackerman (D)
6. Gregory Meeks (D)
7. Joe Crowley (D)
8. Jerry Nadler (D)
9. Anthony Weiner (D)
10. Edolphus Towns (D)
11. Major Owens (D)
12. Nydia Velázquez (D)
13. Vito Fossella (R)
14. Carolyn Maloney (D)
15. Charles Rangel (D)
16. José E. Serrano (D)
17. Eliot Engel (D)
18. Nita Lowey (D)
19. Sue W. Kelly (R)
20. Benjamin Gilman (R)
21. Michael R. McNulty (D)
22. John E. Sweeney (R)
23. Sherwood Boehlert (R)
24. John M. McHugh (R)
25. James T. Walsh (R)
26. Maurice Hinchey (D)
27. Thomas M. Reynolds (R)
28. Louise Slaughter (D)
29. John LaFalce (D)
30. Jack Quinn (R)
31. Amo Houghton (R)

North Carolina

1. Eva Clayton (D)
2. Bob Etheridge (D)
3. Walter B. Jones Jr. (R)
4. David Price (D)
5. Richard Burr (R)
6. Howard Coble (R)
7. Mike McIntyre (D)
8. Robin Hayes (R)
9. Sue Myrick (R)
10. Cass Ballenger (R)
11. Charles Taylor (R)
12. Mel Watt (D)

North Dakota

At Large. Earl Pomeroy (D-NPL)

Ohio

1. Steve Chabot (R)
2. Rob Portman (R)
3. Tony P. Hall (D), until September 9, 2002, vacant thereafter
4. Mike Oxley (R)
5. Paul Gillmor (R)
6. Ted Strickland (D)
7. Dave Hobson (R)
8. John Boehner (R)
9. Marcy Kaptur (D)
10. Dennis Kucinich (D)
11. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D)
12. Pat Tiberi (R)
13. Sherrod Brown (D)
14. Thomas C. Sawyer (D)
15. Deborah Pryce (R)
16. Ralph Regula (R)
17. James Traficant (D), until July 24, 2002, vacant thereafter
18. Bob Ney (R)
19. Steve LaTourette (R)

Oklahoma

1. Steve Largent (R), until February 15, 2002
John Sullivan (R), from February 15, 2002
2. Brad Carson (D)
3. Wes Watkins (R)
4. J. C. Watts (R)
5. Ernest Istook (R)
6. Frank Lucas (R)

Oregon

1. David Wu (D)
2. Greg Walden (R)
3. Earl Blumenauer (D)
4. Peter DeFazio (D)
5. Darlene Hooley (D)

Pennsylvania

1. Bob Brady (D)
2. Chaka Fattah (D)
3. Robert A. Borski Jr. (D)
4. Melissa Hart (R)
5. John E. Peterson (R)
6. Tim Holden (D)
7. Curt Weldon (R)
8. James C. Greenwood (R)
9. Bud Shuster (R), until February 3, 2001
Bill Shuster (R), from May 15, 2001
10. Don Sherwood (R)
11. Paul Kanjorski (D)
12. John Murtha (D)
13. Joe Hoeffel (D)
14. William J. Coyne (D)
15. Pat Toomey (R)
16. Joe Pitts (R)
17. George Gekas (R)
18. Mike Doyle (D)
19. Todd Russell Platts (R)
20. Frank Mascara (D)
21. Phil English (R)

Rhode Island

1. Patrick J. Kennedy (D)
2. James Langevin (D)

South Carolina

1. Henry E. Brown Jr. (R)
2. Floyd Spence (R), until August 16, 2001
Joe Wilson (R), from December 18, 2001
3. Lindsey Graham (R)
4. Jim DeMint (R)
5. John Spratt (D)
6. Jim Clyburn (D)

South Dakota

At Large. John Thune (R)

Tennessee

1. Bill Jenkins (R)
2. Jimmy Duncan (R)
3. Zach Wamp (R)
4. Van Hilleary (R)
5. Bob Clement (D)
6. Bart Gordon (D)
7. Ed Bryant (R)
8. John S. Tanner (D)
9. Harold Ford Jr. (D)

Texas

1. Max Sandlin (D)
2. Jim Turner (D)
3. Sam Johnson (R)
4. Ralph Hall (D)
5. Pete Sessions (R)
6. Joe Barton (R)
7. John Culberson (R)
8. Kevin Brady (R)
9. Nick Lampson (D)
10. Lloyd Doggett (D)
11. Chet Edwards (D)
12. Kay Granger (R)
13. Mac Thornberry (R)
14. Ron Paul (R)
15. Rubén Hinojosa (D)
16. Silvestre Reyes (D)
17. Charles Stenholm (D)
18. Sheila Jackson Lee (D)
19. Larry Combest (R)
20. Charlie Gonzalez (D)
21. Lamar Smith (R)
22. Tom DeLay (R)
23. Henry Bonilla (R)
24. Martin Frost (D)
25. Ken Bentsen (D)
26. Dick Armey (R)
27. Solomon P. Ortiz (D)
28. Ciro Rodriguez (D)
29. Gene Green (D)
30. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D)

Utah

1. James V. Hansen (R)
2. Jim Matheson (D)
3. Chris Cannon (R)

Vermont

At Large. Bernie Sanders (I)

Virginia

1. Jo Ann Davis (R)
2. Ed Schrock (R)
3. Bobby Scott (D)
4. Norman Sisisky (D), until March 29, 2001
Randy Forbes (R), from June 19, 2001
5. Virgil Goode (R), (I prior to August 1, 2002)
6. Bob Goodlatte (R)
7. Eric Cantor (R)
8. Jim Moran (D)
9. Rick Boucher (D)
10. Frank Wolf (R)
11. Tom Davis (R)

Washington

1. Jay Inslee (D)
2. Rick Larsen (D)
3. Brian Baird (D)
4. Doc Hastings (R)
5. George Nethercutt (R)
6. Norman D. Dicks (D)
7. Jim McDermott (D)
8. Jennifer Dunn (R)
9. Adam Smith (D)

West Virginia

1. Alan Mollohan (D)
2. Shelley Moore Capito (R)
3. Nick Rahall (D)

Wisconsin

1. Paul Ryan (R)
2. Tammy Baldwin (D)
3. Ron Kind (D)
4. Jerry Kleczka (D)
5. Tom Barrett (D)
6. Tom Petri (R)
7. Dave Obey (D)
8. Mark Andrew Green (R)
9. Jim Sensenbrenner (R)

Wyoming

At Large. Barbara Cubin (R)

Non-voting members

American Samoa. Eni Faleomavaega (D)
District of Columbia. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D)
Guam. Robert A. Underwood (D)
Puerto Rico. Aníbal Acevedo Vilá (Res. Comm.) (D/PPD)
Virgin Islands. Donna Christian-Christensen (D)
Percentage of House seats held by party
  Democratic 80+ to 100%   Republican 80+ to 100%
  Democratic 60+ to 80%   Republican 60+ to 80%
  Democratic 50+ to 60%   Republican 50+ to 60%
  1 Independent
House minority leadership

Changes in membership

Senate

Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[j]
Vermont (1) Jim Jeffords (R) Incumbent changed party and joined the Democratic caucus. Jim Jeffords (I) June 6, 2001
Minnesota (2) Paul Wellstone (D) Incumbent died October 25, 2002.
Successor appointed to serve the remaining two months of the term.
Dean Barkley (IMN) November 4, 2002
Missouri (1) Jean Carnahan (D) Interim appointee lost election.
Successor elected November 5, 2002.
Jim Talent (R) November 23, 2002
Texas (2) Phil Gramm (R) Incumbent resigned November 30, 2002, to give successor seniority advantages.
Successor appointed on December 2, 2002, having already been elected to the next term.[3][4]
John Cornyn (R) December 2, 2002
Alaska (3) Frank Murkowski (R) Incumbent resigned December 2, 2002, to become Governor of Alaska.
Successor appointed to remainder of the term ending January 3, 2005.
Lisa Murkowski (R) December 20, 2002

House of Representatives

House changes
District Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[j]
California 32nd Vacant Incumbent Julian Dixon (D) had died December 8, 2000, before the beginning of this Congress.
A special election was held June 5, 2001.
Diane Watson (D) June 5, 2001
Pennsylvania 9th Bud Shuster (R) Incumbent resigned, effective January 31, 2001.
A special election was held May 15, 2001.
Bill Shuster (R) May 15, 2001
Virginia 4th Norman Sisisky (D) Incumbent died March 30, 2001.
A special election was held June 19, 2001.
Randy Forbes (R) June 19, 2001
Massachusetts 9th Joe Moakley (D) Incumbent died May 28, 2001.
A special election was held October 16, 2001.
Stephen Lynch (D) October 16, 2001
Arkansas 3rd Asa Hutchinson (R) Incumbent resigned August 5, 2001, to head the Drug Enforcement Administration.
A special election was held November 20, 2001.
John Boozman (R) November 20, 2001
South Carolina 2nd Floyd Spence (R) Incumbent died August 16, 2001.
A special election was held December 18, 2001.
Joe Wilson (R) December 18, 2001
Florida 1st Joe Scarborough (R) Incumbent resigned, effective September 6, 2001.
A special election was held October 16, 2001.
Jeff Miller (R) October 16, 2001
Oklahoma 1st Steve Largent (R) Incumbent resigned, effective February 15, 2002, to concentrate on his campaign for governor.
A special election was held January 8, 2002.
John Sullivan (R) February 15, 2002
Ohio 17th Jim Traficant (D) Incumbent expelled July 24, 2002, for criminal conviction of 10 counts of bribery, racketeering, and tax evasion. Vacant Not filled for remainder of Congress
Virginia 5th Virgil Goode (I) Incumbent changed party. Virgil Goode (R) August 1, 2002
Ohio 3rd Tony P. Hall (D) Incumbent resigned September 9, 2002, after he was appointed to be the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Vacant Not filled for remainder of Congress
Hawaii 2nd Patsy Mink (D) Incumbent died September 28, 2002, but was elected posthumously on November 5, 2002. Ed Case (D) November 30, 2002

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

Caucuses

Employees

Legislative branch agency directors

Senate

House of Representatives

See also

Notes

  1. ^ U.S. Vice President Al Gore's term as President of the Senate ended at noon on January 20, 2001, when Dick Cheney's term began.
  2. ^ When the Congress began, the Senate was divided 50–50. Because the Vice President's tie-breaking vote would change control from Democrats to Republicans on January 20, the Senate elected Byrd to serve until noon and Thurmond to serve from noon on January 20. Control changed again from June 6, 2001, when Jim Jeffords left the Republican Party and Byrd was once again elected President pro tempore.
  3. ^ Al Gore (D) was U.S. Vice President until January 20, 2001, with the tie-breaking vote.
  4. ^ Dick Cheney (R) became U.S. Vice President January 20, 2001, with the tie-breaking vote.
  5. ^ In Vermont, Senator Jim Jeffords switched June 6, 2001, from Republican to Independent and caucused with Democrats.
  6. ^ a b In Minnesota, Paul Wellstone (D) died October 25, 2002. Dean Barkley (IMN), who did not caucus with either party, was appointed November 4, 2002, to Wellstone's seat.
  7. ^ In the November 5, 2002 Missouri special election, Jim Talent (R) took Jean Carnahan (D)'s seat and became senator November 23, 2002, but there was no reorganization because Senate was out of session.[2]
  8. ^ a b In Texas, Phil Gramm (R) resigned November 30, 2002, to give his successor advantageous office space. Senator-elect John Cornyn (R) was appointed December 2, 2002, to finish Gramm's term.
  9. ^ In Missouri, Senator-elect Mel Carnahan (D) died October 16, 2000, but had won the 2000 Senate election posthumously.
  10. ^ a b When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References

  1. ^ "Leaving Republican Party: Jeffords' 2001 speech". Burlington Free Press. August 18, 2014. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  2. ^ "Party Division in the Senate, 1789-Present" – via Senate.gov.
  3. ^ Associated Press (November 21, 2002). "Cornyn Gets Early Start in Senate". The Edwardsville Intelligencer. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  4. ^ "SENATORS OF THE UNITED STATES > 1789-present > A chronological list of senators since the First Congress in 1789" (PDF). United States Senate – via Senate.gov.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress

External links

  • United States 107th Congress Web Archive from the U.S. Library of Congress
  • Congress.gov
  • History, Art and Archives from the United States House of Representatives
  • Statistics & Lists from the United States Senate
  • Booknotes interview with Tom Daschle on Like No Other Time: The 107th Congress and the Two Years That Changed America, November 30, 2003.
  • "Videos of House of Representatives Sessions for the 107th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org".
  • "Videos of Senate Sessions for the 107th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org".
  • "Videos of Committees from the House and Senate for the 107th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org".
  • House of Representatives Session Calendar for the 107th Congress (PDF).
  • Senate Session Calendar for the 107th Congress (PDF).
  • Congressional Pictorial Directory for the 107th Congress. S. PRT. 1967.
  • Congressional Pictorial Directory for the 107th Congress (Revised). S. PRT. 1967.
  • "Official Congressional Directory for the 107th Congress". Congressional Directory. 1991/1992- : S. Pub. 1887.
  • Official Congressional Directory for the 107th Congress (Revised) (PDF).
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