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93rd United States Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1973–1975 U.S. Congress

93rd United States Congress
92nd ←
→ 94th

January 3, 1973 – January 3, 1975
Members100 senators
435 representatives
Senate majorityDemocratic
Senate PresidentSpiro Agnew (R)[a]
(until October 10, 1973)
Vacant[b]
(Oct 10–Dec 6, 1973)
Gerald Ford (R)[c]
(Dec 6, 1973 – Aug 9, 1974)
Vacant[b]
(Aug 9–Dec 19, 1974)
Nelson Rockefeller (R)
(from December 19, 1974)
House majorityDemocratic
House SpeakerCarl Albert (D)
Sessions
1st: January 3, 1973 – December 22, 1973
2nd: January 21, 1974 – December 20, 1974

The93rd United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of theUnited States Senate and theUnited States House of Representatives. It met inWashington, D.C., from January 3, 1973, to January 3, 1975, during the last 18 months ofRichard Nixon's presidency, and the first 6 months ofGerald Ford's. This Congress was the first (and, to date, only) Congress with more than twoSenate presidents (in this case, three). After the resignation ofSpiro Agnew,Gerald Ford was appointed under the authority of the newly ratifiedTwenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Ford became president the next year andNelson Rockefeller was appointed in his place. The apportionment of seats in theHouse of Representatives was based on the1970 United States census. Both chambers had aDemocratic majority.

Major events

[edit]
Main articles:1973 in the United States,1974 in the United States, and1975 in the United States

Major legislation

[edit]
Main article:List of United States federal legislation § 93rd United States Congress

Hearings

[edit]

Party summary

[edit]
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 denoteConservativeJames Buckley and IndependentHarry F. Byrd Jr., respectively.

Senate

[edit]
Party
(shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
DemocraticRepublicanConservativeIndependentVacant
End of theprevious Congress5444111000
Begin5642111000
End5640982
Final voting share57.6%40.4%1.0%1.0%
Beginning of thenext Congress603711991

House of Representatives

[edit]
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  over 80% Democratic
  over 80% Republican
  60+% to 80% Democratic
  60+% to 80% Republican
  up to 60% Democratic
  up to 60% Republican
Party
(shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
DemocraticRepublicanVacant
End ofprevious Congress2521784305
Begin2411924332
End23217440629
Final voting share57.1%42.9%
Beginning ofnext Congress2911444350

Leadership

[edit]
Senate President
Spiro Agnew
Spiro Agnew (R)
(until October 10, 1973)
Gerald Ford
Gerald Ford (R)
(December 6, 1973 – August 9, 1974)
Nelson Rockefeller
Nelson Rockefeller (R)
(from December 19, 1974)

Senate

[edit]

Majority (Democratic) leadership

[edit]

Minority (Republican) leadership

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]

Majority (Democratic) leadership

[edit]

Minority (Republican) leadership

[edit]

Caucuses

[edit]

Members

[edit]

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed byclass, and representatives are listed by district.

Skip down to House of Representatives

Senate

[edit]
Main article:List of United States senators in the 93rd Congress

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 means their term began in the last Congress, facing re-election in 1976; Class 2 means their term began with this Congress, facing re-election in 1978; and Class 3 means their term ended with this Congress, facing re-election in 1974.

2.John Sparkman (D)
3.James Allen (D)
2.Ted Stevens (R)
3.Mike Gravel (D)
1.Paul Fannin (R)
3.Barry Goldwater (R)
2.John L. McClellan (D)
3.J. William Fulbright (D), until December 31, 1974
1.John V. Tunney (D)
3.Alan Cranston (D)
2.Floyd Haskell (D)
3.Peter H. Dominick (R)
1.Lowell Weicker (R)
3.Abraham Ribicoff (D)
1.William Roth (R)
2.Joe Biden (D)
1.Lawton Chiles (D)
3.Edward Gurney (R), until December 31, 1974
Richard Stone (D), from January 1, 1975
2.Sam Nunn (D)
3.Herman Talmadge (D)
1.Hiram Fong (R)
3.Daniel Inouye (D)
2.James A. McClure (R)
3.Frank Church (D)
2.Charles H. Percy (R)
3.Adlai Stevenson III (D)
1.Vance Hartke (D)
3.Birch Bayh (D)
2.Dick Clark (D)
3.Harold Hughes (D)
2.James B. Pearson (R)
3.Bob Dole (R)
2.Walter Dee Huddleston (D)
3.Marlow Cook (R), until December 27, 1974
Wendell Ford (D), from December 28, 1974
2.J. Bennett Johnston (D)
3.Russell B. Long (D)
1.Edmund Muskie (D)
2.William Hathaway (D)
1.J. Glenn Beall Jr. (R)
3.Charles Mathias (R)
1.Ted Kennedy (D)
2.Edward Brooke (R)
1.Philip Hart (D)
2.Robert P. Griffin (R)
1.Hubert Humphrey (DFL)[d]
2.Walter Mondale (DFL)[d]
1.John C. Stennis (D)
2.James Eastland (D)
1.Stuart Symington (D)
3.Thomas Eagleton (D)
1.Mike Mansfield (D)
2.Lee Metcalf (D)
1.Roman Hruska (R)
2.Carl Curtis (R)
1.Howard Cannon (D)
3.Alan Bible (D), until December 17, 1974
Paul Laxalt (R), from December 18, 1974
2.Thomas J. McIntyre (D)
3.Norris Cotton (R), until December 31, 1974
Louis C. Wyman (R), from December 31, 1974
1.Harrison A. Williams (D)
2.Clifford P. Case (R)
1.Joseph Montoya (D)
2.Pete Domenici (R)
1.James L. Buckley (C)
3.Jacob Javits (R)
2.Jesse Helms (R)
3.Sam Ervin (D), until December 31, 1974
1.Quentin Burdick (D-NPL)[d]
3.Milton Young (R)
1.Robert Taft Jr. (R)
3.William B. Saxbe (R), until January 3, 1974
Howard Metzenbaum (D), January 4, 1974 – December 23, 1974
John Glenn (D), from December 24, 1974
2.Dewey F. Bartlett (R)
3.Henry Bellmon (R)
2.Mark Hatfield (R)
3.Bob Packwood (R)
1.Hugh Scott (R)
3.Richard Schweiker (R)
1.John Pastore (D)
2.Claiborne Pell (D)
2.Strom Thurmond (R)
3.Fritz Hollings (D)
2.James Abourezk (D)
3.George McGovern (D)
1.Bill Brock (R)
2.Howard Baker (R)
1.Lloyd Bentsen (D)
2.John Tower (R)
1.Frank Moss (D)
3.Wallace F. Bennett (R), until December 20, 1974
Jake Garn (R), from December 21, 1974
1.Robert Stafford (R)
3.George Aiken (R)
1.Harry F. Byrd Jr. (ID)
2.William L. Scott (R)
1.Henry M. Jackson (D)
3.Warren G. Magnuson (D)
1.Robert Byrd (D)
2.Jennings Randolph (D)
1.William Proxmire (D)
3.Gaylord Nelson (D)
1.Gale W. McGee (D)
2.Clifford Hansen (R)
Senate majority leadership

House of Representatives

[edit]
Main article:List of United States representatives in the 93rd Congress

The names of representatives are preceded by their district numbers.

Contents

Alabama

[edit]
1.Jack Edwards (R)
2.William Louis Dickinson (R)
3.Bill Nichols (D)
4.Tom Bevill (D)
5.Robert E. Jones Jr. (D)
6.John Hall Buchanan Jr. (R)
7.Walter Flowers (D)

Alaska

[edit]
At-large.Don Young (R), from March 6, 1973

Arizona

[edit]
1.John Jacob Rhodes (R)
2.Mo Udall (D)
3.Sam Steiger (R)
4.John Bertrand Conlan (R)

Arkansas

[edit]
1.William Vollie Alexander Jr. (D)
2.Wilbur Mills (D)
3.John Paul Hammerschmidt (R)
4.Ray Thornton (D)

California

[edit]
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), until March 5, 1974
John Burton (D), from June 4, 1974
7.Ron Dellums (D)
8.Pete Stark (D)
9.Don Edwards (D)
10.Charles Gubser (R), until December 31, 1974
11.Leo Ryan (D)
12.Burt Talcott (R)
13.Charles M. Teague (R), until January 1, 1974
Robert J. Lagomarsino (R), from March 5, 1974
14.Jerome Waldie (D)
15.John J. McFall (D)
16.B. F. Sisk (D)
17.Pete McCloskey (R)
18.Bob Mathias (R)
19.Chester E. Holifield (D), until December 31, 1974
20.Carlos Moorhead (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), until December 31, 1974
33.Jerry Pettis (R)
34.Richard T. Hanna (D), until December 31, 1974
35.Glenn M. Anderson (D)
36.William M. Ketchum (R)
37.Yvonne Brathwaite Burke (D)
38.George Brown Jr. (D)
39.Andrew J. Hinshaw (R)
40.Bob Wilson (R)
41.Lionel Van Deerlin (D)
42.Clair Burgener (R)
43.Victor Veysey (R)

Colorado

[edit]
1.Pat Schroeder (D)
2.Donald G. Brotzman (R)
3.Frank Evans (D)
4.James Paul Johnson (R)
5.William L. Armstrong (R)

Connecticut

[edit]
1.William R. Cotter (D)
2.Robert H. Steele (R)
3.Robert Giaimo (D)
4.Stewart McKinney (R)
5.Ronald A. Sarasin (R)
6.Ella Grasso (D)

Delaware

[edit]
At-large.Pete du Pont (R)

Florida

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

Georgia

[edit]
1.Bo Ginn (D)
2.Dawson Mathis (D)
3.Jack Brinkley (D)
4.Benjamin B. Blackburn (R)
5.Andrew Young (D)
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

[edit]
1.Spark Matsunaga (D)
2.Patsy Mink (D)

Idaho

[edit]
1.Steve Symms (R)
2.Orval H. Hansen (R)

Illinois

[edit]
1.Ralph Metcalfe (D)
2.Morgan F. Murphy (D)
3.Robert P. Hanrahan (R)
4.Ed Derwinski (R)
5.John C. Kluczynski (D)
6.Harold R. Collier (R)
7.Cardiss Collins (D), from June 5, 1973
8.Dan Rostenkowski (D)
9.Sidney R. Yates (D)
10.Samuel H. Young (R)
11.Frank Annunzio (D)
12.Phil Crane (R)
13.Robert McClory (R)
14.John N. Erlenborn (R)
15.Leslie C. Arends (R), until December 31, 1974
16.John B. Anderson (R)
17.George M. O'Brien (R)
18.Robert H. Michel (R)
19.Tom Railsback (R)
20.Paul Findley (R)
21.Edward Rell Madigan (R)
22.George E. Shipley (D)
23.Melvin Price (D)
24.Kenneth J. Gray (D), until December 31, 1974

Indiana

[edit]
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.William H. Hudnut III (R)

Iowa

[edit]
1.Edward Mezvinsky (D)
2.John Culver (D)
3.H. R. Gross (R)
4.Neal Edward Smith (D)
5.William J. Scherle (R)
6.Wiley Mayne (R)

Kansas

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

Kentucky

[edit]
1.Frank Stubblefield (D), until December 31, 1974
2.William Natcher (D)
3.Romano Mazzoli (D)
4.Gene Snyder (R)
5.Tim Lee Carter (R)
6.John B. Breckinridge (D)
7.Carl D. Perkins (D)

Louisiana

[edit]
1.F. Edward Hébert (D)
2.Lindy Boggs (D), from March 20, 1973
3.Dave Treen (R)
4.Joe Waggonner (D)
5.Otto Passman (D)
6.John Rarick (D)
7.John Breaux (D)
8.Gillis William Long (D)

Maine

[edit]
1.Peter Kyros (D)
2.William Cohen (R)

Maryland

[edit]
1.William Oswald Mills (R), until May 24, 1973
Robert Bauman (R), from August 21, 1973
2.Clarence Long (D)
3.Paul Sarbanes (D)
4.Marjorie Holt (R)
5.Lawrence Hogan (R)
6.Goodloe Byron (D)
7.Parren Mitchell (D)
8.Gilbert Gude (R)

Massachusetts

[edit]
1.Silvio O. Conte (R)
2.Edward Boland (D)
3.Harold Donohue (D), until December 31, 1974
4.Robert Drinan (D)
5.Paul W. Cronin (R)
6.Michael J. Harrington (D)
7.Torbert Macdonald (D)
8.Tip O'Neill (D)
9.Joe Moakley (D)[1]
10.Margaret Heckler (R)
11.James A. Burke (D)
12.Gerry Studds (D)

Michigan

[edit]
1.John Conyers (D)
2.Marvin L. Esch (R)
3.Garry E. Brown (R)
4.J. Edward Hutchinson (R)
5.Gerald Ford (R), until December 6, 1973
Richard Vander Veen (D), from February 18, 1974
6.Charles E. Chamberlain (R), until December 31, 1974
7.Donald Riegle (R), then (D)
8.R. James Harvey (R), until January 31, 1974
J. Bob Traxler (D), from April 23, 1974
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), until December 31, 1974
18.Robert J. Huber (R)
19.William Broomfield (R)

Minnesota

[edit]
1.Al Quie (R)
2.Ancher Nelsen (R), until December 31, 1974
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), until December 31, 1974

Mississippi

[edit]
1.Jamie L. Whitten (D)
2.David R. Bowen (D)
3.Sonny Montgomery (D)
4.Thad Cochran (R)
5.Trent Lott (R)

Missouri

[edit]
1.Bill Clay (D)
2.James W. Symington (D)
3.Leonor Sullivan (D)
4.William J. Randall (D)
5.Richard Walker Bolling (D)
6.Jerry Litton (D)
7.Gene Taylor (R)
8.Richard Howard Ichord Jr. (D)
9.William L. Hungate (D)
10.Bill Burlison (D)


Montana

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

Nebraska

[edit]
1.Charles Thone (R)
2.John Y. McCollister (R)
3.David Martin (R), until December 31, 1974

Nevada

[edit]
At-large.David Towell (R)

New Hampshire

[edit]
1.Louis C. Wyman (R), until December 31, 1974
2.James Colgate Cleveland (R)

New Jersey

[edit]
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), until December 31, 1974
8.Robert A. Roe (D)
9.Henry Helstoski (D)
10.Peter W. Rodino (D)
11.Joseph Minish (D)
12.Matthew John Rinaldo (R)
13.Joseph J. Maraziti (R)
14.Dominick V. Daniels (D)
15.Edward J. Patten (D)

New Mexico

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

New York

[edit]
1.Otis G. Pike (D)
2.James R. Grover Jr. (R)
3.Angelo D. Roncallo (R)
4.Norman F. Lent (R)
5.John W. Wydler (R)
6.Lester L. Wolff (D)
7.Joseph P. Addabbo (D)
8.Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal (D)
9.James J. Delaney (D)
10.Mario Biaggi (D)
11.Frank J. Brasco (D)
12.Shirley Chisholm (D)
13.Bertram L. Podell (D)
14.John J. Rooney (D), until December 31, 1974
15.Hugh Carey (D), until December 31, 1974
16.Elizabeth Holtzman (D)
17.John M. Murphy (D)
18.Ed Koch (D)
19.Charles Rangel (D)
20.Bella Abzug (D)
21.Herman Badillo (D)
22.Jonathan Brewster Bingham (D)
23.Peter A. Peyser (R)
24.Ogden Reid (D)
25.Hamilton Fish IV (R)
26.Benjamin Gilman (R)
27.Howard W. Robison (R)
28.Samuel S. Stratton (D)
29.Carleton J. King (R), until December 31, 1974
30.Robert C. McEwen (R)
31.Donald J. Mitchell (R)
32.James M. Hanley (D)
33.William F. Walsh (R)
34.Frank Horton (R)
35.Barber Conable (R)
36.Henry P. Smith III (R)
37.Thaddeus J. Dulski (D), until December 31, 1974
38.Jack Kemp (R)
39.James F. Hastings (R)

North Carolina

[edit]
1.Walter B. Jones Sr. (D)
2.Lawrence H. Fountain (D)
3.David N. Henderson (D)
4.Ike Franklin Andrews (D)
5.Wilmer Mizell (R)
6.L. Richardson Preyer (D)
7.Charlie Rose (D)
8.Earl B. Ruth (R)
9.James G. Martin (R)
10.Jim Broyhill (R)
11.Roy A. Taylor (D)

North Dakota

[edit]
At-large.Mark Andrews (R)

Ohio

[edit]
1.William J. Keating (R), until January 3, 1974
Tom Luken (D), from March 5, 1974
2.Donald D. Clancy (R)
3.Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R)
4.Tennyson Guyer (R)
5.Del Latta (R)
6.Bill Harsha (R)
7.Bud Brown (R)
8.Walter E. Powell (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.Ralph Regula (R)
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), until December 31, 1974

Oklahoma

[edit]
1.James R. Jones (D)
2.Clem McSpadden (D)
3.Carl Albert (D)
4.Tom Steed (D)
5.John Jarman (D)
6.John Newbold Camp (R)

Oregon

[edit]
1.Wendell Wyatt (R)
2.Al Ullman (D)
3.Edith Green (D), until December 31, 1974
4.John R. Dellenback (R)

Pennsylvania

[edit]
1.William A. Barrett (D)
2.Robert N. C. Nix Sr. (D)
3.William J. Green III (D)
4.Joshua Eilberg (D)
5.John H. Ware III (R)
6.Gus Yatron (D)
7.Lawrence G. Williams (R)
8.Edward G. Biester Jr. (R)
9.Bud Shuster (R)
10.Joseph M. McDade (R)
11.Dan Flood (D)
12.John P. Saylor (R), until October 28, 1973
John Murtha (D), from February 5, 1974
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.John Heinz (R)
19.George Atlee Goodling (R)
20.Joseph M. Gaydos (D)
21.John Herman Dent (D)
22.Thomas E. Morgan (D)
23.Albert W. Johnson (R)
24.Joseph P. Vigorito (D)
25.Frank M. Clark (D), until December 31, 1974

Rhode Island

[edit]
1.Fernand St Germain (D)
2.Robert Tiernan (D)

South Carolina

[edit]
1.Mendel Jackson Davis (D)
2.Floyd Spence (R)
3.William Jennings Bryan Dorn (D), until December 31, 1974
4.James Mann (D)
5.Thomas S. Gettys (D), until December 31, 1974
6.Edward Lunn Young (R)

South Dakota

[edit]
1.Frank E. Denholm (D)
2.James Abdnor (R)

Tennessee

[edit]
1.Jimmy Quillen (R)
2.John Duncan Sr. (R)
3.LaMar Baker (R)
4.Joe L. Evins (D)
5.Richard Fulton (D)
6.Robin Beard (R)
7.Ed Jones (D)
8.Dan Kuykendall (R)

Texas

[edit]
1.Wright Patman (D)
2.Charlie Wilson (D)
3.James M. Collins (R)
4.Ray Roberts (D)
5.Alan Steelman (R)
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.Bob Price (R)
14.John Andrew Young (D)
15.Kika de la Garza (D)
16.Richard Crawford White (D)
17.Omar Burleson (D)
18.Barbara Jordan (D)
19.George H. Mahon (D)
20.Henry B. González (D)
21.O. C. Fisher (D), until December 31, 1974
22.Robert R. Casey (D)
23.Abraham Kazen (D)
24.Dale Milford (D)

Utah

[edit]
1.K. Gunn McKay (D)
2.Wayne Owens (D)

Vermont

[edit]
At-large.Richard W. Mallary (R)

Virginia

[edit]
1.Thomas N. Downing (D)
2.G. William Whitehurst (R)
3.David E. Satterfield III (D)
4.Robert Daniel (R)
5.Dan Daniel (D)
6.M. Caldwell Butler (R)
7.J. Kenneth Robinson (R)
8.Stanford Parris (R)
9.William C. Wampler (R)
10.Joel Broyhill (R), until December 31, 1974

Washington

[edit]
1.Joel Pritchard (R)
2.Lloyd Meeds (D)
3.Julia Butler Hansen (D), until December 31, 1974
4.Mike McCormack (D)
5.Tom Foley (D)
6.Floyd Hicks (D)
7.Brock Adams (D)

West Virginia

[edit]
1.Bob Mollohan (D)
2.Harley Orrin Staggers (D)
3.John M. Slack Jr. (D)
4.Ken Hechler (D)

Wisconsin

[edit]
1.Les Aspin (D)
2.Robert Kastenmeier (D)
3.Vernon Wallace Thomson (R), until December 31, 1974
4.Clement J. Zablocki (D)
5.Henry S. Reuss (D)
6.William A. Steiger (R)
7.Dave Obey (D)
8.Harold Vernon Froehlich (R)
9.Glenn Robert Davis (R), until December 31, 1974

Wyoming

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At-large.Teno Roncalio (D)

Non-voting members

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District of Columbia.Walter Fauntroy (D)
Guam.Antonio Borja Won Pat (D)
Puerto Rico.Jaime Benítez Rexach (Resident Commissioner) (PPD)
U.S. Virgin Islands.Ron de Lugo (D)
House minority leadership

Changes in membership

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Senate

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See also:List of special elections to the United States Senate
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated byReason for changeSuccessorDate of successor's
formal installation[e]
Ohio
(3)
William B. Saxbe (R)Resigned January 3, 1974, to becomeAttorney General.
Successor appointed January 4, 1974 to finish the term.
Howard Metzenbaum (D)January 4, 1974
Nevada
(3)
Alan Bible (D)Resigned December 17, 1974, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor appointed December 18, 1974, having already been elected to the next term.
Paul Laxalt (R)December 18, 1974
Utah
(3)
Wallace F. Bennett (R)Resigned December 20, 1974, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor appointed December 21, 1974, having already been elected to the next term.
Jake Garn (R)December 21, 1974
Ohio
(3)
Howard Metzenbaum (D)Resigned December 23, 1974, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor appointed December 24, 1974, having already been elected to the next term.
John Glenn (D)December 24, 1974
Kentucky
(3)
Marlow Cook (R)Resigned December 27, 1974, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor appointed December 28, 1974, having already been elected to the next term.
Wendell Ford (D)December 28, 1974
New Hampshire
(3)
Norris Cotton (R)Resigned December 31, 1974, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor appointed December 31, 1974, having already been elected to the next term.
Louis C. Wyman (R)December 31, 1974
Florida
(3)
Edward Gurney (R)Resigned December 31, 1974, in aninfluence peddling scandal.
Successor appointed January 1, 1975, having already been elected to the next term.
Richard Stone (D)January 1, 1975
Arkansas
(3)
J. William Fulbright (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Successor began next term.
VacantNot filled this Congress
North Carolina
(3)
Sam Ervin (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Successor began next term.
VacantNot filled this Congress

House of Representatives

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There were three deaths before this Congress began.

See also:List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
House changes
DistrictVacated byReason for changeSuccessorDate of successor's
formal installation[e]
Illinois 7thVacantRep.George W. Collins (D) died during previous congress.Cardiss Collins (D)June 5, 1973
Alaska at-largeVacantNick Begich (D) andHale Boggs (D) were lost in a plane crash, and the estate of Rep. Begich was issued a presumptive death certificate from the State of Alaska during previous congress. Both were also declared dead pursuant to H. R. Res. 1 issued January 3, 1973.Don Young (R)March 6, 1973
Louisiana 2ndHale Boggs (D)Nick Begich (D) andHale Boggs (D) were lost in a plane crash during previous congress. Both were declared dead pursuant to H. R. Res. 1 issued January 3, 1973.Lindy Boggs (D)March 20, 1973
Michigan 7thDonald Riegle (R)Switched party affiliation.Donald Riegle (D)February 27, 1973
Maryland 1stWilliam Oswald Mills (R)Committed suicide May 24, 1973.Robert Bauman (R)August 21, 1973
Pennsylvania 12thJohn P. Saylor (R)Died October 28, 1973.John Murtha (D)February 5, 1974
Michigan 5thGerald Ford (R)Resigned December 6, 1973, to become vice president.Richard Vander Veen (D)February 18, 1974
California 13thCharles M. Teague (R)Died January 1, 1974.Robert J. Lagomarsino (R)March 5, 1974
Ohio 1stWilliam J. Keating (R)Resigned January 3, 1974.Tom Luken (D)March 5, 1974
Michigan 8thR. James Harvey (R)Resigned January 31, 1974, after being appointed as a judge of theUS District Court of the Eastern District of Michigan.J. Bob Traxler (D)April 23, 1974
California 6thWilliam S. Mailliard (R)Resigned March 5, 1974.John Burton (D)June 4, 1974
California 10thCharles Gubser (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.Remained vacant until next Congress
California 19thChester E. Holifield (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
California 32ndCraig Hosmer (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
California 34thRichard T. Hanna (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Illinois 15thLeslie C. Arends (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Illinois 24thKenneth J. Gray (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Kentucky 1stFrank Stubblefield (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Massachusetts 3rdHarold Donohue (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Michigan 6thCharles E. Chamberlain (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Michigan 17thMartha Griffiths (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Minnesota 2ndAncher Nelsen (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Minnesota 8thJohn Blatnik (DFL)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Nebraska 3rdDavid Martin (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
New Hampshire 1stLouis C. Wyman (R)Resigned December 31, 1974, after being appointed to theU.S. Senate.
New Jersey 7thWilliam B. Widnall (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
New York 14thJohn J. Rooney (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
New York 15thHugh Carey (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
New York 29thCarleton J. King (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
New York 37thThaddeus J. Dulski (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Ohio 23rdWilliam Edwin Minshall Jr. (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Oregon 3rdEdith Green (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Pennsylvania 25thFrank M. Clark (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
South Carolina 3rdWilliam Jennings Bryan Dorn (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
South Carolina 5thThomas S. Gettys (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Texas 21stO. C. Fisher (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Virginia 10thJoel Broyhill (R)Resigned December 31, 1974, after being defeated for re-election.
Washington 3rdJulia Butler Hansen (D)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Wisconsin 3rdVernon Wallace Thomson (R)Resigned December 31, 1974.
Wisconsin 9thGlenn Robert Davis (R)Resigned December 31, 1974 .

Committees

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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

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House of Representatives

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Joint committees

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Employees

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Legislative branch agency directors

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Senate

[edit]

House of Representatives

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^U.S. Vice PresidentSpiro Agnew's term as President of the Senate resigned on October 10, 1973.
  2. ^abPresident pro temporeJames Eastland acted his duties as the President of the Senate during the period.
  3. ^U.S. Vice PresidentGerald Ford's term as President of the Senate ended at noon on August 9, 1974 when he ascended to the presidency.
  4. ^abc TheMinnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) and theNorth Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party (D-NPL) are the Minnesota and North Dakota affiliates of theU.S. Democratic Party and are counted as Democrats.
  5. ^ab When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

Footnotes

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  1. ^Joe Moakley (D–MA) was elected as "Independent Conservative", based on official report of Congress by Benjamin Guthrie. "Statistics of the Presidential and Congressional Election of November 7, 1972." But he was sworn in as a Democrat at the beginning of the Congress, January 3, 1973.[1]
  • 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.

References

[edit]
United States congresses (and year convened)
   
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