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107TH UNITED STATES CONGRESS

'107th United States Congress'

United States Capitol (2002)
Session: January 3, 2001 –
January 3, 2003
President of the Senate: Dick Cheney
President pro tempore of the Senate: Robert Byrd (Jan. 3-20, 2001)
Strom Thurmond (Jan.-Jun. 2001)
Robert Byrd (Jun. 2001-2003)
Speaker of the House: Dennis Hastert
Members: 435 Representatives
100 Senators
5 Territorial Representatives
House Majority: Republican
Senate Majority: Democratic

The 'One Hundred Seventh United States Congress' was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, comprised of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, DC from January 3 2001 to January 3 2003, during the first two years of the first administration of U.S. President George W. Bush.
The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the Twenty-first Census of the United States in 1990. Both chambers had a Republican majority until June 6 2001, after which the Senate had a Democratic majority.

Contents
Dates of sessions
Major events
Major legislation
Party summary
Senate
House of Representatives
Officers
Senate
House of Representatives
Members
Senate
House of Representatives
Changes in Membership
Senate
House of Representatives
Employees
Senate
House of Representatives
References
External links

Dates of sessions


January 3, 2001 – January 3, 2003

★ First session: January 3, 2001 – December 20, 2001

★ Second session: January 23, 2002 – November 22, 2002
Previous congress: ''106th Congress''

Next congress: ''108th Congress''

Major events


Main articles: 2001#Events, 2002#Events

This Congress began in the final days of the Clinton Administration. Hillary Rodham Clinton, wife of outgoing President Bill Clinton, was sworn in as a Senator from New York, and a Joint session of Congress met to count the electoral votes in the contentious 2000 Presidential election. An unprecedented split in the United States Senate and the defection of a single Senator led to ''three'' changes in majorities. After the September 11 attacks, some Senators were targeted by anthrax attacks. Finally, the Congress voted to allow the President to attack Saddam Hussein in Iraq.

January 3, 2001: The Senate began the Congress evenly split, 50-50, between two parties. In the House, there was merely a 9-seat Republican advantage. Hillary Rodham Clinton, wife of outgoing Democratic President Bill Clinton, became the first presidential spouse to serve in Congress. Considering that Democrat Al Gore was still Vice President and had the constitutional authority to break ties, this gave the Democrats a slim majority for the 17 days between the January 3 swearing-in of the new Congress and the January 20 inauguration of Republican Vice President Dick Cheney.

January 20, 2001: George W. Bush and Dick Cheney were sworn-in as President of the United States and Vice President of the United States, respectively, giving the Republicans a narrow majority in the Senate with Cheney's tie-breaking power.

June 6, 2001: Senator Jim Jeffords, previously a Republican, declared himself an independent and announced he will vote with the Democrats, giving Democrats control in the Senate with a one-seat advantage. Democrat Tom Daschle became Senate Majority Leader.

September 11, 2001: The September 11, 2001 attacks: Terrorists flew hijacked commercial airplanes into the World Trade Center in New York City and The Pentagon in Washington, D.C., killing 3,000 people. Another hijacked flight believed to be headed for either the White House or the United States Capitol was diverted by passengers who took control of the plane from hijackers and crashed it into a field in rural western Pennsylvania.

October 9, 2001: Anthrax attacks were executed against members of the Senate, including Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle.

★ December 2001: The corporate financial scandals, including those affecting Enron, Arthur Andersen, Tyco, and WorldCom (now MCI).

Major legislation


A letter sent to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle containing "weaponized" anthrax powder caused the deaths of two postal workers.

The second anthrax note.

Congress passed 377 public laws. 5764 House and 3181 Senate bills were proposed, as well as 521 House Concurrent Resolutions, 160 Senate Concurrent Resolutions, 125 House Joint Resolutions, 53 Senate Joint Resolutions, 616 House Resolutions, and 368 Senate Resolutions.

2001 June 7 — Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act, ,

2001 September 28 — United States-Jordan Free Trade Area Implementation Act, ,

2001 October 26 — Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism ("USA PATRIOT") Act, ,

2002 January 8 — No Child Left Behind Act, ,

2002 January 11 — Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization Act, ,

2002 March 9 — Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act, ,

2002 March 27 — Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain-Feingold), ,

2002 May 13 — Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002, ,

2002 July 30 — Sarbanes-Oxley Act, ,

2002 August 6 — Trade Act of 2002, ,

2002 October 16 — Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq, ,

2002 October 21 — Sudan Peace Act, ,

2002 October 29 — Help America Vote Act, , ,

2002 November 25 — Homeland Security Act, ,

2002 November 27 — Great Lakes and Lake Champlain Act of 2002, ,

2002 December 17 — E-Government Act of 2002, , , , including Title III:Federal Information Security Management Act,

Party summary


Senate

Affiliation Members
January 32001
to
January 202001
January 202001
to
June 62001
June 62001
to
October 25, 2002
October 26, 2002
to
November 5 2002
November 5, 2002
to
November 25 2002
November 25 2002
to
January 3 2003
Republican Party 50 '50' 49 49 49 50 Democratic Party '50' 50 '50' '49' '49' '48' Independent
(caucused with Democrats)
'1' '1' '1' '1' Independent
(caucused with neither party)
1 1
Vacant 1
Total 100 100 100 99 100 100
Control Democrats
(50+VP:50)
Republicans
(50+VP:50)
Democrats
(50+1:49)
Democrats
(49+1:49)
Democrats
(49+1:49:1)
Democrats
(48+1:50:1)
Note Al Gore ''(D)'' was Vice President of the United States, with the tie-breaking vote. Dick Cheney ''(R)'' became Vice President of the United States, with the tie-breaking vote. Sen. Jeffords switched from Republican to Independent and caucused with Democrats. Sen. Wellstone ''(D)'' died. Sen. Barkley (I), who didn't caucus with either party, took Wellstone's seat. Jim Talent ''(R)'' took Jean Carnahan's ''(D)'' seat, but there was no reorganization as Senate was out of session.[1]

House of Representatives

Affiliation Members Republican Party 221 10 seat majority with Independent's vote Democratic Party 212
Independent 1 Caucused with Republicans
1 Caucused with Democrats
Total 435

Officers


Senate

Office Officer Party State Note President Al Gore Democratic Tennessee January 3 – 20, 2001 Dick Cheney Republican Wyoming January 20, 2001 – end President ''pro tempore'' Robert Byrd Democratic West Virginia January 3 – 20, 2001 Strom Thurmond Republican South Carolina January 20 – June 6, 2001 Robert Byrd Democratic West Virginia June 6, 2001 – end Majority Leader Tom Daschle Democratic South Dakota January 3 – 20, 2001 Trent Lott Republican Mississippi January 20 – June 6, 2001 Tom Daschle Democratic South Dakota June 6, 2001 – end Minority Leader Trent Lott Republican Mississippi January 3 – 20, 2001 Tom Daschle Democratic South Dakota January 20 – June 6, 2001 Trent Lott Republican Mississippi June 6, 2001 – end Majority Whip Harry Reid Democratic Nevada January 3 – 20, 2001 Don Nickles Republican Oklahoma January 20 – June 6, 2001 Harry Reid Democratic Nevada June 6, 2001 – end Minority Whip Don Nickles Republican Oklahoma January 3 – 20, 2001 Harry Reid Democratic Nevada January 20 – June 6, 2001 Don Nickles Republican Oklahoma June 6, 2001 – end

House of Representatives

Office Officer Party District Note
Speaker Dennis Hastert Republican
Majority Leader Dick Armey Republican Texas-26
Minority Leader Dick Gephardt Democratic Missouri-3 2001–02
Nancy Pelosi Democratic California-8 2002–end
Majority Whip Tom DeLay Republican Texas-22
Minority Whip David Bonior Democratic Michigan-12 2001–02
Nancy Pelosi Democratic California-8 2002
Steny Hoyer Democratic Maryland-5 2002–end

Members


Senate

Senators' party membership by state.

Senator Party State '↑' Hometown Class First took
office
Richard Shelby RepublicanAlabama Tuscaloosa 3 1987 Jeff Sessions Republican Mobile 2 1997 Ted Stevens RepublicanAlaska Girdwood 2 1969 Frank Murkowski Republican Fairbanks 3 1981 John McCain RepublicanArizona Phoenix 3 1987 Jon Kyl Republican Phoenix 1 1995 Tim Hutchinson RepublicanArkansas Bentonville 2 1997 Blanche Lincoln Democrat Helena 3 1999 Dianne Feinstein DemocratCalifornia San Francisco 1 1992 Barbara Boxer Democrat Greenbrae 3 1993 Ben Nighthorse Campbell RepublicanColorado Ignacio 3 1993 Wayne Allard Republican Loveland 2 1997 Christopher Dodd DemocratConnecticut East Haddam 3 1981 Joseph Lieberman Democrat New Haven 1 1989 Joe Biden DemocratDelaware Wilmington 2 1973 Thomas Carper Democrat Wilmington 1 2001 Bob Graham DemocratFlorida Miami Lakes 3 1987 Bill Nelson Democrat Orlando 1 2001 Max Cleland DemocratGeorgia Lithonia 2 1997 Zell Miller Democrat Young Harris 3 2000 Daniel Inouye DemocratHawaii Honolulu 3 1963 Daniel Akaka Democrat Honolulu 1 1991 Larry Craig RepublicanIdaho Eagle 2 1991 Mike Crapo Republican Idaho Falls 3 1999 Richard Durbin DemocratIllinois Springfield 2 1997 Peter Fitzgerald Republican Inverness 3 1999 Richard Lugar RepublicanIndiana Indianapolis 1 1977 Evan Bayh Democrat Indianapolis 3 1999 Chuck Grassley RepublicanIowa New Hartford 3 1981 Tom Harkin Democrat Cumming 2 1985 Sam Brownback RepublicanKansas Topeka 3 1997 Pat Roberts Republican Dodge City 2 1997 Mitch McConnell RepublicanKentucky Louisville 2 1985 Jim Bunning Republican Southgate 3 1999 John Breaux DemocratLouisiana Crowley 3 1987 Mary Landrieu Democrat New Orleans 2 1997 Olympia Snowe RepublicanMaine Auburn 1 1995 Susan Collins Republican Bangor 2 1997 Paul Sarbanes DemocratMaryland Baltimore 1 1977 Barbara Mikulski Democrat Baltimore 3 1987 Edward Kennedy DemocratMassachusetts Hyannis Port 1 1962 John Kerry Democrat Boston 2 1985 Carl Levin DemocratMichigan Detroit 2 1979 Debbie Stabenow Democrat Lansing 1 2001 Paul Wellstone DemocratMinnesota Saint Paul 2 1991 (died October 25, 2002 Dean Barkley Independent Annandale installed November 4, 2002 Mark Dayton Democrat Minneapolis 1 2001 Thad Cochran RepublicanMississippi Jackson 2 1979 Trent Lott Republican Pascagoula 1 1989 Kit Bond RepublicanMissouri Mexico 3 1987 Jean Carnahan Democrat Rolla 1 2001 Max Baucus DemocratMontana Helena 2 1979 Conrad Burns Republican Billings 1 1989 Chuck Hagel RepublicanNebraska Omaha 2 1997 Ben Nelson Democrat Omaha 1 2001 Harry Reid DemocratNevada Searchlight 3 1987 John Ensign Republican Las Vegas 1 2001 Bob Smith RepublicanNew Hampshire Tuftonboro 2 1990 Judd Gregg Republican Rye 3 1993 Robert Torricelli DemocratNew Jersey New Milford 2 1997 Jon Corzine Democrat Hoboken 1 2001 Pete Domenici RepublicanNew Mexico Albuquerque 2 1973 Jeff Bingaman Democrat Santa Fe 1 1983 Charles Schumer DemocratNew York Brooklyn 3 1999 Hillary Clinton Democrat Chappaqua 1 2001 Jesse Helms RepublicanNorth Carolina Raleigh 2 1973 John Edwards Democrat Raleigh 3 1999 Kent Conrad DemocratNorth Dakota Bismarck 1 1987 Byron Dorgan Democrat Bismarck 3 1993 Mike DeWine RepublicanOhio Cedarville 1 1995 George Voinovich Republican Cleveland 3 1999 Don Nickles RepublicanOklahoma Ponca City 3 1981 James Inhofe Republican Tulsa 2 1995 Ron Wyden DemocratOregon Portland 3 1997 Gordon Smith Republican Pendleton 2 1997 Arlen Specter RepublicanPennsylvania Philadelphia 3 1981 Rick Santorum Republican Penn Hills 1 1995 Jack Reed DemocratRhode Island Cranston 2 1997 Lincoln Chafee Republican Warwick 1 1999 Strom Thurmond RepublicanSouth Carolina Edgefield 2 1954 Ernest Hollings Democrat Charleston 3 1966 Tom Daschle DemocratSouth Dakota Aberdeen 3 1987 Tim Johnson Democrat Vermillion 2 1997 Fred Thompson RepublicanTennessee Nashville 2 1994 Bill Frist Republican Nashville 1 1995 Phil Gramm RepublicanTexas College Station 2 1985 Kay Bailey Hutchison Republican Dallas 1 1993 Orrin Hatch RepublicanUtah Salt Lake City 1 1977 Robert Bennett Republican Salt Lake City 3 1993 Patrick Leahy DemocratVermont Middlesex 3 1975 James Jeffords Republican (left Republican party June 5, 2001) Shrewsbury 1 1989 Independent (from June 6, 2001) John Warner RepublicanVirginia Alexandria 2 1979 George Allen Republican Mount Vernon 1 2001 Patty Murray DemocratWashington Seattle 3 1993 Maria Cantwell Democrat Edmonds 1 2001 Robert Byrd DemocratWest Virginia Sophia 1 1959 Jay Rockefeller Democrat Charleston 2 1985 Herbert Kohl DemocratWisconsin Milwaukee 1 1989 Russ Feingold Democrat Middleton 3 1993 Craig Thomas RepublicanWyoming Casper 1 1995 Michael Enzi Republican Gillette 2 1997

House of Representatives

}


'Section contents:' Alabama â€” Alaska â€” Arizona â€” Arkansas â€” California â€” Colorado â€” Connecticut â€” Delaware â€” Florida â€” Georgia â€” Hawaii â€” Idaho â€” Illinois â€” Indiana â€” Iowa â€” Kansas â€” Kentucky â€” Louisiana â€” Maine â€” Maryland â€” Massachusetts â€” Michigan â€” Minnesota â€” Mississippi â€” Missouri â€” Montana â€” Nebraska â€” Nevada â€” New Hampshire â€” New Jersey â€” New Mexico â€” New York â€” North Carolina â€” North Dakota â€” Ohio â€” Oklahoma â€” Oregon â€” Pennsylvania â€” Rhode Island â€” South Carolina â€” South Dakota â€” Tennessee â€” Texas â€” Utah â€” Vermont â€” Virginia â€” Washington â€” West Virginia â€” Wisconsin â€” Wyoming
American Samoa â€” District of Columbia â€” Guam â€” Puerto Rico â€” Virgin Islands

The names of members of the House of Representatives elected statewide ''at-large,'' are preceded by an "At Large," and the names of those elected from districts, whether plural or single member, are preceded by their district numbers.
Many of the congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress.
'Alabama'
★ . Sonny Callahan ''(R)'' of Mobile
★ . Terry Everett ''(R)'' of Rehobeth
★ . Bob Riley ''(R)'' of Ashland
★ . Robert Aderholt ''(R)'' of Haleyville
★ . Robert Cramer ''(D)'' of Huntsville
★ . Spencer Bachus ''(R)'' of Vestavia Hills
★ . Earl F. Hilliard ''(D)'' of Birmingham'Alaska'
Don Young ''(R)'' of Fort Yukon'Arizona'
★ . Jeff Flake ''(R)'' of Mesa
★ . Ed Pastor ''(D)'' of Phoenix
★ . Bob Stump ''(R)'' of Tolleson
★ . John Shadegg ''(R)'' of Phoenix
★ . Jim Kolbe ''(R)'' of Tucson
★ . J.D. Hayworth ''(R)'' of Scottsdale'Arkansas'
★ . Marion Berry ''(D)'' of Gillett
★ . Vic Snyder ''(D)'' of Little Rock
★ . John Boozman ''(R)'' of Rogers, installed November 20, 2001::''Vacant,'' August 6, 2001 - November 19, 2001::Asa Hutchinson ''(R)'' of Bentonville, resigned August 5, 2001
★ . Mike Ross ''(D)'' of Prescott'California'
★ . Mike Thompson ''(D)'' of Napa Valley
★ . Wally Herger ''(R)'' of Marysville
★ . Doug Ose ''(R)'' of Sacramento
★ . John Doolittle ''(R)'' of Rocklin
★ . Robert Matsui ''(D)'' of Sacramento
★ . Lynn Woolsey ''(D)'' of Petaluma
★ . George Miller ''(D)'' of Martinez
★ . Nancy Pelosi ''(D)'' of San Francisco
★ . Barbara Lee ''(D)'' of Oakland
★ . Ellen Tauscher ''(D)'' of Alamo
★ . Richard Pombo ''(R)'' of Tracy
★ . Tom Lantos ''(D)'' of San Mateo
★ . Pete Stark ''(D)'' of Fremont
★ . Anna Eshoo ''(D)'' of Atherton
★ . Mike Honda ''(D)'' of San Jose
★ . Zoe Lofgren ''(D)'' of San Jose
★ . Sam Farr ''(D)'' of Carmel
★ . Gary Condit ''(D)'' of Ceres
★ . George Radanovich ''(R)'' of Mariposa
★ . Cal Dooley ''(D)'' of Fresno
★ . Bill Thomas ''(R)'' of Bakersfield
★ . Lois Capps ''(D)'' of Santa Barbara
★ . Elton Gallegly ''(R)'' of Simi Valley
★ . Brad Sherman ''(D)'' of Sherman Oaks
★ . Howard McKeon ''(R)'' of Santa Clarita
★ . Howard Berman ''(D)'' of Mission Hills
★ . Adam Schiff ''(D)'' of Burbank
★ . David Dreier ''(R)'' of San Dimas
★ . Henry Waxman ''(D)'' of Los Angeles
★ . Xavier Becerra ''(D)'' of Los Angeles
★ . Hilda Solis ''(D)'' of El Monte
★ . Diane Watson ''(D)'' of Los Angeles, installed June 5, 2001 ::''Vacant,'' January 3, 2001 - June 4, 2001
★ . Lucille Roybal-Allard ''(D)'' of Los Angeles
★ . Grace Napolitano ''(D)'' of Norwalk
★ . Maxine Waters ''(D)'' of Los Angeles
★ . Jane Harman ''(D)'' of Venice
★ . Juanita Millender-McDonald ''(D)'' of Carson
★ . John S. Horn ''(R)'' of Long Beach
★ . Edward R. Royce ''(R)'' of Fullerton
★ . Jerry Lewis ''(R)'' of Redlands
★ . Gary Miller ''(R)'' of Diamond Bar
★ . Joe Baca ''(D)'' of Rialto
★ . Ken Calvert ''(R)'' of Corona
★ . Mary Bono ''(R)'' of Palm Springs
★ . Dana Rohrabacher ''(R)'' of Huntington Beach
★ . Loretta Sanchez ''(D)'' of Anaheim
★ . Chris Cox ''(R)'' of Newport Beach
★ . Darrell Issa ''(R)'' of Vista
★ . Susan Davis ''(D)'' of San Diego
★ . Bob Filner ''(D)'' of San Diego
★ . Randy "Duke" Cunningham ''(R)'' of Del Mar
★ . Duncan Hunter ''(R)'' of Alpine'Colorado'
★ . Diana DeGette ''(D)'' of Denver
★ . Mark Udall ''(D)'' of Boulder
★ . Scott McInnis ''(R)'' of Glenwood Springs
★ . Bob Schaffer ''(R)'' of Fort Collins
★ . Joel Hefley ''(R)'' of Colorado Springs
★ . Thomas G. Tancredo ''(R)'' of Littleton'Connecticut'
★ . John Larson ''(D)'' of East Hartford
★ . Rob Simmons ''(R)'' of Mystic
★ . Rosa DeLauro ''(D)'' of New Haven
★ . Christopher Shays ''(R)'' of Bridgeport
★ . James H. Maloney ''(D)'' of Danbury
★ . Nancy Johnson ''(R)'' of New Britain'Delaware'
Michael N. Castle ''(R)'' of Wilmington'Florida'
★ . Jeff Miller ''(R)'' of Chumuckla, installed October 16, 2001::''Vacant,'' September 7, 2001 - October 15, 2001::Joe Scarborough ''(R)'' of Pensacola, resigned September 6, 2001
★ . Allen Boyd ''(D)'' of Monticello
★ . Corrine Brown ''(D)'' of Jacksonville
★ . Ander Crenshaw ''(R)'' of Jacksonville
★ . Karen Thurman ''(D)'' of Dunnellon
★ . Cliff Stearns ''(R)'' of Ocala
★ . John Mica ''(R)'' of Winter Park
★ . Ric Keller ''(R)'' of Orlando
★ . Michael Bilirakis ''(R)'' of Palm Harbor
★ . Bill Young ''(R)'' of Largo
★ . Jim Davis ''(D)'' of Tampa
★ . Adam Putnam ''(R)'' of Bartow
★ . Dan Miller ''(R)'' of Bradenton
★ . Porter Goss ''(R)'' of Sanibel
★ . Dave Weldon ''(R)'' of Palm Bay
★ . Mark Foley ''(R)'' of West Palm Beach
★ . Carrie P. Meek ''(D)'' of Miami
★ . Ileana Ros-Lehtinen ''(R)'' of Miami
★ . Robert Wexler ''(D)'' of Boca Raton
★ . Peter Deutsch ''(D)'' of Fort Lauderdale
★ . Lincoln Diaz-Balart ''(R)'' of Miami
★ . Clay Shaw ''(R)'' of Fort Lauderdale
★ . Alcee Hastings ''(D)'' of Miramar'Georgia'
★ . Jack Kingston ''(R)'' of Savannah
★ . Sanford Bishop ''(D)'' of Albany
★ . Mac Collins ''(R)'' of Hampton
★ . Cynthia McKinney ''(D)'' of Stone Mountain
★ . John Lewis ''(D)'' of Atlanta
★ . Johnny Isakson ''(R)'' of Marietta
★ . Bob Barr ''(R)'' of Smyrna
★ . Saxby Chambliss ''(R)'' of Moultrie
★ . Nathan Deal ''(R)'' of Clermont
★ . Charlie Norwood ''(R)'' of Evans
★ . John Linder ''(R)'' of Duluth'Hawaii'
★ . Neil Abercrombie ''(D)'' of Honolulu
★ . Ed Case ''(D)'', ''Installed'' November 302002::''Vacant'', September 29, 2002–November 29, 2002::Patsy Mink ''(D)'' of Honolulu, ''died'' September 28, 2002'Idaho'
★ . C. L. Otter ''(R)'' of Star
★ . Michael K. Simpson ''(R)'' of Blackfoot, Idaho'Illinois'
★ . Bobby Rush ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . Jesse Jackson, Jr. ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . William Lipinski ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . Luis Gutierrez ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . Rod Blagojevich ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . Henry Hyde ''(R)'' of Wood Dale
★ . Danny K. Davis ''(D)'' of Chicago
★ . Philip Crane ''(D)'' of Wauconda
★ . Janice D. Schakowsky ''(D)'' of Evanston
★ . Mark Steven Kirk ''(R)'' of Highland Park
★ . Jerry Weller ''(R)'' of Morris
★ . Jerry Costello ''(D)'' of Belleville
★ . Judy Biggert ''(R)'' of Hinsdale
★ . Dennis Hastert ''(R)'' of Yorkville
★ . Timothy V. Johnson ''(R)'' of Sidney
★ . Donald Manzullo ''(R)'' of Egan
★ . Lane Evans ''(D)'' of Rock Island
★ . Ray LaHood ''(R)'' of Peoria
★ . David D. Phelps ''(D)'' of Eldorado
★ . John Shimkus ''(R)'' of Collinsville'Indiana'
★ . Peter Visclosky ''(D)'' of Merrillville
★ . Mike Pence ''(R)'' of Columbus
★ . Tim Roemer ''(D)'' of South Bend
★ . Mark Souder ''(R)'' of Fort Wayne
★ . Steve Buyer ''(R)'' of Monticello
★ . Dan Burton ''(R)'' of Indianapolis
★ . Brian D. Kerns ''(R)'' of Terre Haute
★ . John Hostettler ''(R)'' of Blairsville
★ . Baron Hill ''(D)'' of Seymour
★ . Julia Carson ''(D)'' of Indianapolis'Iowa'
★ . Jim Leach ''(R)'' of Davenport
★ . Jim Nussle ''(R)'' of Manchester
★ . Leonard Boswell ''(D)'' of Davis City
★ . Greg Ganske ''(R)'' of Des Moines
★ . Tom Latham ''(R)'' of Alexander'Kansas'
★ . Jerry Moran ''(R)'' of Hays
★ . Jim Ryun ''(R)'' of Topeka
★ . Dennis Moore ''(D)'' of Lenexa
★ . Todd Tiahrt ''(R)'' of Goddard'Kentucky'
★ . Ed Whitfield ''(R)'' of Hopkinsville
★ . Ron Lewis ''(R)'' of Cecilia
★ . Anne Northup ''(R)'' of Louisville
★ . Ken Lucas ''(D)'' of Florence
★ . Harold Rogers ''(R)'' of Somerset
★ . Ernie Fletcher ''(R)'' of Lexington'Louisiana'
★ . David Vitter ''(R)'' of Metairie
★ . William J. Jefferson ''(D)'' of New Orleans
★ . W.J. Billy Tauzin ''(R)'' of Thibodoux
★ . Jim McCrery ''(R)'' of Shreveport
★ . John Cooksey ''(R)'' of Monroe
★ . Richard H. Baker ''(R)'' of Baton Rouge
★ . Christopher John ''(D)'' of Crowley'Maine'
★ . Tom Allen ''(D)'' of Portland
★ . John Baldacci ''(D)'' of Bangor'Maryland'
★ . Wayne Gilchrest ''(R)'' of Kennedyville
★ . Robert Ehrlich ''(R)'' of Timonium
★ . Ben Cardin ''(D)'' of Baltimore
★ . Albert Wynn ''(D)'' of Mitchellville
★ . Steny Hoyer ''(D)'' of Mechanicsville
★ . Roscoe Bartlett ''(R)'' of Frederick
★ . Elijah Cummings ''(D)'' of Baltimore
★ . Connie Morella ''(R)'' of Bethesda'Massachusetts'
★ . John Olver ''(D)'' of Amherst
★ . Richard Neal ''(D)'' of Springfield
★ . Jim McGovern ''(D)'' of Worcester
★ . Barney Frank ''(D)'' of Newton
★ . Marty Meehan ''(D)'' of Newton
★ . John Tierney ''(D)'' of Salem
★ . Ed Markey ''(D)'' of Malden
★ . Mike Capuano ''(D)'' of Somerville
★ . Stephen Lynch ''(D)'' of South Boston, installed October 16, 2001::''Vacant,'' May 29, 2001 - October 15, 2001::Joe Moakley ''(D)'' of Boston, died May 28, 2001
★ . Bill Delahunt ''(D)'' of Quincy'Michigan'
★ . Bart Stupak ''(D)'' of Marquette
★ . Peter Hoekstra ''(R)'' of Holland
★ . Vern Ehlers ''(R)'' of Grand Rapids
★ . David Lee Camp ''(R)'' of Midland
★ . James A. Barcia ''(D)'' of Bay City
★ . Fred Upton ''(R)'' of St. Joseph
★ . Nick Smith ''(R)'' of Addison
★ . Mike J. Rogers ''(R)'' of Brighton
★ . Dale Kildee ''(D)'' of Flint
★ . David E. Bonior ''(D)'' of Mt. Clemens
★ . Joe Knollenberg ''(R)'' of Bloomfield Hills
★ . Sander Levin ''(D)'' of Royal Oak
★ . Lynn N. Rivers ''(D)'' of Ann Arbor
★ . Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick ''(D)'' of Detroit
★ . John Conyers ''(D)'' of Detroit
★ . John Dingell ''(D)'' of Dearborn'Minnesota'
★ . Gil Gutknecht ''(R)'' of Rochester
★ . Mark Kennedy ''(R)'' of Watertown
★ . Jim Ramstad ''(R)'' of Minnetonka
★ . Betty McCollum ''(DFL)'' of St. Paul
★ . Martin Olav Sabo ''(DFL)'' of Minneapolis
★ . Bill Luther ''(DFL)'' of Brooklyn Park
★ . Collin Peterson ''(DFL)'' of Detroit Lakes
★ . James Oberstar ''(DFL)'' of Chisholm'Mississippi'
★ . Roger Wicker ''(R)'' of Tupelo
★ . Bennie Thompson ''(D)'' of Bolton
★ . Chip Pickering ''(R)'' of Hebron
★ . Ronnie Shows ''(D)'' of Bassfield
★ . Gene Taylor ''(D)'' of Bay Saint Louis
'Missouri'
★ . William Lacy Clay, Jr. ''(D)'' of St. Louis
★ . Todd Akin ''(R)'' of St. Louis
★ . Richard "Dick" Gephardt ''(D)'' of St. Louis
★ . Ike Skelton ''(D)'' of Lexington
★ . Karen McCarthy ''(D)'' of Kansas City
★ . Sam Graves ''(R)'' of Tarkio
★ . Roy Blunt ''(R)'' of Strafford
★ . Jo Ann Emerson ''(R)'' of Cape Girardeau
★ . Kenny Hulshof ''(R)'' of Columbia'Montana'
Denny Rehberg ''(R)'' of Billings'Nebraska'
★ . Doug Bereuter ''(R)'' of Lincoln
★ . Lee Terry ''(R)'' of Omaha
★ . Tom Osborne ''(R)'' of LeMoyne'Nevada'
★ . Shelley Berkley ''(D)'' of Las Vegas
★ . Jim Gibbons ''(R)'' of Reno'New Hampshire'
★ . John E. Sununu ''(R)'' of Salem
★ . Charlie Bass ''(R)'' of Peterborough'New Jersey'
★ . Rob Andrews ''(D)'' of Haddon Heights
★ . Frank LoBiondo ''(R)'' of Ventnor
★ . H. James Saxton ''(R)'' of Mount Holly
★ . Chris Smith ''(R)'' of Hamilton
★ . Marge Roukema ''(R)'' of Ridgewood
★ . Frank Pallone ''(D)'' of Long Branch
★ . Mike Ferguson ''(R)'' of Warren Township
★ . Bill Pascrell, Jr. ''(D)'' of Paterson
★ . Steve Rothman ''(D)'' of Fair Lawn
★ . Donald M. Payne ''(D)'' of Newark
★ . Rodney Frelinghuysen ''(R)'' of Morristown
★ . Rush D. Holt, Jr. ''(D)'' of Hopewell Township
★ . Bob Menendez ''(D)'' of Hoboken'New Mexico'
★ . Heather Wilson ''(R)'' of Albuquerque
★ . Joe Skeen ''(R)'' of Picacho
★ . Tom Udall ''(D)'' of Santa Fe'New York'
★ . Felix Grucci ''(R)'' of Brookhaven
★ . Steve Israel ''(D)'' of Huntington
★ . Peter T. King ''(R)'' of Seaford
★ . Carolyn McCarthy ''(D)'' of Mineola
★ . Gary Ackerman ''(D)'' of Queens
★ . Gregory W. Meeks ''(D)'' of Far Rockaway
★ . Joseph Crowley ''(D)'' of Queens
★ . Jerrold Nadler ''(D)'' of New York
★ . Anthony D. Weiner ''(D)'' of Brooklyn
★ . Edolphus Towns ''(D)'' of Brooklyn
★ . Major Owens ''(D)'' of Brooklyn
★ . Nydia Velázquez ''(D)'' of New York
★ . Vito Fossella ''(R)'' of Staten Island
★ . Carolyn B. Maloney ''(D)'' of New York
★ . Charles Rangel ''(D)'' of New York
★ . José Serrano ''(D)'' of Bronx
★ . Eliot L. Engel ''(D)'' of Bronx
★ . Nita Lowey ''(D)'' of Harrison
★ . Sue W. Kelly ''(R)'' of Katonah
★ . Benjamin A. Gilman ''(R)'' of Middletown
★ . Michael R. McNulty ''(D)'' of Green Island
★ . John E. Sweeney ''(R)'' of Clifton Park
★ . Sherwood Boehlert ''(R)'' of New Hartford
★ . John M. McHugh ''(R)'' of Pierrepont Manor
★ . James T. Walsh ''(R)'' of Syracuse
★ . Maurice Hinchey ''(D)'' of Hurley
★ . Thomas M. Reynolds ''(R)'' of Clarence
★ . Louise McIntosh Slaughter ''(D)'' of Fairport
★ . John J. LaFalce ''(D)'' of Buffalo
★ . Jack Quinn ''(R)'' of Hamburg
★ . Amo Houghton ''(R)'' of Corning'North Carolina'
★ . Eva M. Clayton ''(D)'' of Soul City
★ . Bob Etheridge ''(D)'' of Lillington
★ . Walter B. Jones ''(R)'' of Farmville
★ . David Price ''(D)'' of Chapel Hill
★ . Richard Burr ''(R)'' of Winston-Salem
★ . Howard Coble ''(R)'' of Greensboro
★ . Mike McIntyre ''(D)'' of Lumberton
★ . Robin Hayes ''(R)'' of Concord
★ . Sue Wilkins Myrick ''(R)'' of Charlotte
★ . Cass Ballenger ''(R)'' of Hickory
★ . Charles H. Taylor ''(R)'' of Brevard
★ . Mel Watt ''(D)'' of Charlotte'North Dakota'
Earl Pomeroy ''(D)'' of Valley City'Ohio'
★ . Steve Chabot ''(R)'' of Cincinnati
★ . Rob Portman ''(R)'' of Terrace Park
★ . Tony P. Hall ''(D)'' of Dayton, resigned September 9, 2002::''Vacant,'' until next Congress
★ . Michael G. Oxley ''(R)'' of Findlay
★ . Paul E. Gillmor ''(R)'' of Old Fort
★ . Ted Strickland ''(D)'' of Lisbon
★ . David L. Hobson ''(R)'' of Springfield
★ . John A. Boehner ''(R)'' of West Chester
★ . Marcia C. Kaptur ''(D)'' of Toledo
★ . Dennis J. Kucinich ''(D)'' of Cleveland
★ . Stephanie Tubbs Jones ''(D)'' of Cleveland
★ . Patrick J. Tiberi ''(R)'' of Columbus
★ . Sherrod Brown ''(D)'' of Lorain
★ . Thomas C. Sawyer ''(D)'' of Akron
★ . Deborah D. Pryce ''(R)'' of Columbus
★ . Ralph S. Regula ''(R)'' of Navarre
★ . James Traficant ''(D)'' of Youngstown, expelled July 24, 2002::''Vacant,'' until next Congress
★ . Robert W. Ney ''(R)'' of Heath
★ . Steven C. LaTourette ''(R)'' of Concord Township'Oklahoma'
★ . John Sullivan ''(R)'' of Tulsa, installed January 8, 2002::''Vacant,'' February 16, 2001 - January 7, 2002::Steve Largent ''(R)'' of Tulsa, resigned February 15, 2001
★ . Brad Carson ''(D)'' of Claremore
★ . Wes Watkins ''(R)'' of Stillwater
★ . J.C. Watts ''(R)'' of Norman
★ . Ernest Istook ''(R)'' of Oklahoma City
★ . Frank Lucas ''(R)'' of Cheyenne'Oregon'
★ . David Wu ''(D)'' of Portland
★ . Greg Walden ''(R)'' of Hood River
★ . Earl Blumenauer ''(D)'' of Portland
★ . Peter DeFazio ''(D)'' of Springfield
★ . Darlene Hooley ''(D)'' of West Linn'Pennsylvania'
★ . Bob Brady ''(D)'' of Philadelphia
★ . Chaka Fattah ''(D)'' of Philadelphia
★ . Robert A. Borski, Jr. ''(D)'' of Philadelphia
★ . Melissa Hart ''(R)'' of Bradford Woods
★ . John E. Peterson ''(R)'' of Pleasantville
★ . Tim Holden ''(D)'' of Saint Clair
★ . Curt Weldon ''(R)'' of Thornbury
★ . James C. Greenwood ''(R)'' of Erwinna
★ . Bill Shuster ''(R)'' of Hollidaysburg, installed May 15, 2001::''Vacant,'' February 1, 2001 - May 14, 2001::Bud Shuster ''(R)'' of Everett, resigned January 31, 2001
★ . Don Sherwood ''(R)'' of Tunkhannock
★ . Paul Kanjorski ''(D)'' of Nanticoke
★ . John Murtha ''(D)'' of Johnstown
★ . Joseph M. Hoeffel ''(D)'' of Montgomery County
★ . William J. Coyne ''(D)'' of Pittsburgh
★ . Patrick J. Toomey ''(R)'' of Allentown
★ . Joseph R. Pitts ''(R)'' of Kennett Square
★ . George W. Gekas ''(R)'' of Harrisburg
★ . Michael F. Doyle ''(D)'' of Swissvale
★ . Todd Russell Platts ''(R)'' of York
★ . Frank Mascara ''(D)'' of Charleroi
★ . Phil English ''(R)'' of Erie'Rhode Island'