This page shows textual changes in the document between the two versions indicated in the dates above. Textual matter removed in the later version is indicated with red strikethrough and textual matter added in the later version is indicated with blue.
This report presents a profile of the membership of the 114th Congress (2015-2016). Statistical information is included on selected characteristics of Members, including data on party affiliation, average age, occupation, education, length of congressional service, religious affiliation, gender, ethnicity, foreign births, and military service.
As of September 7November 15, 2016, in the House of Representatives, there are 247248 Republicans (including 1 Delegate), 191193 Democrats (including 4 Delegates and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico), and threeno vacancies. The Senate has 54 Republicans, 44 Democrats, and 2 Independents, who both caucus with the Democrats.
The average age of Members of the House at the beginning of the 114th Congress was 57.0 years; of Senators, 61.0 years. The overwhelming majority of Members of Congress have a college education. The dominant professions of Members are public service/politics, business, and law. Most Members identify as Christians, and Protestants collectively constitute the majority religious affiliation. Roman Catholics account for the largest single religious denomination, and numerous other affiliations are represented.
The average length of service for Representatives at the beginning of the 114th Congress was 8.8 years (4.4 terms); for Senators, 9.7 years (1.6 terms).
One hundred eightnine women (a record number) serve in the 114th Congress: 8889 in the House, including 4 Delegates, and 20 in the Senate. There are 4546 African American Members of the House and 2 in the Senate. This House number includes two Delegates. There are 38 Hispanic or Latino Members (a record number) serving: 34 in the House, including 1 Delegate and the Resident Commissioner, and 4 in the Senate. ThirteenFourteen Members (1011 Representatives, 2 Delegates, and 1 Senator) are Asian Americans or Pacific Islanders. Two American Indians (Native Americans) serve in the House.
The portions of this report covering political party affiliation, gender, ethnicity, and vacant seats will be updated as events warrant. The remainder of the report will not be updated.
Congress is composed of 541 individuals from the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Puerto Rico.1 This count assumes that no seat is temporarily vacant.2
Since 1789, 12,177179 individuals have served in Congress:3 10,884886 in the House and 1,963 in the Senate.4 Of these Members, 669 have served in both chambers. These numbers do not include an additional 176 individuals who have served only as territorial Delegates or as Resident Commissioners from Puerto Rico or the Philippines in the House.
The following is a profile of the 114th Congress (2015-2016).5
In the 114th Congress, the current party alignments as of September 7November 15, 2016, are as follows:
The average age of Members of the 114th Congress is among the highest of any Congress in recent U.S. history.6
Table 1 shows the average ages at the beginning of the 114th and three previous Congresses.
Table 1. Average Age of Members, 111th-114th Congresses
Average (mean) age at the beginning of the Congress
Congress |
Representatives |
Newly Elected Representatives |
Senators |
Newly Elected Senators |
114th |
57.0 years |
52.3 years |
61.0 years |
50.7 years |
113th |
57.0 years |
49.2 years |
62.0 years |
53.0 years |
112th |
56.7 years |
48.2 years |
62.2 years |
52.1 years |
111th |
57.2 years |
49.8 years |
63.1 years |
57.1 years |
Source: CRS calculations based on CQ Roll Call Member Profiles.
Notes: Representatives' age data do not include the Delegates and the Resident Commissioner. Newly elected Members data do not include those returning to the House or Senate for a second time.
The U.S. Constitution requires Representatives to be at least 25 years old when they take office. The youngest Representative at the beginning of the 114th Congress was 30-year-old Elise Stefanik (R-NY), born July 2, 1984. The oldest Representative was John Conyers (D-MI), born May 16, 1929, who was 85 at the beginning of the 114th Congress.
Senators must be at least 30 years old when they take office. The oldest Senator in the 114th Congress is Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), born June 22, 1933, who was 81 at the beginning of the Congress. The youngest Senator is Tom Cotton (R-AR), born May 13, 1977, who was 37.
According to the CQ Roll Call Guide to the New Congress, in the 114th Congress, public service/politics is the dominantly declared profession of Senators, followed by law, then business; for Representatives, public service/politics is first, followed by business, then law.7
Table 2 uses data from the CQ Roll Call Guide to the New Congress and the CQ Roll Call Member Profiles to show the following occupations most frequently listed for Members at the beginning of the 114th Congress.
Table 2. Most Frequently Listed Occupational Categories
by Members, 114th Congress
At the beginning of the 114th Congress
Occupation |
Representatives |
Senators |
Public Service/Politics |
271 |
60 |
Business |
231 |
42 |
Law |
151 |
51 |
Education |
80 |
25 |
Source: CQ Roll Call Guide to the New Congress and the CQ Roll Call Member Profiles.
Notes: Most Members list more than one profession when surveyed by CQ Roll Call, and the professions listed are not necessarily the ones Members practice immediately prior to entering Congress.
A closer look at the prior occupations and previously held public offices of Members of the House and Senate at the beginning of the 114th Congress, as listed in their CQ Roll Call Member Profiles,8 also shows the following:
Other occupations listed in the CQ Roll Call Member Profiles include emergency dispatcher, letter carrier, urban planner, astronaut, flight attendant, electrician, auto worker, museum director, rodeo announcer, carpenter, computer systems analyst, Foreign Service officer, and software engineer.
As has been true in recent Congresses, the vast majority of Members (94% of House Members and 100% of Senators) at the beginning of the 114th Congress hold bachelor's degrees. Sixty-four percent of House Members and 74% of Senators hold educational degrees beyond a bachelor's. The CQ Roll Call Member Profiles at the beginning of the 114th Congress indicate the following:
By comparison, approximately 35 years ago in the 97th Congress (1981-1982), 84% of House Members and 88% of Senators held bachelor's degrees. Approximately 45 years ago, in the 92nd Congress (1971-1972), 77% of House Members and 87% of Senators held bachelor's degrees. Fifty-four years ago, in the 87th Congress (1961-1962), 71% of House Members and 76% of Senators held bachelor's degrees.15
Four Representatives and one Senator in the 114th Congress are graduates of the U.S. Military Academy, one Senator and one Representative graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, and one Representative graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy. Two Senators and two Representatives were Rhodes Scholars, two Representatives were Fulbright Scholars, two Representatives were Marshall Scholars, and one Senator and one Representative were Truman Scholars.16
The average length of service for Members of the House at the beginning of the 114th Congress was 8.8 years (4.4 terms) and for Senators 9.7 years (1.6 terms).
Table 3. Average Length of Service for Members of Congress, 110th-114th Congresses
Average (mean) at the beginning of the Congress, in years and numbers of terms
Congress |
Representatives |
Senators |
114th |
8.8 years (4.4 terms) |
9.7 years (1.6 terms) |
113th |
9.1 years (4.6 terms) |
10.2 years (1.7 terms) |
112th |
9.8 years (4.9 terms) |
11.4 years (1.9 terms) |
111th |
10.3 years (5.2 terms) |
13.4 years (2.2 terms) |
110th |
10.3 years (5.2 terms) |
13.1 years (2.2 terms) |
Source: CRS Report R41545, Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2015, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].
Notes: Representatives are elected for two-year terms. Senators are elected for six-year terms. Note that 53 Senators in the 114th Congress have previously served in the House. Their House service is not included in this average, nor is the House service of Senators included in previous Congresses.
At the beginning of the 114th Congress, 61 of the Representatives, including 2 Delegates (13.8% of the total House Membership) had first been elected to the House in November 2014, and 13 of the Senators (13% of the total Senate membership) had first been elected to the Senate in November 2014. These numbers are lower than at the beginning of the 113th Congress, when 17% of the House and 14% of the Senate were newly elected "freshmen."
At the beginning of the 114th Congress, 131 Representatives, including 2 Delegates (30.4% of House Members), had no more than 2 years of House experience, and 27 Senators (27% of Senators) had no more than 2 years of Senate experience.
For more historical information on the tenure of Members of Congress, see CRS Report R41545, Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2015, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].
Ninety-eight percent of the Members of the 114th Congress are reported to be affiliated with a specific religion.17 Of the 98%, the vast majority (92%) are Christian.
Statistics gathered by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, which studies the religious affiliation of Members, and CQ Roll Call at the beginning of the 114th Congress showed the following:
A record 108109 women (20.1% of the total membership) serve in the 114th Congress as of January 2015, 7November 2016, 8 more than at the beginning of the 113th Congress.1920 Eighty-eight women, including 4 Delegates, serve in the House and 20 in the Senate. Of the 8889 women in the House, 6566 are Democrats, including 3 of the Delegates, and 23 are Republicans, including 1 Delegate. Of the 20 women in the Senate, 14 are Democrats and 6 are Republicans.
There are a record 4748 African American Members (8.78% of the total membership) in the 114th Congress, 23 more than at the beginning of the 113th Congress.2021 Forty-fivesix serve in the House, including two Delegates, and two serve in the Senate. This number includes one Member of the House who is of African American and Asian ancestry and is counted in both ethnic categories in this report. Forty-threefour of the African American House Members, including two Delegates, are Democrats, and two are Republicans. There is a Senator of each party. Twenty African American women, including two Delegates, serve in the House.
There are 38 Hispanic or Latino Members in the 114th Congress, 7.0% of the total membership and a record number.2122 Thirty-four serve in the House and four in the Senate. Of the Members of the House, 25 are Democrats (including 1 Delegate and the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico), 9 are Republicans, and 9 are women.2223 There are four male Hispanic Senators (three Republicans, one Democrat). Two Hispanic Members, Representatives Linda Sánchez and Loretta Sanchez, are sisters.23
ThirteenFourteen Members of the 114th Congress (2.45% of the total membership) are of Asian, South Asian, or Pacific Islander ancestry.24 Twelve25 Thirteen of them (11 Democrats, 1 Republican) serve in the House, and 1 (a Democrat) serves in the Senate. These numbers include one House Member who is also of African American ancestry and another of Hispanic ancestry; these Members are counted in both ethnic categories. Of those serving in the House, two are Delegates. SevenEight of the Asian Pacific American Members are female: sixseven in the House and one in the Senate.
There are two American Indian (Native American) Members of the 114th Congress, both of whom are Republican Members of the House.25
Thirteen Representatives and three Senators (2.9% of the entire 114th Congress) were born outside the United States. Their places of birth include Canada, Cuba, Guatemala, Japan, Peru, and Thailand. Many of these Members were born to American citizens working or serving abroad. The U.S. Constitution requires that Representatives be citizens for seven years and Senators be citizens for nine years before they take office.
At the beginning of the 114th Congress, there were 101 Members (18.7% of the total membership) who had served or were serving in the military, 7 fewer than at the beginning of the 113th Congress (108 Members) and 17 fewer than in the 112th Congress (118 members). According to lists compiled by CQ Roll Call, the House currently has 82 veterans (including 3 female Members, as well as 1 Delegate); the Senate has 20 veterans, including 1 woman.2627 These Members served in the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Kosovo, as well as during times of peace.2728 Many have served in the reserves and the National Guard. Eight House Members and one Senator are still serving in the reserves, and six House Members are still serving in the National Guard.2829 All of the female veterans are combat veterans.
The number of veterans in the 114th Congress reflects the trend of steady decline in recent decades in the number of Members who have served in the military. For example, 64% of the Members of the 97th Congress (1981-1982) were veterans, and in the 92nd Congress (1971-1972), 73% of the Members were veterans.
For summary information on the demographics of Members in selected past Congresses, including age trends, occupational backgrounds, military veteran status, and educational attainment, see CRS Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].29
Author Contact Information
Acknowledgments
Matthew Glassman, Eric Petersen, and the staff of the Office of the Historian of the United States House of Representatives provided assistance.
1. |
This figure includes 100 Senators, 435 Representatives, 5 Delegates (from the District of Columbia, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands), and 1 Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico. |
|
2. |
As of |
|
3. |
U.S. Information about all individuals who have served in Congress is available in the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, a website maintained by the clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate, at http://bioguide.congress.gov. |
|
4. |
A cumulative chronological list of all U.S. Senators is available on the Senate website at http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/briefing/senators_chronological.htm. Information about all House Members is available on the House website at http://history.house.gov/Institution/Total-Members/Total-Members/. |
|
5. |
Information on the five Delegates and the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico is included where relevant. References to Representatives include information for the 435 Members of the House but not Delegates or the Resident Commissioner. For background information on the previous Congress, refer to CRS Report R42964, Membership of the 113th Congress: A Profile, by [author name scrubbed]. See also CRS Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]; CRS Report RL30261, Women in Congress, 1917-2015: Biographical and Committee Assignment Information, and Listings by State and Congress, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]; and CRS Report RL30378, African American Members of the United States Congress: 1870-2012, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]. |
|
6. |
For average ages of Members in each Congress from 1949 to 2011, see an online feature of the Wall Street Journal, "The Capitol's Age Pyramid: A Graying Congress," at http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/CONGRESS_AGES_1009.html. |
|
7. |
"Demographics: Congress by the Numbers," in CQ Roll Call Guide to the New Congress, November 6, 2014, p. 58, available on the CQ.com subscription database at http://www.cq.com/graphics/weekly/2014/11/06/wr20141106_CQWeekly.pdf, and also available as a complimentary download at http://info.cqrollcall.com/NewMemberGuide2014.html. |
|
8. |
CQ Roll Call Member Profiles are available on the CQ.com subscription database at http://www.cq.com/members/home.do. The CQ.com database is available in all House and Senate offices. The profiles are also available in print form in the CQ publication Politics in America. The professions listed here are not exhaustive and are not necessarily the ones practiced by Members immediately prior to entering Congress. Most Members list more than one profession in their CQ Roll Call Member Profiles. |
|
9. |
One of the medical doctors is the Senate is an ophthalmologist, and one of the medical doctors in the House is a psychiatrist. One of the veterinarians is also a physician. |
|
10. |
In addition, one Senator previously served as the U.S. Trade Representative, which has Cabinet-rank status as well as the title of Ambassador. |
|
11. |
National Conference of State Legislators, "Former State Legislators in the 114th Congress" (as of November 24, 2014), http://www.ncsl.org/Portals/1/Documents/statefed/FSL_114th_11-24.pdf, supplemented by data from the CQ Roll Call Member Profiles. |
|
12. |
[author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], Congressional Deskbook, 6th ed. (Washington: TheCapitol.Net, 2012), Figure 5.22, supplemented by data from CQ Roll Call Member Profiles. |
|
13. |
These numbers include two Senators who retired from the military reserves in 2015, but exclude one House Member who arrived after the beginning of the 114th Congress and is a member of the National Guard. These numbers also include one House Member who was serving in the National Guard at the time of his death in July 2016. |
|
14. |
Three Senators and 14 Representatives have M.D. degrees, one Representative has a D.O. (doctor of osteopathic medicine) degree, one Senator has an O.D. (doctor of optometry) degree, three Representatives have D.D.S. (doctor of dental surgery) degrees, three Representatives have D.V.M. (doctor of veterinary medicine) degrees. One of the Representatives has both an M.D. and a D.V.M. degree. |
|
15. |
CRS Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. |
|
16. |
Rhodes and Marshall scholarships fund study at British universities; Fulbright scholarships fund international exchange programs; Truman scholarships fund graduate study toward public service. |
|
17. |
Ten Members of the 114th Congress do not specify a religious affiliation. Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life Project, "Faith on the Hill: The Religious Composition of the 114th Congress," http://www.pewforum.org/2015/01/05/faith-on-the-hill/. |
|
18.
|
19.
Another Buddhist joined the House in November 2016. |
Ibid. Detailed religious affiliation information for the Members of the 114th Congress, and comparisons to the U.S. general public, is available on this website. |
The 114th Congress began with 108 female Members. An additional female House Member was sworn in on November 14, 2016. For more information, see CRS Report RL30261, Women in |
||
The 114th Congress began with 48 African American Members. One African American House Member resigned on June 23, 2016, and another was sworn in on November 14, 2016. For more information, see CRS Report RL30378, African American Members of the United States Congress: 1870-2012, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]; and the |
||
This number includes three House Members and one Senator who are of Portuguese ancestry and belong to the Congressional Hispanic Caucus or the Congressional Hispanic Conference. For more information, see the |
||
This number includes one Delegate who is of Hispanic and Asian ancestry and is counted in both ethic categories. |
||
Both sisters are Democrats from California. Note that Linda Sánchez uses an accent in her last name; her sister Loretta does not. |
||
The 114th Congress began with a record 14 Asian/Pacific Islander American Members. One Asian American House Member died in July 2016, and another was sworn in in November 2016. |
||
This number includes only Members who are enrolled members of federally recognized tribes. For more information, see CRS congressional distribution memorandum, Members of Congress of American Indian Descent, by Jennifer Manning, available to congressional offices upon request. |
||
CQ Roll Call, "114th Congress: House Military Veterans," http://www.cq.com/members/factfilereport.do?report=mff-house-veterans, and "114th Congress: Senate Military Veterans," http://www.cq.com/members/factfilereport.do?report=mff-senate-veterans. Both lists updated June 2016 and reflect changes since the 114th Congress convened. A publicly available list of House veterans as of the beginning of the 114th Congress is available on the House Library's website at http://library.clerk.house.gov/documents/Military_Vets.pdf. We have been unable to identify a comparable Senate list on an official Senate website. |
||
No current Members of Congress served in World War II. |
||
These numbers do not include two Senators who retired from the military reserves or Guard in 2015, or one House Member who passed away in July 2016 and was in the National Guard. |
||
Because of differences in data sources used, some demographic information may differ between CRS Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945, this report, and other demographic studies of Congress. In addition to the CQ Roll Call Member Profiles, other sources of demographic information for the 114th Congress include The Guardian newspaper's "Are You Reflected in the New Congress?" at http://gu.com/p/43384/sbl and Vital Statistics on Congress at http://www.brookings.edu/vitalstats, a joint project of the American Enterprise Institute and the Brookings Institution. Also, the House of Representatives Library's "Membership Profile" web page at http://library.clerk.house.gov/membership-profile.aspx features many lists of House Members such as "114th Congress—Lawyers" and "114th Congress—MBA Holders." |