Representatives and Senators: Trends in
Member Characteristics Since 1945

R. Eric Petersen, Coordinator
Specialist in American National Government
February 17, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R42365
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Summary
Questions about the characteristics of Members of Congress, including their age, education,
previous occupations, and other descriptors, are of ongoing interest to Members, congressional
staff, and constituents. Some of these questions may be asked in the context of representation, in
efforts to evaluate the extent to which Members of Congress reflect their constituencies and the
nation at large. In other instances, questions arise about how the characteristics of Members have
changed over time, which may speak in part to the history of Congress.
This report provides profiles of Senators and Representatives in selected Congresses since 1945.
It includes data based on Representatives and Senators serving on the first day of the 79th, 82nd,
87th, 92nd, 97th, 102nd, and 107th – 112th Congresses for several demographic characteristics, as
well as the tenure of Member service in Congress. The characteristics discussed include age,
including the oldest and youngest Members of the House and Senate; congressional service
tenure; sex; previous occupation; race and ethnicity; education; religion; and military service.
Following the written summaries of each characteristic, the report provides a number of tables
that provide the detailed data by the category on which the summaries are based. All data tables
appear in the “Member Characteristics Data Tables” section.
In several categories, the report provides data on the U.S. population that may be comparable to
data available on Members of Congress. A detailed discussion of the methods used to develop the
data presented in the report, and efforts to provide comparison between Member characteristics
and the American public, is provided in an Appendix.
The disclosure of details of a Member’s race, education, previous occupation, or other
characteristics appears to be voluntary, and no official, authoritative source has collected Member
characteristic data in a consistent manner over time. Member data provided in this report are
based on commercially collected information, and academic sources. Comparative data on the
U.S. population are taken from the Census Bureau, and are supplemented by private sources.
Members in 2011 are older, more likely to identify a religious affiliation, and include more
women and members of racial and ethnic groups than Members in 1945. The data presented in
this report suggest that since the 79th Congress, Members have had high levels of education, and
worked in professional positions prior to coming to Congress. The number of Members who
previously served in the military has risen and fallen, largely in tandem with the levels of service
in the broader population.
Other Congressional Research Service reports also provide data and other information on the
characteristics of Members. These include CRS Report R41647, Membership of the 112th
Congress: A Profile
; CRS Report R40086, Membership of the 111th Congress: A Profile; and CRS
Report R41545, Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-
2011
. Due to differences in data collection or characterization, data in other studies on Member
characteristics may differ from those presented in this report.


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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Contents
Characteristics of Representatives and Senators.............................................................................. 4
Age ............................................................................................................................................ 4
Congressional Service Tenure ................................................................................................... 5
Representatives.................................................................................................................... 6
Senators ............................................................................................................................... 6
Sex ............................................................................................................................................. 6
Representatives.................................................................................................................... 8
Senators ............................................................................................................................... 8
Previous Occupation.................................................................................................................. 8
Representatives.................................................................................................................... 9
Senators ............................................................................................................................. 10
Race and Ethnicity................................................................................................................... 11
Representatives.................................................................................................................. 11
Senators ............................................................................................................................. 12
Education................................................................................................................................. 12
Religion ................................................................................................................................... 15
Representatives.................................................................................................................. 16
Senators ............................................................................................................................. 17
Military Service....................................................................................................................... 18
Concluding Observations............................................................................................................... 18
Member Characteristics Data Tables ............................................................................................. 19
Age .......................................................................................................................................... 19
Congressional Service Tenure ................................................................................................. 20
Sex ........................................................................................................................................... 20
Previous Occupation................................................................................................................ 22
Race/Ethnicity ......................................................................................................................... 23
Education................................................................................................................................. 24
Religion ................................................................................................................................... 25
Military Service....................................................................................................................... 30

Figures
Figure 1. Age of Representatives, Senators, and U.S. Population ................................................... 4
Figure 2. Oldest and Youngest Representatives............................................................................... 5
Figure 3. Oldest and Youngest Senators .......................................................................................... 5
Figure 4. Tenure of Representatives and Senators.......................................................................... 6
Figure 5. Women in the House and Senate, Selected Congresses Since 1945................................. 7
Figure 6. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Representatives, Selected
Congresses Since 1945 ............................................................................................................... 10
Figure 7. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Senators, Selected Congresses Since
1945 ............................................................................................................................................ 11
Figure 8. Race and Ethnicity of Representatives, Senators, and the U.S. Population .................. 12
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Figure 9. Four or More Years of College Completed by Representatives, Senators, and
U.S. Population, Selected Congresses Since 1945 ..................................................................... 14
Figure 10. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, Senators, and U.S. Population..................... 16
Figure 11. Christian Denominations Identified by Representatives, Senators, and the U.S.
Population................................................................................................................................... 17
Figure 12. Military Service by Representatives, Senators, and U.S. Population........................... 18

Tables
Table 1. Congresses for Which Member Data Are Provided........................................................... 2
Table 2. Age of Representatives, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945......................... 19
Table 3. Age of Senators, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945 .................................... 19
Table 4. Average Service Tenure of Representatives and Senators, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945 ............................................................................................................... 20
Table 5. Female and Male Representatives, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since
1945 ............................................................................................................................................ 20
Table 6. Female and Male Senators, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945 ................... 21
Table 7. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Representatives, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945................................................................................................. 22
Table 8. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Senators, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945 ............................................................................................................... 22
Table 9. Race and Ethnicity of Representatives, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since
1945 ............................................................................................................................................ 23
Table 10. Race and Ethnicity of Senators, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945 ......... 24
Table 11. High School and Undergraduate Completion of Representatives, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945................................................................................................. 24
Table 12. High School and Undergraduate Completion of Senators, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945................................................................................................. 25
Table 13. Representatives Specifying a Religious Affiliation, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945 ............................................................................................................... 25
Table 14. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, Senators, and the U.S. Population ................ 26
Table 15. Denominations of Christian Representatives, Senators, and the U.S. Population ........ 27
Table 16. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, at the Start of Selected Congresses
Since 1945 .................................................................................................................................. 27
Table 17. Denominations of Christian-Affiliated Representatives Since 1945 ............................. 28
Table 18. Religious Affiliation of Senators, Selected Congresses Since 1945 .............................. 29
Table 19. Denominations of Christian-Affiliated Senators Since 1945......................................... 29
Table 20. Military Service by Representatives, Senators, and U.S. Population Since 1945......... 30

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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Appendixes
Appendix. Developing Member Data............................................................................................ 31

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 36
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... 36

Congressional Research Service

Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

uestions about the characteristics of Members of Congress, including their age, education,
previous occupations, and other descriptors, are of ongoing interest to Members,
Q congressional staff, and constituents. Some of these questions may be asked in the context
of representation, in efforts to evaluate the extent to which Members of Congress reflect their
constituencies and the nation at large. In other instances, questions arise about how the
characteristics of Members have changed over time, which may speak in part to the history of
Congress.
A challenge of discussing Member characteristics in a manner that allows comparison across the
history of Congress is the identification of characteristics and reliable data on those
characteristics that are collected in a consistent manner over time. No government entity has
collected data on Members in a consistent manner for all Congresses. Congressional sources,
including entries in the online Biographical Directory of the United States Congress,1 or the print
versions of the biennial Official Congressional Directory,2 are compiled by the House and Senate,
based on information reported by Members. Some academic and journalistic sources3 provide
data on a limited number of Member characteristics over a variety of time periods. While these
sources provide some information, they do not report various descriptive characteristics for all
Members or all Congresses in a consistent manner. 4 Biographies created by Members for official
or campaign purposes are another potential source; those are not readily retrievable for all
Members in the Congresses for which this report provides data, and do not report various
characteristics for all Members in a uniform manner.
Relying on commercial and academic sources that collected data over time, this report provides
profiles of Senators and Representatives based on selected characteristics in selected Congresses
since 1945. Based on Members in office on the first day of each of 12 Congresses, summarized in
Table 1, the report provides data on the following characteristics:
• age, including the oldest and youngest Members of the House and Senate;
• congressional service tenure;
• sex;

1 http://bioguide.congress.gov/biosearch/biosearch.asp.
2 See, e.g., U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, 2009-2010 Official Congressional Directory, 112th Congress,
112th Cong., 1st sess., S.Pub. 112-12 (Washington: GPO, 2011). Links to directories for the 104th-112th Congresses are
available from the Government Printing Office (GPO) at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?
collectionCode=CDIR.
3 Michael J. Malbin, Norman J. Ornstein, and Thomas E. Mann, Vital Statistics on Congress 2008 (Washington, DC:
Brookings Institution Press, 2008); Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, Faith on the Hill: The Religious
Composition of the 112th Congress
, January 5, 2011, http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1846/religious-composition-112th-
congress; and Eric Lichtblau, “Economic Slide Took a Detour At Capitol Hill,” The New York Times, December 27,
2011, p. 1; and Peter Whoriskey, “Growing Wealth Widens Distance Between Lawmakers and Constituents,” The
Washington Post
, December 26, 2011, http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/growing-wealth-widens-
distance-between-lawmakers-and-constituents/2011/12/05/gIQAR7D6IP_story.html.
4 The Congressional Research Service has for several years produced profile reports covering individual Congresses,
including CRS Report R41647, Membership of the 112th Congress: A Profile, by Jennifer E. Manning, and CRS Report
R40086, Membership of the 111th Congress: A Profile, by Jennifer E. Manning. These reports are updated throughout
the Congress, and may provide different information from that provided here, due in part to changes in membership
from the first day of a Congress, or because those reports relied on sources and information about Members that are
different from the sources and information used to develop this report. Reports addressing some Member characteristics
in the 94th (1975-1976) 96th (1979-1980), and 99th-110th (1985-2008) Congresses are available to Congressional offices
upon request.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

• previous occupation;
• race and ethnicity;
• education;
• religion; and
• military service.

Specific Congresses were selected to provide
Member Characteristics, 112th Congress
detailed information on changes in Member
For detailed information on Member Characteristics in
characteristics in recent Congresses, and to
the 112th Congress, see CRS Report R41647,
compare those changes to previous
Membership of the 112th Congress: A Profile, by Jennifer E.
Congresses. The five most recent Congresses
Manning.
(108th-112th Congresses) were collected to
demonstrate contemporary Member characteristics. Data for the 82nd, 87th, 92nd, 97th, 102nd, and
107th Congresses are provided for comparison of Congresses at 10-year intervals from the
beginning of the 112th Congress. The 79th Congress is included because it is the earliest for which
readily comparable data are available.
Table 1. Congresses for Which Member Data Are Provided
Congress Years Congress Years
112th 2011-2012 102nd 1991-1992
111th 2009-2010 97th 1981-1982
110th 2007-2008 92nd 1971-1972
109th 2005-2006 87th 1961-1962
108th 2003-2004 82nd 1951-1952
107th 2001-2002 79th 1945-1946
Source: CRS.
Data on Member characteristics provided in this report are drawn from two sources provided by
non-congressional entities. The principal source of Member data in this report is the CQ Press
Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection (hereafter CQ Press), a subscription database that
provides data on Members and a range of characteristics. The database does not contain
information on Members who have served as Delegates5 or Resident Commissioner for Puerto
Rico.6 The second source, from which data on new Members of the 112th Congress were taken, is
CQ Roll Call’s Guide to the New Congress. 7
Data on congressional career service patterns are drawn from three sources. For the 79th through
104th Congresses, data were drawn from the Roster of United States Congressional Officeholders

5 There are currently five Delegates to Congress representing the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands.
6 For more information, see CRS Report RL31856, Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico, by R. Eric Petersen.
7 CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th Congress, November 4, 2010.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

and Biographical Characteristics of Members of the United States Congress, 1789-1996.8 Data
for the 105th through 111th Congresses were compiled from the Congressional Directory.9 Data
for the 112th Congress were obtained from the Clerk of the House and CQ Press’s Guide to the
New Congress
.10
For each characteristic category, a written summary is provided. In some categories, the report
provides data on the U.S. population that may be comparable to data available on Members of
Congress, as discussed in more detail below. Following the written summaries, the report
provides a number of tables that provide the detailed data by the category on which the
summaries are based. All data tables appear in the “Member Characteristics Data Tables” section.
A detailed discussion of the methods used to develop the data presented in the report, and efforts
to provide comparison between Member characteristics and the American public, is provided in
an Appendix. Due to differences in data collection or characterization, data in other studies on
Member characteristics may differ from those presented in this report.

8 Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, and Carroll McKibbin. Roster of United States
Congressional Officeholders and Biographical Characteristics of Members of the United States Congress, 1789-1996:
Merged Data [computer file] 10th ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor: MI: Inter-university for Political and Social Research
[producer and distributor], 1997.
9 U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 111th Congress, S. Pub 111-14, 111th
Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2009); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional
Directory, 110th Congress
, S. Pub 110-13, 110th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2007); U.S. Congress, Joint
Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 109th Congress, S. Pub 109-12, 109th Cong., 1st sess.
(Washington: GPO, 2006); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 110th
Congress
, S. Pub 108-18, 108th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2003); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing,
Official Congressional Directory, 107th Congress, S. Pub 107-20, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001); U.S.
Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 106th Congress, S. Pub 106-21, 106th Cong.,
1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1999); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory,
105th Congress
, S. Pub 105-20, 105th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1997).
10 U.S. Congress, House, Office of the Clerk, 112th Congress Members-Elect, available at http://clerk.house.gov/
member_info/112-members-elect.pdf; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th Congress, November 4, 2010.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Characteristics of Representatives and Senators
Age
In general, the ages of Members of Congress
Figure 1. Age of Representatives,
and the U.S. population have increased
Senators, and U.S. Population
slowly since 1945. Figure 1 provides the
median ages of Representatives, Senators and
First Day of Selected Congresses
the U.S. population in selected Congresses
since 1945. Data tables with the mean and
median ages of Members in selected
Congresses are provided in the “Age” section,
below.
The significant age difference between the
U.S. population and Representatives and
Senators is explained in part by the scope of
people counted in the United States. Census

data provide information for all U.S. residents
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress
of any age from birth until death. To hold
Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
office in the House, a Member must be at
112th Congress; and CRS calculations.
least 25 years old. A Senator must be at least
30 years of age. Median ages of Members of Congress are higher than in the U.S. population,
since the congressional statistics are calculated on the basis of small numbers of adults in an age
restricted group. The median age of the entire U.S. population was 30 years or less until the 102nd
Congress.11
In both the House and the Senate, between the 79th and 97th Congresses, the ages of Members
fluctuated narrowly. The lowest average and median ages in the House and Senate were recorded
in the 97th Congress, when the median age of Representatives was 49.0 years and of Senators
51.7. Thereafter, the median age of Congress began gradually increasing. The 111th Congress held
record highs for both the House and the Senate with median ages of 57.3 years and 62.1 years
respectively. In the 112th Congress, the median age of Representatives was essentially unchanged
at 57.2 years, while the Senate median decreased at a slightly greater rate to 61.4 years. Figure 2
and Figure 3 provide lists of the oldest and youngest Representatives and Senators, respectively,
for selected Congresses since 1945.

11 The Census Bureau generally reports the median, age of the U.S. population in its standard, widely distributed
summaries. The median is middle value, or point at which half of the values (age, years of service, costs, etc.) in a list
of numbers are higher and half are lower. This section discusses the median age of Members and the U.S. population
for ease of comparability. Average and median ages of Representatives and Senators are provided in Table 2 and
Table 3, respectively.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Figure 2. Oldest and Youngest
Figure 3. Oldest and Youngest Senators
Representatives
First Day of Selected Congresses Since 1945
First Day of Selected Congresses Since 1945


Source: Biographical Directory of the United States
Source: Biographical Directory of the United States
Congress; CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ
Congress; CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ
Congress Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the
Congress Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the
New Congress, 112th Congress; and CRS
New Congress, 112th Congress; and CRS
calculations.
calculations.
Congressional Service Tenure
At the commencement of the 112th Congress, the average number of years of House service for
Representatives was 9.8, or just less than five terms.12 The average number of years of Senate
service for Senators was 11.4, slightly less than two full Senate terms. Figure 4 and Table 4
provide Member tenure in the House and Senate for selected Congresses since 1945.
Two underlying factors appear to influence variation over time in the average years of service for
Members of Congresses: the decision of sitting Members whether or not to seek election to the
next Congress, and the success rate of Members who seek election to the next Congress. In
addition, short-term variation in average service is affected by the individual service tenures of
Members who do not return for the following Congress.
Observed increases in the proportion of Members seeking re-election and decreases in the
proportion of Members defeated for re-election conform with previous scholarly assessments of
congressional history. During the early history of Congress, turnover in membership was frequent
and resignations were commonplace. During the 20th century, congressional careers lengthened as
turnover decreased as congressional service became more of a career. 13

12 Chamber service and total congressional service were recorded for each member of each Congress, as of the first day
of Congress. Freshmen members in each house are counted as having no service (zero years), and changes in
membership during a Congress were not taken into account. From these individual data, aggregate statistics were
derived for each Congress.
13 For detailed discussion of congressional career patterns since 1789, see CRS Report R41545, Congressional
Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2011
, by Matthew Eric Glassman and Amber Hope
(continued...)
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Representatives
Figure 4. Tenure of Representatives
In general, the average length of service of
and Senators
Representatives increased during the second
Selected Congresses Since 1945
half of the 20th century and early 21st century,
from an average of 7.1 and 7.6 years of
service in the 79th and 82nd Congresses to an
average of 9.2 and 9.8 years of service in the
107th and 112th Congresses. Within this
general increase, however, exists substantial
variation. For example, average service in the
97th Congress was only 7.4 years. Average
service peaked at 10.3 years in the 102nd,
110th, and 111th Congresses.

Source: CRS analysis of ICPSR and proprietary data.
Senators
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social
Research, and Carroll McKibbin. Roster of United
Similar to Representatives, the average years
States Congressional Officeholders and Biographical
of service among Senators generally
Characteristics of Members of the United States Congress,
increased during the second half the 20th
1789-1996: Merged Data [computer file] 10th ICPSR
ed. Ann Arbor: MI: Inter-university for Political and
century and early 21st century, and also
Social Research [producer and distributor], 1997.
exhibited substantial variation across
Congresses. Average service in the 79th and 82nd Congresses was 8.2 and 7.0 years respectively,
and was 11.3 and 11.4 years in the 107th and 112th Congresses. The average period of service
peaked at 13.4 years of service in the 111th Congress. The average Senate service of Senators has
typically been greater in any given Congress than the average House service of Representatives,
although this was not the case in the 82nd or 87th Congress.
Sex
Figure 5 provides the distribution of female Members of Congress for selected Congresses since
1945, the distribution of men and women in each chamber in the 112th Congress, 14 and the U.S.
population, based on the 2010 census. Data on the percentage of female and male Representatives
and Senators in selected Congresses since 1945 are provided in the “Sex” section, below.
The first female to serve in the House, Jeanette Rankin of Montana, was elected to the 65th
Congress (1917-1919). Although no women were elected to the 66th Congress (1919-1921),
during which Congress proposed and the states ratified the 19th Amendment to the Constitution
granting women the right to vote, women have served in the House in every Congress since.

(...continued)
Wilhelm.
14 Additional information on the number of women in Congress is available in the historical data section of :
http://womenincongress.house.gov/; and U.S. House, Committee on House Administration and Office of the Clerk,
Women in Congress, 1917-2006 (Washington, GPO: 2006); CRS Report RL30261, Women in the United States
Congress: 1917-2012
, by Jennifer E. Manning and Colleen J. Shogan; and Jennifer L. Lawless, Men Rule: The
Continued Under-Representation of Women in U.S. Politics
(Washington, DC: Women and Politics Institute, 2012).
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In the Senate, the first female to serve was Rebecca Latimer Felton of Georgia, who was
appointed to the Senate on October 3, 1922, following the death of Thomas E. Watson. Aged 87,
she served for only 24 hours while the Senate was in session. The next female in the Senate,
Hattie Caraway of Arkansas, was appointed on November 13, 1931, to fill the vacancy caused by
the death of her husband, Thaddeus H. Caraway. She became the first woman elected to the
Senate on January 12, 1932, when she won special election for the remainder of the term and was
reelected to two additional terms, serving in the Senate for a total of 14 years. At least one female
Senator has served in each Congress since then, with the exception of the 79th Congress, the 93rd
Congress (1973-1974), and the 94th Congress (1975-1976).
According to the 2010 census, the total population is 50.8% female and 49.2% male.15 According
to the Census Bureau, there have been more females than males in the United States since the
1950 census.16
Figure 5. Women in the House and Senate, Selected Congresses Since 1945
House and Senate, 112th Congress, and the U.S. Population, 2010

Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
; U.S. Census Bureau; and CRS calculations.

15 U.S. Census Bureau, Age and Sex Composition: 2010, 2010 Census Briefs, Table 1. Population by Sex and Selected
Age Groups: 2000 and 2010, issued May 2011. Available at http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-
03.pdf.
16 For a further historical comparison of gender composition, see U.S. Census Bureau, Gender: 2000, Census 2000
Brief, Figure 2. The Male-Female Ratio: 1900 to 2000, issued September 2001. Available at http://www.census.gov/
prod/2001pubs/c2kbr01-9.pdf.
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Representatives
The percentage of female Representatives has fluctuated since the 79th Congress. The House was
more than 95% male until the 102nd Congress. The percentage of women more than doubled
between the 102nd and 107th Congresses, reaching 13.6%. This period represents the most rapid
change in gender composition as a percentage of the House in its history. The percentage of
female Representatives reached a high of 17.3% in the 111th Congress before falling slightly in
the 112th Congress.
Senators
As in the House, the change in the gender composition was greatest from the 102nd to the 107th
Congresses, growing from 2% to 13%. The number of female Senators has remained steady or
grown ever since, and membership in the 111th and 112th Congresses has been approximately 17%
female.
Previous Occupation
Representatives and Senators bring an array of work experiences with them to Congress. Careers
in law and public service are common, but Members have also served as astronauts, entertainers,
teachers, and practiced numerous trades.17 Representatives and Senators have generally similar
occupational backgrounds. Most of the occupation data are categorized in the CQ Press data into
one of 20 broad subcategories, including, among others:
• acting/entertainer;
• business or banking;
• journalism;
• law;
• public service/politics; and
• real estate. 18

17 See, for example, David T. Canon, Actors, Athletes, and Astronauts: Political Amateurs in the United States
Congress
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990); and Roger H. Davidson, Walter J. Oleszek, and Frances E.
Lee, Congress and its Members, 13th ed. (Washington: Sage/CQ Press, 2012), pp. 111-112.
18 The complete list of pre-determined categories provided in the CQ Press search interface and codebook includes any
occupation; acting/entertainer; aeronautics; agriculture; business or banking; clergy; congressional aide;
construction/building trades; education; engineering; journalism; labor leader; law; law enforcement; medicine;
military; misc.[ellaneous]; public service/ politics; real estate; and sports. It cannot be determined from available
resources whether those categories have changed over time.
Voluntary categories, as they appear in the CQ Press database (with slight variations for spelling and punctuation),
include acting/entertainer; actor; aeronautics; agriculture; agricultural news service owner; Air Force officer; airline
pilot; Army officer; at-risk youth mentorship program founder; bank CEO; business [and/or] banking; campaign and
congressional aide; clergy; computers/technology; congressional aide; construction/building trades; county
[government] administrator; deputy county sheriff; education; engineering; hospital administrator; gubernatorial aide;
journalism; labor leader; law; law enforcement; lobbyist; medicine; military; misc[ellaneous]; newspaper reporter;
nonprofit community activism org[anization] founder; private school fundraiser; professor; public service/politics; real
estate attorney; real estate; religious school fundraiser; religious youth camp director; sports; state party Hispanic
outreach director; and university president.
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These and other categories provide a relatively simple way to summarize professional
experiences for thousands of diverse Members who have served in selected Congresses since
1945. It is important to note that the CQ Press data provide an overview of pre-congressional
careers, but leave some questions unanswered.
The CQ Press data provide up to five occupational categories for each Member. This report
provides data on the first—and in some cases, only—occupation provided. In the absence of
additional information, however, it is unclear how or why these positions were listed, or why they
were listed first when more than one occupation was provided. Finally, in some instances, the CQ
Press data provide no information on occupation for some Members.
In addition, the CQ Press data do not provide detail about what facet of a profession a Member
pursued, for how long, or whether he or she did so full-time or part-time. In some cases, CQ Press
data identify a specific profession, such as Army officer or professor. These listings provide more
detail than the broad categories noted above, but might also overlap with some other categories.
As discussed above, a former congressional aide might also categorize his or her work as public
service/politics. Due to the organization by CQ Press of Members’ previously held elective office
in a separate category outside the database, the extent of public service backgrounds as the
previous occupation of Members may be significantly understated.19 In summary, it is important
to note that this section provides an overview of Member occupation, but the source data do not
necessarily reflect all of the occupations a Member may have pursued prior to their congressional
service.
Representatives
Representatives have diverse occupational backgrounds. In total, the CQ Press data reveal that
House Members held 38 different primary occupations in selected Congresses since 1945. As
noted above, most of those reflect pre-determined categories; others reflect customized titles
apparently provided by Members or their staffs. Although the prominence of individual
occupations varies by Congress, in general, five occupations were most commonly reported in the
selected Congresses. These include:
• agriculture;
• business or banking;
• congressional aide;
• education, and
• law.
Law was the most commonly cited profession over time. Legal experience has not uniformly
dominated House Members’ professional experience as might be expected, however. As Figure 6
shows, lawyers dominated among House members between the 79th and 92nd Congresses. During
that period, approximately 40% of Representatives reported having been part of the legal
profession. Beginning in the 97th Congress, Representatives listing professional law backgrounds
as a primary profession declined sharply, although the occupation continued to be the most

19 Detailed occupational information that includes the elective careers of Members of the 112th Congress is available in
CRS Report R41647, Membership of the 112th Congress: A Profile, by Jennifer E. Manning.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

common profession cited among Representatives; between 20% and 25% of Representatives
identified law as their first occupation in selected Congresses since 1945. As the figure shows, as
the proportion of House Members with legal experience was declined, those reporting
occupations in banking or business rose.
Members whose occupations were in banking
Figure 6. Most Frequently Reported
or business slightly surpassed those with legal
Occupations of Representatives, Selected experience—each group included about 20%
Congresses Since 1945
of House Members—between the 107th and
112th Congresses.
Finally, although careers as congressional
aides (which could include a variety of job
functions), in agriculture, and education were
common overall, they were far less common
than business or banking and law. Table 7,
provides data on the five most frequently
reported occupations of Representatives since
1945.
Senators

Senators in selected Congresses held various
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress
professional backgrounds. Senators’
Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
occupations, however, have generally been
112th Congress, http://innovation.cq.com/newmember/
confined to a narrower set of career
2010elexnguide.pdf, CRS calculations.
backgrounds than House Members.
In total, Senators cited (or were identified as having) 21 different primary occupations over the
Congresses studied—slightly more than half the 38 total occupations into which House Members
were classified. Senators’ primary occupations generally included agriculture; business or
banking; service as congressional aides; education; or law. Senators also cited “public
service/politics” as their primary occupation; 1%-6% of Senators did so for the Congresses
studied in this report.20 These figures are similar to those for House Members, although prior
service as congressional aides is slightly more common overall than occupations classified as
“public service/politics.” Table 8 below summarizes the five most frequently reported
occupations for Senators since 1945.

20 Due to the organization by CQ Press of Members’ previously held elective office in a separate category outside the
database, the extent of Senator’s prior elected service in the House or elsewhere cannot be determined.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Law has dominated Senators’ occupational
experience. As shown, lawyers have occupied
Figure 7. Most Frequently Reported
between one-third and half of Senate seats in
Occupations of Senators, Selected
each Congress studied since 1945. During the
Congresses Since 1945
92nd Congress, Members trained in the legal
profession peaked, with slightly more than
half of Senators (51%) identifying their
previous occupations in law. Legal
backgrounds were less commonly reported in
the most succeeding Congresses. Law
backgrounds, however, have been associated
with at least 30% of Senators in every
Congress studied.
Business and banking again appeared as the
second-most-common occupation. In
particular, between approximately 10% and
25% of Senators in the selected Congresses
reported having practiced business or

banking. Backgrounds in education or as
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress
congressional aides have also been common,
Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
but far less so than the other most commonly
112th Congress, http://innovation.cq.com/newmember/
cited jobs. As with the House, Senators’ prior
2010elexnguide.pdf, CRS calculations.
professional experience in agriculture has declined steadily over time.
Race and Ethnicity
Figure 8 compares a distribution of Representatives and Senators by race at the beginning of the
112th Congress to the U.S. population in the 2010 census.
Representatives
Table 9, below, provides data on the race and ethnicity of Representatives in selected Congresses
since 1945. The largest change in the racial composition of the House of Representatives occurred
between the 102nd and 107th Congresses. For the selected Congresses, the House of
Representatives was more than 95% white until the 97th Congress, and more than 90% white until
the 107th Congress. The second largest group is African Americans, who comprised 0.5% of the
House at the beginning of the 79th Congress, growing to 9.2% in the 109th and 110th Congresses,
before dipping slightly in the 111th Congress and then growing to a high of 9.7% at the outset of
the 112th Congress. This group is followed by the Representatives who have identified as
Hispanic, who have grown from 0.2% of the Representatives at the beginning of the 79th
Congress to 5.5% in the 111th and 112th Congresses. While the 79th Congress did not have any
Asian American Representatives, this group represents 1.6% of the House in the 112th Congress.
American Indian21 membership in the House has fluctuated between 0.0% and 0.2%.

21 American Indian is a term typically used by the Census Bureau and other governmental entities. The CQ Press data
identify the same population as Native Americans.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Senators
Figure 8. Race and Ethnicity of
Representatives, Senators, and
Membership of the Senate at the beginning of
the U.S. Population
the 112th Congress was 96% white, 2% above
House and Senate, 112th Congress, and
the low of 94% for Congresses in this study.
the U.S. Population, 2010
Senators identifying as Hispanic have ranged
from 0% (97th, 102nd, 107th, and 108th
Congresses) to a high of 3.1%22 of Senators at
the outset of the 111th Congress. At the
beginning of the 112th Congress, 2% of
Senators identified as Hispanic. Senators
identifying as Asian American have ranged
between 0% of Senators in the 79th and 82nd
Congresses, to 3% of Senators in the 97th
Congress, with membership at the outset of
the 112th Congress at 2%. No more than 1%
of Senators in each of the Congresses
examined identified as African American or
Native American. Table 10 provides data on
the race and ethnicity of Senators in selected
Congresses since 1945.

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the U.S.
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress
population is 0.9% “American Indian or
Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
Alaska Native”; 4.8% “Asian”; 12.6% “Black
112th Congress; U.S. Census Bureau; and CRS
calculations.
or African American”; 16.3% “Hispanic”;
72.4% “White”; 6.2% “Some other race”; and
2.9% “Two or more races.”23 In the 2010 Census data, respondents who identified Hispanic origin
also identified a racial category. These data are reported together in Figure 8. CQ Press identifies
Hispanic Members in lieu of specific racial identification. As a consequence of these different
data collection methods, direct comparisons of race and ethnicity between Representatives and
Senators, and the U.S. population should be made with care.
Education
Since the 79th Congress, attendance and graduation rates among Representatives and Senators
have increased at the high school, college, and graduate levels. Although these rates have also
increased among the population at large, the average Member of Congress has a higher
educational attainment level than the average American. In the 112th Congress, the majority of
Representatives and Senators have completed high school, college, and some form of graduate

22 On the first day of the 111th Congress in the Senate, 98 Senators were present, and two seats were vacant.
23 U.S. Census Bureau, Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010, 2010 Census Briefs, Table 1: Population by
Hispanic Origin and by Race for the United States: 2000 and 2010, issued March 2011, available at
http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf. Percentages are provided by the Census Bureau to one
decimal place, and do not equal 100% because census respondents identifying Hispanic origin may identify in any
racial category.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

school.24 Today a majority of Americans aged 25 years or older have completed high school, but
less than one-third have completed four years of college or attended graduate school.
Historically, most Members of Congress have held at least a high school diploma, and although
most Americans today have completed high school, this was not always the case. During the 79th
Congress, the average Member of Congress was more likely to have graduated from high school
than the average American. Only 24.1% of American adults age 25 or older had completed four
years of high school or more education during the years of the 79th Congress.25 By contrast, high
school completion rates were 75.7% for House Members and 85.4% for Senators serving in the
79th Congress.26 The percentage of those with at least a high school diploma in the United States
has since grown, reaching 85.3% in 2009.27 High school graduation rates among Members of
Congress, however, remain at a higher level. In the 112th Congress, at least 99.1% of
Representatives had completed high school, and all Senators had completed high school.28

24 Data from CQ Press on Member education included Representatives with “Education Unknown” for all these
Congresses. Due to this, the proportion of school attendance and completion rates may actually be higher than what is
reported.
25 The 1940 U.S. Census provides the best estimate for education levels in 1944-1945. Because respondents were asked
about their highest level of education, this figure is the combined percentage of respondents who reported 4 years of
high school, 1-3 years of college, and 4 or more years of college.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1944-1945
(Washington: GPO, 1945), pp. 228-229.
26 CQ Press reports attendance and graduate rates instead of years of school. Based on this data, this figure includes
Members who graduated high school and did not pursue further education, Members who attended some college, and
Members who obtained a college degree. This includes Members who received associate’s degrees and Members who
received bachelor’s degrees: this may inflate the proportion of high school graduates slightly, since some Members will
be counted twice, if achieving an associate’s degree on the way to achieving a bachelor’s degree. In some instances,
Members have earned undergraduate or graduate degrees while serving in Congress. In some instances, the CQ Press
data were determined not to have been updated to reflect those changes. As a consequence some levels of educational
attainment may be underreported in the CQ Press data.
27 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 2009 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates,
“Selected Social Characteristics in the United States: 2009,” http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ADPTable?_bm=y&-
geo_id=01000US&-ds_name=ACS_2009_1YR_G00_&-_lang=en&-_caller=geoselect&-format.
28 In the 112th Congress, CQ Press lists one Representative with “Education Unknown.”
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Historically, a majority of Representatives
Figure 9. Four or More Years of College
and Senators have also held a college degree.
Completed by Representatives, Senators, The percentage of college graduation rates
and U.S. Population, Selected Congresses has increased more markedly since the 79th
Since 1945
Congress than high school graduation rates
among Members. Members of Congress also
have a higher rate of college attendance and
postgraduate education compared to the
American population aged 25 years or older.
Figure 9 compares the percentages of
Representatives, Senators, and the U.S.
population with four or more years of college
education.29 The percentage for each group
has generally increased since 1945, though a
much higher proportion of Senators and

Representatives have attended four or more
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress
years of college than the U.S. population at
Collection; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
large today. Table 11 provides high school
112th Congress; U.S. Census Bureau; and CRS
calculations. U.S. data are based on Americans aged
and undergraduate college completion data
25 years or older.
for Representatives in selected Congresses
since 1945. Table 12 provides the same data
over the same period for Senators.
During the 79th Congress, only 4.6% of American adults aged 25 years or older completed four or
more years of college.30 In the same time period, 56.3% of Representatives held a bachelor’s
degree, and 75.0% of Senators held a bachelor’s degree. In addition to traditional four-year
colleges and universities, Members of the 79th Congress also attended junior colleges,
correspondence schools, art schools, normal (teacher training) schools, agricultural schools,
seminary schools, and U.S. service academies.
The national average for four or more years of college completed grew to 27.9% in 2009.31 By the
112th Congress, however, 95.2% of Representatives, and 99% of Senators held a bachelor’s
degree. Although traditional four-year colleges and universities are the most commonly attended
institutions, some Members also attended U.S. service academies or community colleges,
although CQ Press does not identify attendance by school. In the 112th Congress, 21
Representatives and 1 Senator held associate’s degrees. For 6 Representatives, this was the

29 CQ Press provides the reported academic degrees earned by a Representative or Senator. Columns for
Representatives and Senators represent the percent of Members with bachelor’s degrees, which typically take four
years to earn. In some cases, however, a Representative or Senator could have earned a bachelor’s degree in less than
four years. American population information came from the U.S. Bureau of the Census, which measures educational
attainment as a percent of individuals over 25 who completed four or more years of college. These measures capture
the same idea in many cases, but it is important to note that they are different measures, and may not be completely
comparable.
30 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 1944-1945
(Washington: GPO, 1945), pp. 228-229.
31 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 2009 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates,
“Selected Social Characteristics in the United States: 2009,” http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ADPTable?_bm=y&-
geo_id=01000US&-ds_name=ACS_2009_1YR_G00_&-_lang=en&-_caller=geoselect&-format=.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

highest degree obtained, but the other Members with associate’s degrees also received bachelor’s
degrees.
The greatest change in Member education since the 79th Congress has been the increased number
of graduate degrees. During the 112th Congress, 72.6% of Representatives and 76.0% of Senators
held graduate degrees.32 By contrast, only 15.6% of Representatives and 33.1% of Senators held
graduate degrees in the 79th Congress. Both then and now, professional degrees are the most
common type of advanced degree held among Representatives and Senators. During the 112th
Congress, 40.4% of Representatives held professional degrees, and 53.0% of Senators held
professional degrees. Only 28.5% of Representatives and 23.0% of Senators held master’s
degrees in the 112th Congress. Doctoral degrees are fairly rare among Members, with 3.7% of
Representatives in the 112th Congress holding such a degree and no Senators.
Religion
Figure 10 provides a comparison of self-identified religious affiliation among the Representatives
and Senators in the 112th Congress, and the U.S. adult population in 2008, the latest date for
which inclusive data are available.33 Data identifying the religious affiliations of Representatives,
Senators and the U.S. population during the same periods are provided in Table 14.
In both chambers, the percentages of Members identifying an affiliation grew through the 102nd
Congress, before decreasing in the 107th and 112th Congresses. There also have been increases in
the number of Members providing information. For example, in the 79th Congress, CQ Press
provided information for 32 Senators and 172 Representatives.34 In the 112th Congress,
information regarding religious affiliation was specified for 92 Senators and 404 Representatives.
Table 13 in the data section provides affiliation data for Representatives and Senators for selected
Congresses since 1945.
Religious affiliation data show that Representatives and Senators identify a religious affiliation in
higher proportions than that of the general public. Of those who are affiliated, Representatives
and Senators identify themselves as Christian or Jewish35 in greater proportions than those
affiliated with those faiths in the U.S. population. Among Christian denominations,
Representatives and Senators are affiliated with Catholic, Mormon, and orthodox churches in
greater proportion than the U.S. population. In the 112th Congress, Representatives are affiliated

32 This includes master’s degrees, doctoral degrees, and professional degrees. Generally, in contemporary times,
graduate professional degrees are awarded at the completion of a course of study that prepares a student for a specific
profession or career track. In the CQ Press data, these include the following: medical degrees (MD, DO), dental degrees
(DMD, DDS), law degrees (LLB and JD), and Master’s degrees in business administration (MBA) and public
administration (MPA).
33 Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation: Diverse and
Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-landscape-study-
full.pdf.
34 Comparing the level of affiliation across time may be problematic for a number of reasons. First, it cannot be
determined from the CQ Press data whether the differences in levels of affiliation may be ascribed to the extent of
affiliation; reluctance to discuss private matters, including religious affiliation during the early years covered by the
data, or the potential political benefits of identifying an affiliation in later years; or differences in the way CQ Press
collected its data over time.
35 The CQ Press data did not identify Jewish Representatives and Senators among the various traditions or movements
of that faith.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

with Muslim and Buddhist faiths in approximate proportion to the U.S. population; there are no
Muslim or Buddhist adherents in the Senate, nor Hindus in either chamber.
Figure 10. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, Senators, and U.S. Population
Members, 112th Congress, Public, 2008

Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection; and CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
for Members of Congress; Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey:
Religious Affiliation: Diverse and Dynamic
for the U.S. population; and CRS calculations.
Representatives
In each of the selected Congresses, most Representatives who specified a religious affiliation
have identified Christianity or a Christian denomination.36 The lowest level of Christian
identification was 90.3% in the 102nd Congress; the highest, 97.7%, occurred in the 79th
Congress.37 Of those Representatives who specified a Christian faith, a majority have identified a
Protestant denomination38 since 1945. The Protestant majority peaked in the 82nd Congress, and
has steadily declined, reaching its lowest level in the 111th Congress at 55.0%, before increasing
slightly in the 112th Congress, to 56.1%. Representatives who identified an affiliation with
Judaism ranged from a low of 0.6% in the 79th Congress, and peaked at 7.7% in the 102nd
Congress. In the 112th Congress the level is 6.2%.
Table 16 provides affiliation data for Representatives in selected Congresses since 1945. Table
17
provides data on Representatives who identified a Christian denomination.

36 Christian responses identified in the CQ Press data include the following: Cases in which religion was identified as
“Christian” without further specification; mainline and evangelical Protestant denominations, including historically
Black churches, Catholic, Mormon, Orthodox, and other Christian.
37 Aggregated religious affiliation data tables are available upon request.
38 Protestant includes the following responses: Protestant responses without further specification, and any responses
that identified a mainline or evangelical Protestant denomination, or historically Black churches. CQ Press data do not
distinguish between Protestant churches in mainline or evangelical traditions.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Figure 11. Christian Denominations Identified by Representatives,
Senators, and the U.S. Population
Members, 112th Congress, U.S. Public, 2008

Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection; and CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
for Members of Congress; Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey:
Religious Affiliation: Diverse and Dynamic
for the U.S. population; and CRS calculations. Member percentages are
based on 404 Representatives and 91 Senators who specified affiliation with a Christian denomination or
tradition.
Senators
Among Senators who identified a religious affiliation, Christianity or a Christian denomination
was identified by at least 85% of Senators in each of the selected Congresses. Senators who
identified Judaism ranged from zero in the 79th Congress, increasing to a high of 14% in the 110th
Congress before falling slightly in the 111th and 112th Congresses. In the 112th Congress, Senators
who identified a Jewish affiliation comprised 13.2% of those who identified a religion.
Among Senators who identified themselves as Christians, a majority offered a Protestant
denomination in each of the selected Congresses. The highest percentage of Protestant Senators
occurred in the 82nd Congress at 88.3%. This level fell steadily through the 111th Congress, to
61.3%, before showing a slight upturn to 64.1% in the 112th Congress. Table 18 provides
affiliation data for Representatives in selected Congresses since 1945. Table 19 provides data on
Senators who identified a Christian denomination.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Military Service
Member military service grew gradually since
Figure 12. Military Service by
World War II before peaking at 72% in the
Representatives, Senators, and U.S.
House and 78% in the Senate in the 92nd
Population
Congress. Thereafter, the total number of
Selected Congresses
veterans declined to 18% in the House and
27.8% in the Senate in the 111th Congress. For
the 112th Congress, the number of Members
who have served in the military is up slightly
in both chambers, with 21.4% of
Representatives and 28.9% of Senators
having previously served in the armed
forces.39
Table 20 provides data on the
Representatives, Senators and members of the

U.S. population who have served in the
Source: CQ Press U.S. Census Bureau, Susan B.
Carter, Scott Sigmund Gartner, Michael R. Haines, et
military.
al., Historical Statistics of the United States.
Compared with the general population,
Representatives and Senators have served in the military in greater proportions. For example, in
the 79th Congress, 43.5% of Representatives and 41.4% of senators had served in the military,
while only 3.3% of the adult U.S. population were veterans.40 At the same time, the proportion of
Members and the general public who have served fluctuates in tandem. The percentage of veteran
Members increased from the 79th to the 92nd Congresses and then declined through the 111th
Congress, in a manner similar to the trend seen within the general population.
Concluding Observations
A challenge to understanding an enduring institution like Congress is the broad scope of its
activities, and the lack of consistent, reliable information about its various components over time.
This report focuses on selected characteristics of Members that appear to be consistent over a
period of six decades. Members in 2011 are older, more likely to identify a religious affiliation,
and include more women and members of racial and ethnic groups than Members in 1945. The
data suggest that since the 79th Congress, Members have had high levels of education, and
worked in professional positions prior to coming to Congress. The number of Members who
previously served in the military has risen and fallen, largely in tandem with the levels of service
in the broader population.
These findings arguably provide a more robust understanding of the composition of
Representatives and Senators over time than other studies that focus on the membership of
individual Congresses. A consistent data source enables longitudinal analysis, but comparisons to

39 Data identifying the service of Representatives and Senators by military branch are available upon request.
40 Susan B. Carter, Scott Sigmund Gartner, Michael R. Haines, et al., Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 5
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), pp. 5-408.
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other profiles of Congress, which may rely on different data sources, characteristics of Members,
or time periods, should be made with caution.
Member Characteristics Data Tables
Age
Table 2. Age of Representatives, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945
Mean
Congress
(Average) Median
79th 52.77 51.84
82nd 52.61 52.17
87th 52.80 52.65
92nd 52.55 51.74
97th 48.90 48.95
102nd 52.95 51.73
107th 53.87 53.89
108th 54.48 54.95
109th 55.55 56.22
110th 56.38 56.59
111th 56.94 57.26
112th 56.65 57.17
Source: Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, http://bioguide.congress.gov/biosearch/
biosearch.asp; CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Col ection, CQ Rol Cal , Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
, CRS calculations.
Table 3. Age of Senators, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945
Mean
Congress
(Average)
Median
79th 58.96 59.29
82nd 57.22 55.91
87th 58.16 58.83
92nd 56.99 56.29
97th 52.81 51.69
102nd 57.36 56.36
107th 59.30 58.43
108th 59.92 59.35
109th 60.85 60.98
110th 62.24 62.76
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Mean
Congress
(Average) Median
111th 63.23 62.11
112th 62.23 61.41
Source: Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, http://bioguide.congress.gov/biosearch/
biosearch.asp; CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Col ection, CQ Rol Cal , Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
, CRS calculations.
Congressional Service Tenure
Table 4. Average Service Tenure of Representatives and Senators, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945

Average Years of Service
Congress House Senate
79th 7.08 8.17
82nd 7.60 7.03
87th 9.26 8.85
92nd 9.73 10.88
97th 7.45 7.49
102nd 10.34 11.26
107th 9.22 11.27
108th 9.27 11.76
109th 10.10 12.31
110th 10.25 13.06
111th 10.29 13.37
112th 9.77 11.36
Source: CRS analysis of ICPSR and proprietary data. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social
Research, and Carroll McKibbin. Roster of United States Congressional Officeholders and Biographical Characteristics of
Members of the United States Congress, 1789-1996: Merged Data
[computer file] 10th ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor: MI:
Inter-university for Political and Social Research [producer and distributor], 1997.
Notes: Member service tenure data for the House and Senate since 1789 are available in CRS Report R41545,
Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2011, by Matthew Eric Glassman and
Amber Hope Wilhelm.
Sex
Table 5. Female and Male Representatives,
at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress Female Male
79th 2.07%
97.93%
82nd 1.38%
98.62%
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Congress Female Male
87th 3.20%
96.80%
92nd 2.76%
97.24%
97th 4.15%
95.85%
102nd 6.44% 93.56%
107th 13.59% 86.41%
108th 13.56% 86.44%
109th 14.98% 85.02%
110th 11.49% 88.51%
111th 17.28% 82.72%
112th 16.55% 83.45%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentages are based on the number of Representatives who took seats on the first day of a new
Congress. In the 87th Congress there were 437 Representatives due to the temporary expansion of House
membership to provide representation to Alaska and Hawaii after their admission to the Union. On the first day
of the 111th, 109th, 107th, and 97th Congresses, 434 of 435 Representatives were present. Additional information
on the number of women in Congress is available in the historical data section of
http://womenincongress.house.gov/; and U.S. House, Committee on House Administration and Office of the
Clerk, Women in Congress, 1917-2006 (Washington, GPO: 2006); and CRS Report RL30261, Women in the United
States Congress: 1917-2012
, by Jennifer E. Manning and Col een J. Shogan.
Table 6. Female and Male Senators, at the Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress Female Male
79th 0.00%
100.00%
82nd 1.04%
98.96%
87th 2.00%
98.00%
92nd 1.00%
99.00%
97th 2.00%
98.00%
102nd 2.00% 98.00%
107th 13.00% 87.00%
108th 14.00% 86.00%
109th 14.00% 86.00%
110th 16.00% 84.00%
111th 17.35% 82.65%
112th 17.00% 83.00%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentages are based on the number of Senators who took seats on the first day of a new Congress.
There were 96 seats in the Senate in the 79th and 82nd Congresses. Alaska and Hawaii became states in 1959
increasing the number of Senate seats to 100 in subsequent Congresses. On the first day of the 111th Congress,
98 Senators took the oath of office. Additional information on the number of women in Congress is available in
the historical data section of http://womenincongress.house.gov/; and U.S. House, Committee on House
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Administration and Office of the Clerk, Women in Congress, 1917-2006 (Washington, GPO: 2006); and CRS
Report RL30261, Women in the United States Congress: 1917-2012, by Jennifer E. Manning and Col een J. Shogan.
Previous Occupation
Table 7. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Representatives, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945
Banking or
Congressional
Congress Agriculture Business
Aide Education Law
79th 10.80% 19.31% 1.61% 9.20% 41.61%
82nd 11.95% 21.40% 3.45% 9.43% 38.16%
87th 11.21% 19.22% 3.89% 6.86% 42.56%
92nd 9.43% 20.46% 4.83% 8.97% 41.38%
97th 7.83% 23.96% 5.99% 9.91% 34.56%
102nd 4.83% 27.59% 6.90% 11.72% 29.43%
107th 5.07% 24.65% 5.53% 12.90% 22.12%
108th 4.37% 22.07% 5.06% 11.49% 21.15%
109th 3.67% 21.40% 5.76% 11.29% 21.20%
110th 2.99% 20.23% 5.98% 11.03% 24.37%
111th 2.53% 18.20% 4.84% 8.76% 22.12%
112th 2.99% 21.38% 5.06% 6.44% 23.91%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentage of Representatives reporting the occupation as “Job 1” in that Congress. Percentages may
understate the extent to which Representatives practiced an occupation, since some listed as many as five
occupations. Further, CQ Press does not include Members’ prior elected service in state or local offices (which
are common paths to congressional careers) in occupational data, which may lead to a significant understatement
of the public service/politics category, and which could otherwise affect the most frequently reported pre-
congressional occupations.
Table 8. Most Frequently Reported Occupations of Senators, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945
Banking or
Congressional
Congress Agriculture Business
Aide
Education Law
79th 13.54% 11.46% 3.13% 7.29% 43.75%
82nd 21.88% 15.63% 3.13% 7.29% 38.54%
87th 13.00% 15.00% 3.00% 11.00% 44.00%
92nd 11.00% 16.00% 2.00% 10.00% 51.00%
97th 11.00% 24.00% 0.00% 6.00% 44.00%
102nd 9.00% 22.00% 3.00% 8.00% 45.00%
107th 5.00% 22.00% 5.00% 10.00% 38.00%
108th 5.00% 21.00% 4.00% 7.00% 42.00%
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Banking or
Congressional
Congress Agriculture Business
Aide Education Law
109th 4.00% 23.00% 2.00% 7.00% 41.00%
110th 5.00% 23.00% 2.00% 9.00% 41.00%
111th 3.06% 19.39% 3.06% 9.18% 37.76%
112th 3.00% 20.00% 3.00% 7.00% 37.00%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentage of Senators reporting the occupation as “Job 1” in that Congress. Percentages may
understate the extent to which Representatives practiced an occupation, since some listed as many as five
occupations. Further, CQ Press does not include Members’ prior elected service in state or local offices (which
are common paths to congressional careers) in occupational data, which may lead to a significant understatement
of the public service/politics category, and which could otherwise affect the most frequently report pre-
congressional occupations. Percentages are based on the number of Senators who took seats on the first day of
a new Congress. There were 96 seats in the Senate in the 79th and 82nd Congresses. Alaska and Hawaii became
states in 1959 increasing the number of Senate seats to 100 in subsequent Congresses. On the first day of the
111th Congress, 98 Senators took the oath of office.
Race/Ethnicity
Table 9. Race and Ethnicity of Representatives, at the Start
of Selected Congresses Since 1945
African
Asian
Native
Congress
American
American Hispanic American White
79th 0.46% 0.00% 0.23% 0.00% 99.31%
82nd 0.46% 0.00% 0.23% 0.00% 99.31%
87th 0.92% 0.46% 0.23% 0.23% 98.17%
92nd 2.76% 0.46% 1.15% 0.00% 95.63%
97th 3.92% 0.69% 1.38% 0.00% 94.01%
102nd
5.75% 0.69% 2.30% 0.23% 91.03%
107th
8.29% 0.92% 4.38% 0.00% 86.41%
108th
8.51% 0.69% 5.06% 0.23% 85.52%
109th
9.22% 0.69% 5.30% 0.23% 84.56%
110th
9.20% 1.15% 5.29% 0.23% 84.14%
111th
8.99% 1.38% 5.53% 0.23% 83.87%
112th
9.66% 1.61% 5.52% 0.23% 82.99%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentages are based on the number of Representatives who took seats on the first day of a new
Congress. In the 87th Congress there were 437 Representatives due to the temporary expansion of House
membership to provide representation to Alaska and Hawaii after their admission to the Union. On the first day
of the 111th, 109th, 107th, and 97th Congresses, 434 of 435 Representatives were present. Additional information
on the number of Members from various racial and ethnic groups is available from the fol owing sources: U.S.
House, Black Americans in Congress, 1870-2007, Office of the Clerk, Office of History and Preservation
(Washington, GPO: 2008), http://baic.house.gov/; Hispanic Americans in Congress, http://www.loc.gov/rr/
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

hispanic/congress/; CRS Report RL30378, African American Members of the United States Congress: 1870-2011, by
Jennifer E. Manning and Col een J. Shogan; and CRS Report 97-398, Asian Pacific Americans in the United States
Congress
, by Lorraine H. Tong.
Table 10. Race and Ethnicity of Senators, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945
African
Asian
Native
Congress
American
American
Hispanic
American
White
79th 0.00% 0.00% 1.04% 0.00% 98.96%
82nd 0.00% 0.00% 1.04% 0.00% 98.96%
87th 0.00% 1.00% 1.00% 0.00% 98.00%
92nd 1.00% 2.00% 1.00% 0.00% 96.00%
97th 0.00% 3.00% 0.00% 0.00% 97.00%
102nd
0.00% 2.00% 0.00% 0.00% 98.00%
107th
0.00% 2.00% 0.00% 1.00% 97.00%
108th
0.00% 2.00% 0.00% 1.00% 97.00%
109th
1.00% 2.00% 2.00% 0.00% 95.00%
110th
1.00% 2.00% 3.00% 0.00% 94.00%
111th
0.00% 2.04% 3.06% 0.00% 94.90%
112th
0.00% 2.00% 2.00% 0.00% 96.00%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Percentages are based on the number of Senators who took seats on the first day of a new Congress.
There were 96 seats in the Senate in the 79th and 82nd Congresses. Alaska and Hawaii became states in 1959,
increasing the number of Senate seats to 100 in subsequent Congresses. On the first day of the 111th Congress,
98 Senators took the oath of office. Additional information on the number of Members from various racial and
ethnic groups is available from the fol owing sources: U.S. House, Black Americans in Congress, 1870-2007, Office
of the Clerk, Office of History and Preservation (Washington, GPO: 2008), http://baic.house.gov/; Hispanic
Americans in Congress, http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/congress/; CRS Report RL30378, African American
Members of the United States Congress: 1870-2011
, by Jennifer E. Manning and Col een J. Shogan; and CRS Report
97-398, Asian Pacific Americans in the United States Congress, by Lorraine H. Tong.
Education
Table 11. High School and Undergraduate Completion of Representatives, at the
Start of Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress High
School College
79th 97.93%
56.32%
82nd 97.47%
65.06%
87th 97.48%
70.94%
92nd 97.70%
76.55%
97th 97.01%
84.37%
102nd 98.39%
86.67%
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Congress High
School College
107th 99.08%
92.41%
108th 99.08%
91.26%
109th 99.08%
90.80%
110th 99.08%
91.03%
111th 99.54%
91.95%
112th 99.08%
91.72%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Col ege completion based on Member reports of finishing four or more years of education after high
school.
Table 12. High School and Undergraduate Completion of Senators, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress High
School College
79th 94.79%
75.00%
82nd 94.79%
77.08%
87th 97.00%
76.00%
92nd 98.00%
87.00%
97th 100.00%
88.00%
102nd 100.00%
92.00%
107th 100.00%
97.00%
108th 100.00%
98.00%
109th 100.00%
98.00%
110th 100.00%
99.00%
111th 100.00%
98.98%
112th 100.00%
99.00%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Notes: Col ege completion based on Member reports of finishing four or more years of education after high
school. Percentages are based on the number of Senators who took seats on the first day of a new Congress.
There were 96 seats in the Senate in the 79th and 82nd Congresses. Alaska and Hawaii became states in 1959,
increasing the number of Senate seats to 100 in subsequent Congresses. On the first day of the 111th Congress,
98 Senators took the oath of office.
Religion
Table 13. Representatives Specifying a Religious Affiliation, at the Start of Selected
Congresses Since 1945
Congress Representatives Senators
79th 39.54%
33.68%
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Congress Representatives Senators
82nd 64.83%
65.98%
87th 96.55%
99.00%
92nd 97.70%
100.00%
97th 99.08%
100.00%
102nd 99.08% 99.00%
107th 91.72% 96.00%
108th 88.28% 93.00%
109th 89.43% 92.00%
110th 90.11% 93.00%
111th 91.03% 90.72%
112th 92.87% 92.00%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations.
Table 14. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, Senators, and the U.S. Population
Members, 112th Congress, U.S. Population, 2008
Affiliation Representatives
Senators U.S.

Christian 92.06%
85.71%
78.50%
Jewish 6.20%
13.19%
1.70%
Muslim 0.50%
0.00%
0.60%
Buddhist 0.74%
0.00%
.70%
Othera 0.50%
1.10%
1.50%
Hindu 0.00%
0.00%
0.40%
No Affiliation
—b
—b 16.10%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection; and CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
for Members of Congress; Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey:
Religious Affiliation: Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/
report-religious-landscape-study-full.pdf, for the U.S. population; and CRS calculations.
Notes: Data for Members of Congress at the beginning of the 112th Congress (2011-2012). Percentages are
based on 404 Representatives and 91 Senators who responded to CQ Press regarding a religious affiliation. U.S.
population data are based on a 2008 sample of 35,000 respondents.
a. Other religious affiliations reported in CQ Press data include Quaker; Unitarian; Unitarian Universalist;
Universalist; Society of Friends; and some specific identification of participation in certain Quaker Annual
Meetings. Other affiliations in the U.S. population data include Unitarian and other liberal faiths, New Age,
and Native American religions.
b. CQ Press did not provide information on the number of unaffiliated Members. Instead it provided a
category called “not specified.” In the 112th Congress, 7.13% of Representatives, and 8.00% of Senators did
not specify their religious affiliation, if any. See Figure 10.
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Table 15. Denominations of Christian Representatives,
Senators, and the U.S. Population
Members, 112th Congress, U.S. Population, 2008
Christians Representativesa Senatorsb U.S.

Protestant 56.06%
54.95%
51.3%
Evangelical Protestant


26.3%
Mainline Protestant


18.1%
Historical y Black Churches


6.9%
Catholic 31.02%
24.18%
23.9%
Christian Science
0.74%
0.00%

Mormon 2.23%
4.40%
1.7%
Jehovah’s Witness


0.7%
Orthodox 0.74%
1.10%
0.6%
Unspecified 5.71%
1.10%

Other Christian


0.3%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection; and CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress,
112th Congress
for Members of Congress; Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey:
Religious Affiliation: Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/
report-religious-landscape-study-full.pdf, for the U.S. population; and CRS calculations. For consistency and
comparability, categories are based on those provided for the U.S. population by the Pew Forum. Researchers
and adherents may identify affiliations, and faith practices differently.
Notes: Data for Members of Congress at the beginning of the 112th Congress (2011-2012). U.S. population data
are based on a 2008 sample of 35,000 respondents.
a. Percentages are based on 404 Representatives who specified affiliation with a Christian denomination or
tradition.
b. Percentages are based on 91 Senators who specified affiliation with a Christian denomination or tradition.
Table 16. Religious Affiliation of Representatives, at the Start of
Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress Affiliated Christiana Jewish Muslim Buddhist Otherb
79th 172 97.67% 0.58% 0.00% 0.00% 1.74%
82nd 282 95.74% 1.77% 0.00% 0.00% 2.48%
87th 420 95.71% 2.62% 0.00% 0.00% 1.67%
92nd 425 95.76% 2.82% 0.00% 0.00% 1.41%
97th 431 92.11% 6.03% 0.00% 0.00% 1.86%
102nd 431 90.26% 7.66% 0.00% 0.00% 2.09%
107th 399 92.98% 6.27% 0.00% 0.00% 0.75%
108th 384 92.97% 6.25% 0.00% 0.00% 0.78%
109th 389 93.06% 6.17% 0.00% 0.00% 0.77%
110th 392 91.58% 7.14% 0.26% 0.51% 0.51%
111th 396 90.91% 7.32% 0.51% 0.51% 0.76%
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Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics Since 1945

Congress Affiliated Christiana Jewish Muslim Buddhist Otherb
112th 404 92.06% 6.20% 0.50% 0.74% 0.50%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations. For consistency and comparability, categories are based on those provided for the
U.S. population by the Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation:
Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-
landscape-study-full.pdf. Researchers and adherents may identify affiliations, and faith practices differently.
a. Christian responses identified in the CQ Press data include the following: Cases in which religion was
identified as “Christian” without further specification; mainline and evangelical Protestant denominations,
including historically Black churches, Catholic, Mormon, Orthodox, and other Christian.
b. Other religious affiliations reported in the CQ Press data include Quaker; Unitarian; Unitarian Universalist;
Universalist; Society of Friends; and some specific identification of participation in certain Quaker Annual
Meetings.
Table 17. Denominations of Christian-Affiliated Representatives Since 1945
Christian
Christian
Not
Congress Affiliation
Catholicb
Science
Mormonc Orthodox Protestant Specifiedd
79th 168 17.26% 0.60% 0.00% 0.00% 77.38% 4.76%
82nd 270 17.41% 0.37% 0.37 0.00% 79.26% 2.59%
87th 402 21.64% 1.24% 1.00% 0.00% 74.63% 1.49%
92nd
407 24.08% 0.74% 1.47% 1.23% 70.27% 2.21%
97th 397 30.23% 0.50% 1.76% 1.01% 65.24% 1.26%
102nd
389 30.08% 0.77% 2.31% 1.54% 64.27% 1.03%
107th
371 31.54% 1.15% 2.07% 0.46% 52.87% 1.84%
108th
357 31.65% 1.40% 2.52% 0.28% 61.34% 2.80%
109th
362 33.15% 1.38% 2.49% 0.55% 58.84% 3.59%
110th
359 33.43% 1.39% 2.51% 1.11% 56.55% 5.01%
111th
360 35.56% 0.83% 2.22% 1.39% 55.00% 5.00%
112th
371 33.69% 0.81% 2.43% 0.81% 56.06% 6.20%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations. For consistency and comparability, categories are based on those provided for the
U.S. population by the Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation:
Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-
landscape-study-full.pdf. Researchers, and adherents may identify affiliations, and faith practices differently.
a. Christian responses identified in the CQ Press data include the following: Cases in which religion was
identified as “Christian” without further specification; mainline and evangelical Protestant denominations,
including historically Black churches, Catholic, Mormon, Orthodox, and other Christian.
b. Includes “Catholic” responses without further specification, and “Roman Catholic” responses.
c. Includes “Mormon” responses without further specification, and “Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints;” and “Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints” responses.
d. No Christian denomination specified.
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Table 18. Religious Affiliation of Senators, Selected Congresses Since 1945
Congress Affiliated Christiana Jewish Muslim Buddhist Otherb
79th 31
96.88%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
3.13%
82nd 64
93.75%
1.56%
0.00%
0.00%
4.69%
87th 99
91.92%
1.01%
0.00%
0.00%
7.07%
92nd 100
93.00%
2.00%
0.00%
0.00%
5.00%
97th 100
91.00%
6.00%
0.00%
0.00%
3.00%
102nd 99 88.89%
8.08%
0.00%
0.00%
3.03%
107th 96 88.54%
10.42%
0.00%
0.00%
1.04%
108th 93 87.10%
11.00%
0.00%
0.00%
1.08%
109th 92 86.96%
11.96%
0.00%
0.00%
1.09%
110th 93 84.95%
13.98%
0.00%
0.00%
1.08%
111th 91 85.23%
13.64%
0.00%
0.00%
1.14%
112th 91 85.71%
13.19%
0.00%
0.00%
1.10%
Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations. For consistency and comparability, categories are based on those provided for the
U.S. population by the Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation:
Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-
landscape-study-full.pdf. Researchers, and adherents may identify affiliations, and faith practices differently.
a. Christian responses identified in the CQ Press data include the following: Cases in which religion was
identified as “Christian” without further specification; mainline and evangelical Protestant denominations,
including historically Black churches, Catholic, Mormon, Orthodox, and other Christian.
b. Other religious affiliations reported in the CQ Press data include Quaker; Unitarian; Unitarian Universalist;
Universalist; Society of Friends; and some specific identification of participation in certain Quaker Annual
Meetings.
Table 19. Denominations of Christian-Affiliated Senators Since 1945
Christian
Christian
Not
Congress
Affiliationa
Catholicb
Science
Mormonc Orthodox Protestant Specifiedd
79th 31
3.23%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
83.87%
12.90%
82nd 64 3.33%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
88.33%
3.33%
87th 91
13.19%
0.00%
4.40%
0.00%
82.42%
0.00%
92nd 93
11.83%
1.08%
4.30%
0.00%
81.72%
1.08%
97th 91
17.58%
1.10%
4.40%
2.20%
73.63%
1.10%
102nd 88 21.59%
0.00%
3.41%
1.14%
72.73%
1.14%
107th 85
27.06%
0.00%
5.88%
2.35%
62.35%
2.35%
108th 81
27.16%
0.00%
6.17%
2.47%
61.73%
2.47%
109th 80
26.25%
0.00%
6.25%
2.50%
63.75%
1.25%
110th 79
27.85%
0.00%
6.33%
1.27%
63.29%
1.27%
111th 78
30.67%
0.00%
5.33%
1.33%
61.33%
1.33%
112th 78
28.21%
0.00%
5.13%
1.28%
64.10%
1.28%
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Source: CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th
Congress
, CRS calculations. For consistency and comparability, categories are based on those provided for the
U.S. population by the Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation:
Diverse and Dynamic
, Washington, DC, February 2008, p. 12, http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-
landscape-study-full.pdf. Researchers, and adherents may identify affiliations, and faith practices differently.
a. Christian responses identified in the CQ Press data include the following: Cases in which religion was
identified as “Christian” without further specification; mainline and evangelical Protestant denominations,
including historically Black churches, Catholic, Mormon, Orthodox, and other Christian.
b. Includes Catholic responses without further specification, and Roman Catholic responses.
c. Includes Mormon responses without further specification, and Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints;
and Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints responses.
d. No Christian denomination specified.
Military Service
Table 20. Military Service by Representatives, Senators,
and U.S. Population Since 1945
Congress Representatives Senators U.S.
79th 21.30%
28.92%
7.10%a
82nd 18.04%
27.78%

87th 20.14%
29.00%

92nd 21.48%
30.00%

97th 22.99%
35.00%

102nd 26.96% 38.00%
9.40%b
107th 47.82%
69.00%
11.00%c
108th 61.43%
76.00%
12.60%c
109th 72.02%
78.00%
13.60%c
110th 63.16%
69.00%
12.60%c
111th 56.97%
67.71%
12.70%c
112th 43.48%
41.43%
3.30%c
Source: Members, CQ Press Electronic Library, CQ Congress Collection, CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New
Congress, 112th Congress
; U.S. population, as noted; CRS calculations. – indicates no data.
a. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 2009 American Community Survey 1-Year
Estimates, “Selected Social Characteristics in the United States: 2009,” http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/
ADPTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=01000US&-ds_name=ACS_2009_1YR_G00_&-_lang=en&-_cal er=geoselect&-
format=.
b. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 2000 Census of Population, Census 2000 Summary
File 3 (SF-3), DP-2, “Profile of Selected Social Characteristics, 2000,” http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/
QTTable?_bm=y&-qr_name=DEC_2000_SF3_U_DP2&-geo_id=01000US&-ds_name=DEC_2000_SF3_U&-
_lang=en&-format=&-CONTEXT=qt.
c. Susan B. Carter, Scott Sigmund Gartner, Michael R. Haines, et al., Historical Statistics of the United States, vol.
5 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), p. 5-408.
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Appendix. Developing Member Data
Beyond the basic information necessary to ascertain the qualifications for office of a U.S. Senator
or Representative,41 the disclosure of details of a Member’s race, education, previous occupation,
or other characteristics appears to be voluntary, and has not been collected by congressional or
other governmental authorities. This report provides data on Member characteristics and the
tenure of Member service based on sources and methodologies described below.
Member Characteristics
Data on Member characteristics provided in this report are drawn from two non-congressional
entities.42 The principal source of Member data in this report is the CQ Press Electronic Library,
CQ Congress Collection (hereafter CQ Press), a subscription database that provides data on
Members and a range of characteristics according to the following variables: Congress;
Representative or Senator; political party; state; age; religion; race/ethnicity; previous occupation;
sex; and military service. CQ Press provides data on Representatives, Senators, and individuals
who served as President and Vice President of the United States.43 The database does not contain
information on Members who have served as Delegates44 or Resident Commissioner for Puerto
Rico.45
The second source, from which data on new Members of the 112th Congress were taken, is CQ
Roll Call’s Guide to the New Congress. The third, U.S. population data, is based on the results of
decennial censuses conducted by the Bureau of the Census between 1940 and 2010, and other
official government sources as appropriate. Data on religious affiliations of the U.S. population
are taken from a private source, as discussed in the “Religion” section below.
Specific Congresses were selected to provide detailed information on changes in Member
characteristics in recent Congresses, and to compare those changes to previous Congresses. The
four most recent Congresses (108th-112th Congresses) were collected to demonstrate
contemporary Member characteristics. Data for the 82nd, 87th, 92nd, 97th, 102nd, and 107th

41 Article I, Section 2 of the Constitution requires that a Member of the House of Representatives be at least 25 years
old, a citizen of the United States for at least seven years, and a resident of the state from which they are elected at the
time they are elected. Article I, Section 3 requires that a Senator be at least 30 years old, a citizen of the United States
for at least nine years, and resident of the state from which they are elected at the time they are elected.
42 The compilation and distribution of information about members of national legislatures is carried out by non-
governmental entities in at least two other countries, and relied on for official purposes by a government entity in the
United Kingdom. In Canada, The Public Policy Forum, which describes itself as “an independent, not-for-profit
organization,” has produced a profile of Canadian Parliamentarians. See Jonathon Dignan, “(Less) Male, (Even Less)
Educated, (Even Less) Experienced & (Even more) White,” April 5, 2009, available at http://www.ppforum.ca/
publications/lessmale-even-less-educated-even-less-experienced-%0Beven-more-white. In the United Kingdom, since
1945, Nuffield College, Oxford University has sponsored studies of British Parliamentarians chosen in general
elections. See Dennis Kavanaugh and Philip Cowley, The British General Election of 2010 (Basingstoke, Hampshire,
United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The House of Commons Library publishes a report that relies in part on
Nuffield data. See Feargal McGuiness, Social Backgrounds of MPs, United Kingdom House of Commons Library,
London, December 10, 2010, http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/research/briefing-papers/SN01528.
43 Data on presidential and vice presidential service are excluded from consideration in this report.
44 There are currently five Delegates to Congress representing the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands.
45 For more information, see CRS Report RL31856, Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico, by R. Eric Petersen.
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Congresses are provided for comparison of Congresses at 10-year intervals from the beginning of
the 112th Congress. The CQ Press data provides information on Members beginning in the 79th
Congress, making that Congress the earliest for which comparable data are available.
Data for all Representatives and Senators who served on the day Congress convened in the
selected Congresses in the 79th-111th Congresses, and returning Members of the 112th Congress,
were taken from CQ Press’ database. Data for new Members of the 112th Congress were taken
from CQ Roll Call’s Guide to the New Congress.46 CQ Press and CQ Roll Call are separate
entities with different corporate ownership. Previously, the material that comprises the CQ Press
data were gathered and maintained by Congressional Quarterly, Inc., through research and
reporting capacities that now are a part of CQ Roll Call. Some of the data have been reported in
various forms in products created by Congressional Quarterly, Inc., CQ Press, or CQ Roll Call.47
Those products may also rely on data that are not included in the CQ Press data. Consequently,
there may be differences between data reported here and information reported in some
commercial products issued by CQ Press, CQ Roll Call and other sources of congressional
information.
According to CQ Press, their Member biographical data are derived from a variety of primary
sources, including reporting, surveys administered to congressional offices, and official sources.
CQ Press reports that it “uses multiple sources to confirm this information, including obituaries
and excerpts from major newspapers, as sources do not always agree on precise dates.”48 CQ
Press does not indicate whether the data underlying their database have been collected in a
consistent manner over time.
Data provided in this report include the number of Representatives and Senators entitled to take
seats in the House or Senate, respectively, on the first day of a new Congress. In the 79th and 82nd
Congresses, the Senate had 96 seats representing the 48 states admitted to the Union. Membership
of the House has been fixed at 435 seats since 1911, except for a temporary enlargement to 437 in
the 86th (1959-1960) and 87th (included in this report) Congresses to accommodate
Representatives from Alaska and Hawaii upon their admission as states. The number of House
seats reverted to 435 following the 1960 census and reapportionment. On the first day of a new
Congress, some seats may be vacant due to the illness or death of a Member-elect, a contested
election, or other reason. On the first day of the 111th Congress in the Senate, for example, 98
Senators were present, and two seats were vacant. In the House, 434 of 435 Representatives were
present on the first day of the 97th, 107th, 109th, and 111th Congresses with one seat vacant in each
instance. Percentages provided in figures and data tables below are based on the number of
Members who were present on the first day of a Congress in each chamber.
Due to differences in data collection or characterization, data in other studies on Member
characteristics may differ from those presented in this report.

46 CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th Congress, November 4, 2010.
47 These products include Biographical Directory of the American Congress, 1774-1996 (Alexandria, VA: CQ Staff
Directories, Inc., 1997), CQ Weekly, formerly known as Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report; the Congressional
Quarterly, Inc. Almanac and Congress and the Nation series; biennial editions of Politics in America: Members of
Congress in Washington and at Home
, published by CQ Press; and others.
48 CQ Press, “Codebook for CQ Congress Collection Data Exports” (Washington: CQ Press, 2011), unnumbered pages.
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Congressional Service Tenure
Data on career service patterns are drawn from three sources. For the 79th through 104th
Congresses, data were drawn from the Roster of United States Congressional Officeholders and
Biographical Characteristics of Members of the United States Congress, 1789-1996
.49 Data for
the 105th through 111th Congresses were compiled from the Congressional Directory.50 Data for
the 112th Congress were obtained from the Clerk of the House and CQ Press’s Guide to the New
Congress
.51
Chamber service and total congressional service were recorded for each member of each
Congress, as of the first day of Congress. From these individual data, aggregate statistics were
derived for each Congress. 52
Comparing Members to the U.S. Population
Comparing the small number of Members of Congress (generally 435 Representatives and 100
Senators53) to the population of the United States (131.7 million in 1940;54 308.7 million in
201055) poses some challenges. Such challenges results, in part, from differences in scale. Others
arise as a consequence of the way information about Members of Congress or the U.S. population
is collected, or how the information has been categorized over time. Since in some instances,
described below, there may be no direct comparison between the types of data available
describing characteristics of Representatives, Senators and the U.S. population, any comparison
between Members and the broader American public is potentially subject to a wide range of

49 Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, and Carroll McKibbin. Roster of United States
Congressional Officeholders and Biographical Characteristics of Members of the United States Congress, 1789-1996:
Merged Data [computer file] 10th ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor: MI: Inter-university for Political and Social Research
[producer and distributor], 1997.
50 U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 111th Congress, S. Pub 111-14, 111th
Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2009); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional
Directory, 110th Congress
, S. Pub 110-13, 110th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2007); U.S. Congress, Joint
Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 109th Congress, S. Pub 109-12, 109th Cong., 1st sess.
(Washington: GPO, 2006); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 110th
Congress
, S. Pub 108-18, 108th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2003); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing,
Official Congressional Directory, 107th Congress, S. Pub 107-20, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001); U.S.
Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory, 106th Congress, S. Pub 106-21, 106th Cong.,
1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1999); U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on Printing, Official Congressional Directory,
105th Congress
, S. Pub 105-20, 105th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1997).
51 U.S. Congress, House, Office of the Clerk, 112th Congress Members-Elect, available at http://clerk.house.gov/
member_info/112-members-elect.pdf; CQ Roll Call, Guide to the New Congress, 112th Congress, November 4, 2010,
available at http://innovation.cq.com/newmember/2010elexnguide.pdf.
52 For detailed discussion of congressional career patterns since 1789, see CRS Report R41545, Congressional
Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2011
, by Matthew Eric Glassman and Amber Hope
Wilhelm.
53 In the 79th and 82nd Congresses, the Senate had 96 Members representing the 48 states admitted to the Union.
Membership of the House has been fixed at 435 since 1911, except for a temporary enlargement to 437 in the 86th and
87th Congresses to accommodate Representatives from Alaska and Hawaii upon their admission as states. House
Membership reverted to 435 following the 1960 census and reapportionment.
54 Susan B. Carter, Scott Sigmund Gartner, Michael R. Haines, et al., Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), p. 1-36.
55 http://www.census.gov/.
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interpretations. Conclusions should be drawn from the data provided here with care. Issues that
inform the understanding, utility, and comparability of the data presented in this report include the
following:
Education
CQ Press data provide the academic degrees Members have earned (high school completion,
undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees). The Census Bureau expresses educational
attainment among the U.S. population as percentages of individuals aged 25 years and older who
have completed four years of high school or four or more years of college. The Census Bureau
also provides a measurement of the median years of schooling completed by the population aged
25 years and older.
Previous Occupation
Questions arise when comparing the occupation of Members to occupations pursued in the United
States, but also when comparing the work of Members before they arrived in Congress.
With regard to the comparison of Members to constituents, is the proper comparison between the
American public and Members in their roles as government officials, or to the work they did
before taking office? In addition, Census and other government efforts to categorize work have
changed to reflect the dynamic nature of work activity, which may limit or preclude comparison
of occupations over time.
Questions regarding the most appropriate manner of identifying congressional work experience,
coupled with changes in the collection of occupational data for the nation, may raise questions
about the comparability of congressional and U.S. population data across time. Due to the
diversity of employment in the U.S. population, and the challenges of comparing that data to CQ
Press information on Members, comparisons between the occupations of Members and those of
the U.S. population at large are not provided in this report.
Focusing on Member characteristics, what might previous occupations reveal about Members
who have served in Congress for many years, or otherwise left other professions to pursue
elective office prior to their congressional service? If the focus is on Members in their official
capacities, in what ways might that work be categorized?
The CQ Press data provide previous occupations reported by individual Members, organized by
broad category identified as “Previous Occupation.” Occupations previously practiced by
Members might fit into one or more of the subcategories CQ Press identifies. For example, CQ
Press provides previous occupational subcategories that include congressional aide, law
enforcement, and military; each of these arguably could be included in another subcategory CQ
Press provides, entitled “public service/politics.” In addition to that concern, the extent to which
the public service/politics subcategory includes or excludes Members prior elected service in state
or local offices (which are common paths to congressional careers) cannot be determined.
Race and Ethnicity
In the census data, race and ethnicity are currently based on self identification. CQ Press data,
which are collected from a number of sources including self identification, reports only one
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response for this category for Members; Members or other sources may identify more detailed
racial or ethnic affiliations elsewhere. Over time, Congress has required the Census Bureau to
deploy a broader array of categories in the decennial censuses, and to allow respondents to choose
more than one category. These changes may raise questions about the comparability of
congressional and U.S. population data, whether at a specific moment in time or across the span
of the Congresses examined.
Religion
Comparing Member religious affiliation to that of the U.S. population poses a number of
challenges for several reasons. First, there is no authoritative categorization of American religious
practice that covers the period since 1945 in a consistent manner that includes consideration of all
faiths, denominations, and traditions. This is due, in part, to the prohibition placed on the census
Bureau from collecting religious affiliation data.56 Second, the data that are available from private
sources for the U.S. population are not readily comparable to the data CQ Press gathers on the
religious affiliations of Members of Congress as they chose to identify themselves. CQ Press’s
Member information includes broad listings that do not identify different traditions within
broader denominations. Another challenge is the lack of consistent information on the number of
American observers of some religions, or the incomplete collection of data over time. Most
efforts to categorize religious affiliation in the United States attempt to identify adherents within
the mainline and evangelical traditions of Protestantism,57 or affiliation with historically Black
churches, but no such distinction is possible regarding Member affiliation, based on the CQ Press
data. With regard to the U.S. population, it is possible to identify information on the number of
Christian adherents in the United States since 1945, but it is more difficult to identify those who
follow Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, or Hindu faiths, or those who identify no religious affiliation.
Some of this is explained in part by the preponderance of Americans who identify themselves as
Christians or as members of Christian churches. As a consequence, it is only possible to compare
religious adherents in the House and Senate in the 112th Congress, and the U.S. population in
2008. U.S. population data are based on the research of the Pew Forum on Religious & Public
Life.58



56 The Census Bureau is prohibited by law “from asking a question on religious affiliation on a mandatory basis.” See
http://www.census.gov/prod/www/religion.htm. For discussion on the challenges of tracking religious affiliation over
time, see Julia Corbett-Hemeyer, Religion in America, 6th ed. (Boston: Prentice Hall, 2010); and Brian Streensland,
Jerry Z. Park, and Mark D. Regnerus, et al., “The Measure of American Religion: Toward Improving the State of the
Art,” Social Forces, vol. 79, no. 1 (September 2000), pp. 291-318.
57 Donald W. Dayton and Robert K. Johnson, eds., The Variety of American Evangelism (Knoxville, TN: The
University of Tennessee Press, 1991).
58 Pew Forum on Religious & Public Life, U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Affiliation: Diverse and
Dynamic
, February, 2008, at http://religions.pewforum.org/pdf/report-religious-landscape-study-full.pdf.
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Author Contact Information

R. Eric Petersen, Coordinator
Jennifer E. Manning
Specialist in American National Government
Information Research Specialist
epetersen@crs.loc.gov, 7-0643
Ida A. Brudnick
Jacob R. Straus
Specialist on the Congress
Analyst on the Congress
R. Sam Garrett
Jennifer D. Williams
Specialist in American National Government
Specialist in American National Government
Matthew Eric Glassman
Amber Hope Wilhelm
Analyst on the Congress
Graphics Specialist


Acknowledgments
Erin Hemlin, and Sarah Eckman, former CRS interns, collected data and coauthored sections of this report.
Royce Crocker, Specialist in American National Government, and Audrey Celeste Crane-Hirsch,
Information Research Specialist, provided data and technical assistance.

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