Membership of the 117th Congress: A Profile 
June 22, 2021 
This report presents a profile of the membership of the 117th Congress (2021-2022) as of June 22, 
2021, or at the beginning of the 117th Congress (January 3, 2021), where noted. Statistical 
Jennifer E. Manning 
information is included on selected characteristics of Members, in cluding data on party 
Senior Research Librarian 
affiliation, average age, occupation, education, length of congressional service, religious 
  
affiliation, gender, ethnicity, foreign birth, and military service. 
 
In the House of Representatives, there are 224 Democrats (including 4 Delegates), 213 
Republicans (including 1 Delegate and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico), and 4 vacant seats. The Senate has 50 
Republicans, 48 Democrats, and 2 Independents, who both caucus with the Democrats. Additionally , 
  The average age of Members of the House at the beginning of the 117th Congress was 58.4 years; of 
Senators, 64.3 years.  
  The overwhelming majority, 96%, of Members of Congress have a college education.  
  The dominant professions of Members are public service/politics, business, and law. 
  Most Members identify as Christians, and the collective majority of these affiliate with a Protestant 
denomination. Roman Catholics account for the largest single religious denomination, and numerous other 
affiliations are represented, including Jewish, Mormon, Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, Greek Orthodox, 
Pentecostal Christian, Unitarian Universalist, and Adventist. 
  The average length of service for Representatives at the beginning of the 117th Congress was 8.9 years (4.5 
House terms); for Senators, 11.0 years (1.8 Senate terms). 
  One hundred forty-seven women serve in the 117th Congress: 123 in the House, including 3 Delegates and 
the Resident Commissioner, and 24 in the Senate.  
  There are 57 African American Members of the House and 3 in the Senate. This House number includes 
two Delegates. 
  There are 54 Hispanic or Latino Members (a record number) serving: 47 in the House, including 2 
Delegates and the Resident Commissioner, and 7 in the Senate. 
  There are 21 Members (16 Representatives, 3 Delegates, and 2 Senators) who are Asian Americans or 
Pacific Islander Americans. 
  A record five Native Americans (American Indians or Native Hawaiians) serve in the House. 
The portions of this report covering political party affiliation, gender, ethnicity, and vacant seats may be updated as events 
warrant. The remainder of the report will not be updated. 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Contents 
Overview and Total Members in History............................................................................. 1 
Party Breakdown ............................................................................................................ 1 
Age............................................................................................................................... 2 
Occupations ................................................................................................................... 2 
Education ...................................................................................................................... 5 
Congressional Service...................................................................................................... 6 
Religion......................................................................................................................... 6 
Gender and Ethnicity ....................................................................................................... 7 
Women Members ...................................................................................................... 7 
African American Members ........................................................................................ 7 
Hispanic/Latino American Members............................................................................. 8 
Asian/Pacific Islander American Members .................................................................... 8 
American Indian Members .......................................................................................... 9 
Foreign Birth ............................................................................................................ 9 
Military Service ........................................................................................................ 9 
 
Tables 
Table 1. Average Age of Members, 114th-117th Congresses .................................................... 2 
Table 2. Most Frequently Listed Occupational Categories by Members, 117th Congress ............. 3 
Table 3. Average Length of Service for Members of Congress, 113th-117th Congresses ............... 6 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ....................................................................................................... 10 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
Membership of the 117th  Congress: A Profile 
 
Overview and Total Members in History 
Congress is composed of 541 individuals1 from the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, the 
U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Puerto Rico. Since 
1789, 12,418 individuals2 have served as either Representatives (11,104 individuals) or Senators 
(1,994 individuals).3 Of these individuals, 680 have served in both chambers. An additional 178 
individuals  have served in the House in the roles of territorial Delegates or Resident 
Commissioners.4 
The following is a profile of the 117th Congress (2021-2022).5 
Party Breakdown 
In the 117th Congress, the current party alignments as of June 22, 2021,6 are as follows: 
  House of Representatives: 224 Democrats (including 4 Delegates), 213 
Republicans (including 1 Delegate and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto 
Rico), and 4 vacant seats. 
  Senate: 50 Republicans, 48 Democrats, and 2 Independents, who both caucus 
with the Democrats. 
                                              
1 T his 541 number is  the maximum number of individuals  who may currently serve in the House and Senate and 
assumes  that no seat is temporarily vacant. As of June 22, 2021, there were four House  vacancies. T he 541 number 
includes  the 535 Members from the 50 states (100 Senators, 435 Representatives), 5 Members who are Delegates (from 
the District of Columbia, Guam,  American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin  Islands,  and the Northern Mariana Islands), and 1 
Member who is Resident  Commissioner from Puerto Rico. References in this report to “ Representative(s)” include the 
435 Members of the House from the 50 states and exclude  the Members who are Delegates and the Resident 
Commissioner. Percentages in this report assume a full Congress  of 541 Members. 
For more information on the status of the Delegates and Resident Commissioner, refer to CRS  Report R40170, 
Parliam entary Rights of the Delegates and Resident Com m issioner from  Puerto Rico , by Christopher M. Davis. 
2 U.S.  Congress, House,  Office of the Historian, “T otal Members of the House and State Representation,” at 
http://history.house.gov/Institution/Total-Members/Total-Members/, updated January 21, 2021, and CRS  calculations. 
Information about all the Members who have served in Congress  is available  in the Biographical Directory of the 
United States Congress, a website  maintained by the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate at 
http://bioguide.congress.gov. 
3 A cumulative, chronological list of all U.S.  Senators is  available on the Senate website  at http://www.senate.gov/
artandhistory/history/common/briefing/senators_chronological.htm. Information about all House Members  is available 
on the House website  at http://history.house.gov/Institution/Total-Members/T otal-Members/. 
4 T he Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico serves a four-year term, unlike other House members who serve two-
year terms. T he Philippines was represented in the House by Resident Commissioners from 1907 until 1946, when it 
became an independent nation. For more information, see CRS  Report R40555, Delegates to the U.S. Congress: 
History  and Current Status, by Christopher M. Davis.  
5 For background  information on the previous Congress, refer to CRS  Report R45583, Membership of the 116th 
Congress: A Profile, by Jennifer E. Manning. 
6 T he 117th Congress began  on January 3, 2021, with the following party alignments: House of Representatives: 226 
Democrats (including  4 Delegates), 213 Republicans  (including  1 Delegate and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto 
Rico), and 2 vacant seats; Senate: 51 Republicans,  46 Democrats, 2 Independents, who both caucus  with the 
Democrats, and 1 vacant seat. 
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Age 
The average age at the beginning of the 117th Congress was 58.4 years for Representatives and 
64.3 years for Senators.7 
Table 1 shows the average ages at the beginning of the 117th and three previous Congresses. 
Table 1. Average Age of Members, 114th-117th Congresses 
Average (mean) age at the beginning of the Congress 
Newly Elected 
Newly Elected 
Congress 
Representatives 
Representatives 
Senators 
Senators 
117th 
58.4 years 
50.6 years 
64.3 years 
56.1 years 
116th 
57.6 years 
47.9 years 
62.9 years 
58.1 years 
115th 
57.8 years 
50.8 years 
61.8 years 
54.8 years 
114th 
57.0 years 
52.3 years 
61.0 years 
50.7 years 
Source: CRS calculations based on CQ, “117th Congress: Birthdays,” https://plus.cq.com/members/factfile/
birthdays. 
Notes: Representatives’  age data do not include the Delegates  and the Resident Commissioner.  Newly elected 
Members’  data do not include those returning to the House or Senate for a second time. 
The U.S. Constitution requires Representatives to be at least 25 years old when they take office.8 
The youngest Representative in the 117th Congress, and the youngest House Member since 1965,9 
is Madison Cawthorn (R-NC), born August 1, 1995, who was 25 at the beginning of the 117th 
Congress. The oldest Representative is Don Young (R-AK), born June 9, 1933, who was 87. 
Senators must be at least 30 years old when they take office. The youngest Senator in the 117th 
Congress is Jon Ossoff (D-GA), born February 16, 1987, who was 33 at the beginning of the 
Congress. The oldest Senator in the 117th Congress is Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), born June 22, 
1933, who was 87. 
Occupations 
According to data on occupations provided by CQ.com, in the 117th Congress, public 
service/politics is the most commonly declared profession of Senators, followed by law, then 
business; for Representatives, public service/politics is first, closely followed by business, then 
law.10 
                                              
7 For more information about age distributions in the 117th Congress, see Pew Research Center, “Boomers, Silents still 
have most seats in Congress, though number of Millennials, Gen Xers is  up slightly,” February  12, 2021, at  
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/02/12/boomers-silents-still-have-most-seats-in-congress-though-number-
of-millennials-gen-xers-is-up-slightly/. 
8 Article I, Section 2, clause  2, of the U.S.  Constitution. 
9 Rep. Jed Johnson Jr. (D-OK) was  sworn into the 89th Congress (1965-66) seven days after he turned 25. 
10 T hese data do not include the Delegates and Resident Commissioner. 
For more summary information on the occupational backgrounds of Members  of Congress, 1953-present, see the “ Prior 
Occupations” tables in Chapter 1, “Demographics of members of Congress”  in Vital  Statistics  on Congress at 
https://www.brookings.edu/multi-chapter-report/vital-statistics-on-congress/, a joint project of the American Enterprise 
Institute and Brookings Institution. 
Please note that the data in these third-party resources are unlikely to be updated  after publication. 
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Table 2 uses summary data from CQ.com to present the occupational categories most frequently 
listed as prior careers of Members of the 117th Congress. 
Table 2. Most Frequently Listed Occupational Categories 
by Members, 117th Congress 
At the beginning of the 117th Congress 
Occupation 
Representatives 
Senators 
Public Service/Politics 
297 
64 
Business 
273 
47 
Law 
173 
57 
Education 
85 
28 
Sources: CQ.com  and the CQ Member  Profiles. 
Note: Most Members  list more  than one profession  when surveyed by CQ Rol  Cal ,  and the professions  listed 
are not necessarily  the ones Members  practiced immediately  prior to entering Congress. 
A closer look at the range of prior occupations and previously held public offices of Members of 
the House and Senate at the beginning of the 117th Congress, as listed in their CQ Member 
Profiles,11 also shows the following: 
  47 Senators with previous House service; 
  113 Members who have worked in education, including teachers, professors, 
instructors, school fundraisers, counselors, administrators, or coaches (85 in the 
House, including 2 Delegates, 28 in the Senate); 
  4 physicians in the Senate, 14 physicians in the House, plus 5 dentists and 1 
veterinarian;12 
  2 psychologists (in the House), an optometrist (in the Senate), 2 pharmacists (in 
the House), and 3 nurses and 1 physician assistant (in the House); 
  7 ordained ministers (5 in the House, 2 in the Senate);  
  38 former mayors (31 in the House, 7 in the Senate); 
  13 former state governors (12 in the Senate, 1 in the House) and 10 lieutenant 
governors (5 in the Senate, 5 in the House); 
  7 attorneys general of their states (6 in the Senate, 1 in the House) and 8 
secretaries of state (3 in the Senate, 5 in the House); 
  16 former judges (al  but 1 in the House) and 38 prosecutors (9 in the Senate, 29 
in the House) who have served in city, county, state, federal, or military 
capacities; 
                                              
11 CQ Member Profiles are available on the CQ.com subscription database  at http://www.cq.com/members/home.do. 
T he CQ.com database is  available in all House and Senate offices, as  well  as some academic libraries. T he profiles are 
also available in print form in the CQ publication  Politics in Am erica. T he professions listed here are not exhaustive 
and are not necessarily the ones practiced by Members immediately prior to entering Congress. Most Members  list 
more than one profession in their CQ Mem ber Profiles. 
12 One of the medical doctors in the Senate is  an ophthalmologist. For more information on medical professionals 
serving in the House, see  the Library of the House of Representatives’ “ Member Demographics” web  page at 
https://clerk.house.gov/Members#Demographics. For Senators, see the Senate Historical Office’s “ Physicians in the 
Senate” web  page at https://www.senate.gov/senators/PhysiciansintheSenate.htm. 
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Membership of the 117th  Congress: A Profile 
 
  4 Ambassadors (two in each chamber);13 
  238 former state or territorial legislators (45 in the Senate, 193 in the House, 
including 2 Delegates and the Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico);14 
  at least 78 former congressional staffers (15 in the Senate, 63 in the House, 
including 3 Delegates), as wel  as 5 former congressional pages (2 in the House 
and 3 in the Senate);15 
  2 sheriffs, 1 police chief and 3 other police officers, 1 fire chief, 1 firefighter, 2 
CIA employees, and 1 FBI agent (al  in the House);  
  1 Peace Corps volunteer in the House; 
  1 physicist and 1 chemist, both in the House, and 1 geologist in the Senate; 
  9 engineers (8 in the House and 1 in the Senate);  
  21 public relations or communications professionals (3 in the Senate, 18 in the 
House), and 7 accountants (1 in the Senate and 6 in the House); 
  6 software company executives in the House and 2 in the Senate; 
  38 consultants16 (7 in the Senate, 31 in the House), 5 car dealership owners (al  in 
the House), and 4 venture capitalists (2 in the House, 2 in the Senate); 
  16 bankers or bank executives (4 in the Senate, 12 in the House), 27 veterans of 
the real estate industry (3 in the Senate, 24 in the House), and 8 Members who 
have worked in the construction industry (1 in the Senate, 7 in the House); 
  7 social workers (2 in the Senate, 5 in the House) and 3 union representatives (al  
in the House); 
  16 nonprofit executives or founders (15 in the House, 1 in the Senate);  
  2 radio talk show hosts (both in the House); 4 radio or television broadcasters, 
managers, or owners (3 in the House, 1 in the Senate); 7 reporters or journalists 
(1 in the Senate, 6 in the House); and 3 newspaper publishers in the House; 
  18 insurance agents or executives (3 in the Senate, 15 in the House) and 7 
Members who have worked in the securities industry (al  in the House); 
  1 artist, 1 book publisher, and 2 speechwriters (al  in the House), and 2 
documentary filmmakers in the Senate; 
  6 restaurateurs (5 in the House, 1 in the Senate), as wel  as 2 coffee shop and 1 
wine store owners (al  in the House), and 1 brewpub owner in the Senate;  
  27 farmers, ranchers, or cattle farm owners (6 in the Senate, 21 in the House);  
  1 almond orchard owner and vintner, as wel  as a forester and a fruit orchard 
worker (al  in the House); 
  1 flight attendant and 4 pilots, al   in the House, and 1 astronaut in the Senate; 
                                              
13 In addition, one Senator previously served as the U.S.  T rade Representative, a position carrying the rank and title of 
Ambassador. 
14 National Conference of State Legislators, “Former State Legislators in the 117 th Congress” (as of December 30, 
2020), at https://www.ncsl.org/ncsl-in-dc/publications-and-resources/former-state-legislators-in-congress.aspx. 
15 Michael L. Koempel and Judy  Schneider,  Congressional Deskbook, 6th ed.  (Washington: T he Capitol.Net, 2012), 
Figure  5.22, supplemented by data from CQ  Member Profiles and House  and Senate payroll documents. 
16 T he job titles for these consultants in their CQ Member Profiles include  “management consultant,” “ethics 
consultant,” and “nonprofit consultant.” 
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  3 professional footbal  players, 1 hockey player, 1 basebal  player, and 1 mixed 
martial arts fighter (al  in the House); and 
  7 current members of the military reserves (6 in the House, 1 in the Senate) and 7 
current members of the National Guard (al  in the House). 
Other occupations listed in the CQ Member Profiles include emergency dispatcher, letter carrier, 
animal nutrition specialist, waiter, electrician, rodeo announcer, carpenter, video game developer, 
computer systems analyst, software engineer, R&D lab executive, and explosives expert. 
Education 
As has been true in recent Congresses, the vast majority of Members (93.8% of House Members 
and 100% of Senators) at the beginning of the 117th Congress have earned at least a bachelor’s 
degree. Sixty-seven percent of House Members and 76% of Senators hold educational degrees 
beyond a bachelor’s.17 The CQ Member Profiles at the beginning of the 117th Congress indicate 
the following: 
  22 Members of the House have no educational degree beyond a high school 
diploma or GED; 
  5 Members of the House have associate’s degrees as their highest degrees; 
  108 Members of the House and 18 Senators earned a master’s degree as their 
highest attained degrees; 
  144 Members of the House (32.7% of the House) and 50 Senators (50% of the 
Senate) hold law degrees;  
  22 Representatives and 4 Senators have doctoral (Ph.D., D.Phil., Ed.D., or 
D. Min) degrees;18 and 
  20 Members of the House and 5 Senators have medical degrees.19 
By comparison, 35 years ago in the 100th Congress (1987-1988), 85.5% of House Members and 
89% of Senators held bachelor’s degrees. Forty-five years ago, in the 95th Congress (1977-1978), 
82.7% of House Members and 87% of Senators held bachelor’s degrees. Sixty years ago, in the 
87th Congress (1961-1962), 76% of House Members and 76% of Senators held bachelor’s 
degrees.20 
Three Representatives and one Senator are graduates of the U.S. Military Academy, four 
Representatives and one Senator graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, one Representative 
graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy, and one Senator graduated from the U.S. Merchant 
Marine Academy. Five Representatives and one Senator were Rhodes Scholars, two 
Representatives were Fulbright Scholars, two Representatives were Marshal  Scholars, and two 
Representatives and one Senator were Truman Scholars.21 
                                              
17 CQ, “117th Congress: Education,” at https://plus.cq.com/members/factfile/education.  
18 An additional House  Member with a doctoral degree  was  sworn in in April 2021. 
19 Four Senators and 14 Representatives have M.D. degrees, 1 Senator has an O.D. (doctor of optometry) degree, 5 
Representatives have D.D.S. (doctor of dental surgery) degrees,  and 1 Representative has a D.V.M. (doctor of 
veterinary medicine) degree. 
20 CRS  Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member Characteristics  Since 1945 , coordinated by 
R. Eric Petersen.  
21 Rhodes and Marshall scholarships fund study at British universities; Fulbright  scholarships fund international 
exchange programs; T ruman scholarships fund graduate  study toward public  service. 
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Congressional Service 
The average length of service for Representatives at the beginning of the 117th Congress was 8.9 
years (4.5 House terms); for Senators, 11.0 years (1.8 Senate terms). 
Table 3. Average Length of Service for Members of Congress, 113th-117th Congresses 
Average (mean) at the beginning of the Congress, in years and numbers of terms 
Congress 
Representatives 
Senators 
117th   
8.9 years (4.5 terms) 
11.0 years (1.8 terms) 
116th 
8.6 years (4.3 terms) 
10.1 years (1.7 terms) 
115th 
9.4 years (4.6 terms) 
10.1 years (1.7 terms) 
114th 
8.8 years (4.4 terms) 
9.7 years (1.6 terms) 
113th 
9.1 years (4.6 terms) 
10.2 years (1.7 terms) 
Source: CRS Report R41545, Congressional  Careers: Service  Tenure and Patterns  of Member Service,  1789-2021, by 
Sarah J. Eckman and Amber  Hope Wilhelm.   
Notes: Representatives are elected for two-year terms.  Senators are elected for six-year terms.  Note that 47 
Senators in the 117th Congress have previously  served in the House.  Their House service  is not included in this 
average, nor is the House service  of Senators included in previous Congresses. 
At the beginning of the 117th Congress, 57 of the House Members (12.9% of the total House 
membership) had first been elected to the House in November 2020, and 9 of the Senators (9% of 
the total Senate membership) had first been elected to the Senate in November 2020.22 At the 
beginning of the 116th Congress, 20.4% of the House and 9% of the Senate were newly elected 
“freshmen.” 
At the beginning of the 117th Congress, 131 House Members (29.7% of House Members) had no 
more than two years of House experience, and 18 Senators (18% of Senators) had no more than 
two years of Senate experience. 
For more historical information on the tenure of Members of Congress, see CRS Report R41545, 
Congressional Careers: Service Tenure and Patterns of Member Service, 1789-2021, by Sarah J. 
Eckman and Amber Hope Wilhelm. 
Religion 
Ninety-seven percent of the Members of the 117th Congress report an affiliation with a specific 
religion.23 
Statistics gathered by the Pew Research Center on Religion and Public Life, which studies the 
religious affiliation of Representatives and Senators, and CQ at the beginning of the 117th 
Congress showed the following: 
  55.4% of Members (236 in the House, 58 in the Senate) are Protestant, with 
Baptist as the most represented denomination, followed by Methodist; 
                                              
22 In addition, one Senator was  appointed to and sworn into the Senate in January 2021, after the 117 th Congress began. 
23 Nineteen Members of the 117th Congress do  not specify a religious  affiliation, or report themselves as unaffiliated. 
Pew Research Center on Religion  and Public Life Project, “Faith on the Hill: T he Religious  Composition of the 117 th 
Congress,” January 4, 2021, at https://www.pewforum.org/2021/01/04/faith-on-the-hill-2021/. 
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  29.8% of Members (134 in the House, 24 in the Senate) are Catholic; 
  6.3% of Members (25 in the House, 9 in the Senate) are Jewish; 
  1.7% of Members (6 in the House, 3 in the Senate) are Mormon (Church of Jesus 
Christ of Latter-day Saints); 
  2 Members (1 in the House, 1 in the Senate) are Buddhist, 3 Representatives are 
Muslim, and 2 Representatives are Hindu; and 
  other religious affiliations represented include Greek Orthodox, Pentecostal 
Christian, Unitarian  Universalist, and Adventist.24 
Gender and Ethnicity 
Women Members 
One hundred forty-seven women Members (27.2% of the total membership) serve in the 117th 
Congress, 16 more than at the beginning of the 116th Congress.25 One hundred twenty-three 
women, including 3 Delegates as wel  as the Resident Commissioner, serve in the House and 24 
in the Senate. Of the 123 women in the House, 90 are Democrats, including 2 of the Delegates, 
and 33 are Republicans, including 1 Delegate as wel  as the Resident Commissioner. Of the 24 
women in the Senate, 16 are Democrats and 8 are Republicans.26 
By comparison, approximately 35 years ago in the 100th Congress (1987-1988), 24 women served 
in the House, and 2 in the Senate. Approximately 45 years ago, in the 95th Congress (1977-1978), 
there were 18 women in the House, and 3 in the Senate. 
African American Members 
There are a record 60 African American Members (11.1% of the total membership) in the 117th 
Congress, 3 more than at the beginning of the 116th Congress.27 Fifty-seven serve in the House, 
including two Delegates, and three serve in the Senate. This number includes two Representatives 
who are of African American and Asian  ancestry, and two Representatives who are of African 
American and Hispanic ancestry. In this report, each of these three Members is counted as 
                                              
24 Detailed religious  affiliation information for Members of the 117 th Congress, and comparisons to the U.S. general 
population, are available at https://www.pewforum.org/2021/01/04/faith-on-the-hill-2021/.  
25 T he 117th Congress began  with 148 women Members;  one woman House Member was  sworn in in February 2021, 
one woman Senator resigned  in January 2021 to become Vice  President, and another woman Senator’s temporary term 
ended  in January 2021. In March 2021, two women House  Members resigned  to join the President’s Cabinet, and an 
additional woman House Member was  sworn in in April 2021, followed by  another in June 2021.  
26 For more information, see CRS  Report RL30261, Women in Congress, 1917-2020: Service Dates and Committee 
Assignm ents by Mem ber, and Lists by State and Congress, by Jennifer E. Manning and Ida A. Brudnick ;  and the Office 
of the House Historian’s Women in Congress  website  at http://history.house.gov/Exhibition-and-Publications/WIC/
Women-in-Congress/.  
27 T he 117th Congress began  with 62 African American Members. In January 2021, after the 117 th Congress began, one 
African American House  Member resigned  to become Senior Advisor and Director of Public Engagement in the Biden 
Administration, one Senator resigned to become Vice  President of the United States, and another Senator was sworn in. 
in March 2021, one African American House Member resigned  to become Secretary of Housing  and Urban 
Development. One African American House Member died  in April 2021, and another was sworn in in May 2021.  
For more information, see the Office of the House Historian’s Black Am ericans in Congress  website  at 
https://history.house.gov/baic/. 
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Membership of the 117th  Congress: A Profile 
 
belonging to two ethnic groups. Fifty-five of the African American House Members, including 
two Delegates, are Democrats, and two are Republicans. Two of the Senators are Democrats and 
one is Republican. Twenty-six African American women, including two Delegates, serve in 
Congress, al  in the House.28 
By comparison, approximately 35 years ago in the 99th Congress (1985-1986), 21 African 
American Members served in the House, and none in the Senate. Sixty years ago, in the 87th 
Congress (1961-1962), there were 4 African American Members of Congress, al  serving in the 
House. 
Hispanic/Latino American Members 
There are 54 Hispanic or Latino Members in the 117th Congress, 10.0% of the total membership 
and a record number.29 Forty-seven serve in the House, including two Delegates and the Resident 
Commissioner, and 7 in the Senate. These numbers include two House Members who are also of 
Asian descent, and two House Members also of African ancestry; these Members are counted in 
both ethnic categories in this report. Of the Members of the House, 34 are Democrats (including 2 
Delegates) and 13 are Republicans (including the Resident Commissioner). Fourteen are women, 
including the Resident Commissioner. Of the seven Hispanic Senators (three Republicans, four 
Democrats), one is a woman. By comparison, approximately 35 years ago in the 99th Congress 
(1985-1986), 14 Hispanic or Latino Members served in Congress. Al  14 were male Members of 
the House. 
Asian/Pacific Islander American Members 
Twenty-one Members of the 117th Congress (3.9% of the total membership) are of Asian, South 
Asian, or Pacific Islander ancestry.30 Nineteen of them (16 Democrats, 3 Republicans) serve in 
the House, and 2 (both Democrats) serve in the Senate. These numbers include two House 
Members who are also of African American ancestry, two House Members also of Hispanic 
ancestry, and one Member who is also Native Hawai an (Native American); these Members are 
counted in both ethnic categories in this report. Of those serving in the House, three are 
Delegates. Eleven of the Asian, Pacific Islander, or South Asian American Members are female: 
nine in the House, and two in the Senate. By comparison, approximately 35 years ago in the 99th 
Congress (1985-1986), there were five Asian/Pacific Islander Americans in the House, and two in 
the Senate. 
                                              
28 For more information, see CRS  Report RL30378, African American Members of the U.S. Congress: 1870-2020, by 
Ida A. Brudnick  and Jennifer E. Manning, and  the Office of the House Historian’s Black Am ericans in Congress 
website  at https://history.house.gov/baic/. Due to differences in data collection or characterization, demographic data in 
other studies on Members of Congress may differ from those presented in this report.  
29 T his number includes  four House Members  and one Senator who are of Portuguese ancestry and belong, or have 
belonged,  to the Congressional Hispanic Caucus  or the Congressional Hispanic Conference. For more information, see 
the Office of the House Historian’s Hispanic Am ericans in Congress website  at http://history.house.gov/Exhibitions-
and-Publications/HAIC/Hispanic-Americans-in-Congress/. Due to differences in data collection or characterization, 
demographic data in other studies on Members of Congress  may differ from those presented in this report.  
30 T he 117th Congress began  with a record 22 Asian/Pacific Islander American Members; one Senator resigned in 
January 2021 to become Vice  President of the United States. 
For more information, see the Office of the House Historian’s Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in Congress 
website  at http://history.house.gov/apa/. Due to differences in data collection or characterization, demographic data in 
other studies on Members of Congress may differ from those presented in this report.  
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American Indian Members 
There are five American Indian (Native American) or Native Hawai an Members of the 117th 
Congress: three Republicans and two Democrats, al  in the House.31 This is .9% of the total 
congressional membership, and a record number. 
Foreign Birth 
Twenty-eight Representatives and five Senators (6.1% of the 117th Congress) were born outside 
the United States. Their places of birth include Canada, Cuba, Germany, Guatemala, Japan, Peru, 
and India. Some of these Members were born to American citizens working or serving abroad.32 
The U.S. Constitution requires that Representatives be citizens for seven years and Senators be 
citizens for nine years before they take office.33 
Military Service 
At the beginning of the 117th Congress, there were 91 individuals (16.8% of the total 
membership) who had served or were serving in the military, 5 fewer than at the beginning of the 
116th Congress (96 Members). According to lists compiled by CQ, the House as of January 2021 
had 75 veterans (including 4 female Members, as wel  as 1 Delegate); the Senate had 16 veterans, 
including 2 women.34 These Members’ service included tours of duty in the Vietnam War and the 
Persian Gulf War, and combat or peacekeeping missions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Kosovo. Six 
House Members and one Senator are stil  serving in the reserves, and seven House Members are 
stil  serving in the National Guard. Two of the six female veterans are combat veterans. 
The number of veterans in the 117th Congress reflects the trend of steady decline in recent 
decades in the number of Members who have served in the military. For example, 64% of the 
Members of the 97th Congress (1981-1982) were veterans, and in the 92nd Congress (1971-1972), 
73% of the Members were veterans. According to the Military Times, the 117th Congress veterans 
numbers are at the “lowest since the start of World War II.”35 
                                              
31 T he 117th Congress began  with six Native American or Native Hawaiian  Members. One Native American House 
Member resigned  in March 2021 to become Secretary of the Interior. One Native Hawaiian Member is also of Asian 
ancestry and is  counted in both ethnic categories in this report. 
T his number includes  only Members who  are enrolled members of federally recognized tribes. For more information, 
see CRS  congressional distribution memorandum, Mem bers of Congress of Am erican Indian Descent, by Jennifer 
Manning, available  t o congressional offices upon request. 
32 For more information, see Pew Research Center, “Immigrants and Children of Immigrants make up at least 14% of 
the 117th Congress,” February 12, 2021, at https://www.pewresearch.org/fact -tank/2021/02/12/immigrants-and-
children-of-immigrants-make-up-at-least-14-of-the-117th-congress/; Office of the Senate Historian’s Senators Born 
Outside the United States list at https://www.senate.gov/senators/Foreign_born.htm; and the Library of the House of 
Representatives’ Foreign Born list at https://clerk.house.gov/documents/Foreign_Born.pdf. 
33 Article I, Section 2, clause  2, and Article I, Section 3, clause  3 of the U.S. Constitution.  
34 CQ, “117th Congress: House  Military Veterans,” at https://plus.cq.com/members/factfile/house-veterans; and “117th 
Congress:  Senate Military Veterans,” at https://plus.cq.com/members/factfile/senate-veterans. Both lists are frequently 
updated to reflect changes since the 117th Congress convened. 
35 For more information and a list of current  veteran Members, see the Military Times, “Veterans in the 117th Congress, 
by the numbers,” December 28, 2020, at https://www.militarytimes.com/news/pentagon-congress/2020/12/28/veterans-
in-the-117th-congress-by-the-numbers. 
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For summary information on the demographics of Members in selected past Congresses, 
including age trends, occupational backgrounds, military veteran status, and educational 
attainment, see CRS Report R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Member 
Characteristics Since 1945, coordinated by R. Eric Petersen.36 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Jennifer E. Manning 
   
Senior Research Librarian 
    
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should n ot be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in 
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or 
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to 
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
                                              
36 Because  of differences in data sources  used,  some demographic information may differ between CRS  Report 
R42365, Representatives and Senators: Trends in Mem ber Characteristics  Since 1945 , coordinated by R. Eric Petersen, 
this report, and other demographic studies of Congress.   
In addition to the CQ Mem ber Profiles, other sources of demographic information for the 117th Congress include  Vital 
Statistics on Congress at https://www.brookings.edu/multi-chapter-report/vital-statistics-on-congress/, a joint project of 
the American Enterprise Institute and the Brookings Institution ; and the Library of the House of Representatives’ 
“Member Demographics” web  page at https://clerk.house.gov/Members#Demographics, which features lists of House 
Members such  as “117th Congress—Lawyers” and “117th Congress—Former Mayors.” T he Secretary of the Senate also 
maint ains a collection of lists about Senators at https://www.senate.gov/reference/Senators.htm.  
For summary information, see Pew Research Center Fact  T ank’s “ Racial, ethnic diversity increases yet again with the 
117th Congress,” at  https://www.pewresearch.org/fact -tank/2021/01/28/racial-ethnic-diversity-increases-yet-again-with-
the-117th-congress/. 
 
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