List of new members of the 102nd United States Congress

Last updated

The 102nd United States Congress began on January 3, 1991. There were three new senators (one Democrat, two Republicans) and 43 new representatives (24 Democrats, 18 Republicans, one independent), as well as one new delegate (a Democrat) at the start of the first session. Additionally, six senators (five Democrats, one Republican) and nine representatives (five Democrats, four Republicans) took office on various dates in order to fill vacancies during the 102nd Congress before it ended on January 3, 1993.

Contents

Senate

Took office January 3, 1991

StateImageSenatorSenioritySwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
Colorado HankBrown.jpg Hank Brown (R)1st
(98th overall)
No
Open seat; replaced William L. Armstrong (R)
U.S. House of Representatives [lower-alpha 1]
Colorado Senate
1940 [1]
Idaho Larry Craig 1989.png Larry Craig (R)2nd
(99th overall)
No
Open seat; replaced James A. McClure (R)
U.S. House of Representatives [lower-alpha 2]
Idaho Senate
1945 [2]
Minnesota Paul Wellstone.jpg Paul Wellstone (DFL)3rd
(100th overall)
Yes
Defeated Rudy Boschwitz (R)
Academic1944 [3]

Took office during the 102nd Congress

StateImageSenatorTook officeSwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
California John F Seymour (cropped).jpg John Seymour (R)January 10, 1991No
Appointed; replaced Pete Wilson (R)
California State Senate
Mayor of Anaheim
1937 [4]
Pennsylvania Harriswofford (cropped).jpg Harris Wofford (D)May 9, 1991No
Appointed; replaced John Heinz (D)
Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor
Pennsylvania Democratic Party Chair
1926 [5]
North Dakota JocelynBirchBurdick (cropped).jpg Jocelyn Burdick (D–NPL)September 16, 1992No
Appointed; replaced Quentin Burdick (D–NPL)
Radio announcer1922 [6]
California Dianne Feinstein congressional portrait.jpg Dianne Feinstein (D)November 10, 1992 Yes
Defeated John Seymour (R)
Mayor of San Francisco
San Francisco Board of Supervisors
1933 [7]
North Dakota Byron Dorgan official photo.jpg Byron Dorgan (D–NPL)December 15, 1992 No
Open seat; replaced Kent Conrad (D–NPL) [lower-alpha 3]
U.S. House of Representatives [lower-alpha 4]
North Dakota Tax Commissioner
1942 [8]
Tennessee Senator Harlan Mathews (D-TN).jpg Harlan Mathews (D)January 2, 1993No
Appointed; replaced Al Gore (D)
Tennessee State Treasurer 1927 [9]

House of Representatives

Took office January 3, 1991

DistrictRepresentativeSwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
Alabama 5 Robert E. Cramer (D)No District Attorney 1947 [10]
Arkansas 2 Ray Thornton (D)Yes U.S. Representative [lower-alpha 5] 1928 [11]
California 1 Frank Riggs (R)YesReal estate executive1950 [12]
California 14 John Doolittle (R)No State Senator 1950 [13]
California 17 Cal Dooley (D)YesRancher1954 [14]
California 29 Maxine Waters (D)No State Assemblywoman 1938 [15]
California 44 Duke Cunningham (R)Yes Navy Commander 1941 [16]
Colorado 4 Wayne Allard (R)No State Senator 1943 [17]
Connecticut 3 Rosa DeLauro (D)NoChief of staff1943 [18]
Connecticut 5 Gary Franks (R)No Alderman 1953 [19]
Florida 2 Pete Peterson (D)YesContractor1935 [20]
Florida 11 Jim Bacchus (D)NoAttorney1949 [21]
Hawaii 1 Neil Abercrombie (D)Yes U.S. Representative [lower-alpha 6] 1938 [22]
Idaho 1 Larry LaRocco (D)YesBroker1946 [23]
Illinois 16 John W. Cox Jr. (D)Yes State Attorney 1947 [24]
Indiana 3 Tim Roemer (D)YesCongressional staffer1956 [25]
Iowa 2 Jim Nussle (R)No District Attorney 1960 [26]
Kansas 5 Dick Nichols (R)NoBanker1926 [27]
Louisiana 2 William J. Jefferson (D)No State Senator 1947 [28]
Maine 1 Thomas Andrews (D)No State Senator 1953 [29]
Maryland 1 Wayne Gilchrest (R)YesEducator1946 [30]
Michigan 10 Dave Camp (R)No State Representative 1953 [31]
Michigan 13 Barbara-Rose Collins (D)No City Councilor 1939 [32]
Minnesota 3 Jim Ramstad (R)No State Senator 1946 [33]
Minnesota 7 Collin Peterson (DFL)Yes State Senator 1944 [34]
Missouri 2 Joan Kelly Horn (D)YesReal estate developer1936 [35]
Nebraska 3 Bill Barrett (R)No State Senator 1929 [36]
New Hampshire 1 Bill Zeliff (R)NoBusinessman1936 [37]
New Hampshire 2 Richard Swett (D)YesArchitect1957 [38]
New Jersey 12 Dick Zimmer (R)No State Senator 1944 [39]
North Carolina 11 Charles H. Taylor (R)Yes State Senator 1941 [40]
Ohio 1 Charlie Luken (D)No City Councilor 1951 [41]
Ohio 7 Dave Hobson (R)No State Senator 1936 [42]
Ohio 8 John Boehner (R)No State Representative 1949 [43]
Oklahoma 3 William K. Brewster (D)No State Representative 1941 [44]
Oregon 5 Michael J. Kopetski (D)Yes State Representative 1949 [45]
Pennsylvania 18 Rick Santorum (R)YesLawyer1958 [46]
Rhode Island 2 Jack Reed (D)Yes State Senator 1949 [47]
Texas 11 Chet Edwards (D)No State Senator 1951 [48]
Utah 3 Bill Orton (D)YesLawyer1948 [49]
Vermont at-large Bernie Sanders (I)Yes Mayor of Burlington 1941 [50]
Virginia 8 Jim Moran (D)Yes Mayor of Alexandria 1945 [51]
Wisconsin 2 Scott L. Klug (R)YesJournalist1953 [52]

Non-voting delegates

DistrictDelegateSwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
District of Columbia at-large Eleanor Holmes Norton (D)NoChair of the EEOC 1937 [53]

Took office during the 102nd Congress

DistrictRepresentativeTook officeSwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
Texas 3 Sam Johnson (R)May 8, 1991 No State Representative 1930 [54]
Massachusetts 1 John Olver (D)June 18, 1991Yes State Senator 1936 [55]
Illinois 15 Thomas W. Ewing (R)July 2, 1991No State Representative 1935 [56]
Arizona 2 Ed Pastor (D)October 3, 1991No County Supervisor 1943 [57]
Pennsylvania 2 Lucien Blackwell (D)November 5, 1991No City Councilor 1931 [58]
Virginia 7 George Allen (R)November 5, 1991 No State Delegate 1952 [59]
New York 17 Jerry Nadler (D)November 3, 1992No State Assemblyman 1947 [60]
North Carolina 1 Eva Clayton (D)November 3, 1992No County Commissioner 1934 [61]

Non-voting delegates

DistrictDelegateTook officeSwitched partyPrior backgroundBirth yearRef
Puerto Rico at-large Antonio Colorado (PD/D)March 4, 1992No Secretary of State of Puerto Rico 1939 [62]

See also

Notes

  1. Elected to the 97th Congress, serving from 1981 to 1991 in Colorado's 4th district .
  2. Elected to the 97th Congress, serving from 1981 to 1991 in Idaho's 1st district .
  3. Conrad had planned to retire at the end of this Congress and initially not to run for re-election; however, he subsequently decided to run in the Class I seat for the special election to succeed appointee Jocelyn Burdick. He then won to succeed her and retained his seniority.
  4. Elected to the 97th Congress, serving from 1981 to 1992 in North Dakota's at-large district .
  5. Previously elected to the 93rd Congress, serving from 1973 to 1979 in the 4th district .
  6. Previously elected to the 99th Congress, serving from 1986 to 1987.

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Preceded by New members of the 102nd Congress
1991–1993
Succeeded by