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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.
State | Image | Senator | Seniority | Switched party | Prior background | Birth year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado | 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 (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 (DFL) | 3rd (100th overall) | Yes Defeated Rudy Boschwitz (R) | Academic | 1944 | [3] |
State | Image | Senator | Took office | Switched party | Prior background | Birth year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
California | John Seymour (R) | January 10, 1991 | No Appointed; replaced Pete Wilson (R) | California State Senate Mayor of Anaheim | 1937 | [4] | |
Pennsylvania | Harris Wofford (D) | May 9, 1991 | No Appointed; replaced John Heinz (D) | Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor Pennsylvania Democratic Party Chair | 1926 | [5] | |
North Dakota | Jocelyn Burdick (D–NPL) | September 16, 1992 | No Appointed; replaced Quentin Burdick (D–NPL) | Radio announcer | 1922 | [6] | |
California | 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 (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 | Harlan Mathews (D) | January 2, 1993 | No Appointed; replaced Al Gore (D) | Tennessee State Treasurer | 1927 | [9] |
District | Delegate | Switched party | Prior background | Birth year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
District of Columbia at-large | Eleanor Holmes Norton (D) | No | Chair of the EEOC | 1937 | [53] |
District | Representative | Took office | Switched party | Prior background | Birth year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Texas 3 | Sam Johnson (R) | May 8, 1991 | No | State Representative | 1930 | [54] |
Massachusetts 1 | John Olver (D) | June 18, 1991 | Yes | State Senator | 1936 | [55] |
Illinois 15 | Thomas W. Ewing (R) | July 2, 1991 | No | State Representative | 1935 | [56] |
Arizona 2 | Ed Pastor (D) | October 3, 1991 | No | County Supervisor | 1943 | [57] |
Pennsylvania 2 | Lucien Blackwell (D) | November 5, 1991 | No | 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, 1992 | No | State Assemblyman | 1947 | [60] |
North Carolina 1 | Eva Clayton (D) | November 3, 1992 | No | County Commissioner | 1934 | [61] |
District | Delegate | Took office | Switched party | Prior background | Birth year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Puerto Rico at-large | Antonio Colorado (PD/D) | March 4, 1992 | No | Secretary of State of Puerto Rico | 1939 | [62] |
The 1982 United States Senate elections were held on November 2, 1982. They were elections for the United States Senate following Republican gains in 1980. The 33 Senate seats of Class 1 were up for election in 1982. A total of four seats changed hands between parties, with Democrats winning seats in New Jersey and New Mexico, and Republicans taking seats in Nevada and the seat of the lone independent, Senator Harry Byrd Jr., in Virginia. Democrats made a net gain of one seat in the elections, while Republicans stayed at 54 seats for a majority. A special election was also held in Washington state in 1983 that gave Republicans a seat that was previously held by a Democrat, bringing their majority to 55-45.
The 1976 United States Senate elections was an election for the United States Senate. Held on November 2, the 33 seats of Class 1 were contested in regular elections. They coincided with Democrat Jimmy Carter's presidential election and the United States Bicentennial celebration. Although almost half of the seats decided in this election changed parties, Carter's narrow victory did not provide coattails for the Democratic Party.
The 1972 United States Senate elections were held on November 7, with the 33 seats of Class 2 contested in regular elections. They coincided with the landslide re-election of Republican President Richard Nixon. Despite Nixon's landslide victory, Democrats increased their majority by two seats. The Democrats picked up open seats in Kentucky and South Dakota, and defeated four incumbent senators: Gordon Allott of Colorado, J. Caleb Boggs of Delaware, Jack Miller of Iowa, and Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. The Republicans picked up open seats in New Mexico, North Carolina, and Oklahoma, and defeated one incumbent, William B. Spong Jr. of Virginia.
The 1960 United States Senate elections coincided with the election of John F. Kennedy as president on November 8, 1960. The 33 seats of Class 2 were contested in regular elections. A special election was also held on June 28, 1960, for a mid-term vacancy in North Dakota. The Republicans gained two seats at the expense of the Democrats. However, Republican Senator-elect Edwin Keith Thomson of Wyoming died December 9, 1960, and was replaced by appointee Democratic John J. Hickey at the beginning of the Congress, reducing Republican gains to one seat.
The 1956 United States Senate elections were elections for the United States Senate that coincided with the re-election of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The 32 seats of Class 3 were contested in regular elections, and three special elections were held to fill vacancies. Although Democrats gained two seats in regular elections, the Republicans gained two seats in special elections, leaving the party balance of the chamber unchanged.
Quentin Northrup Burdick was an American lawyer and politician. A member of the North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party, he represented North Dakota in the U.S. House of Representatives (1959–1960) and the U.S. Senate (1960–1992). At the time of his death, he was the third longest-serving senator among current members of the Senate.
John Strode Barbour Jr. was a slave owner, U.S. Representative and a Senator from Virginia, and fought against the United States in the Confederate Army. He took power in Virginia from the short-lived Readjuster Party in the late 1880s, forming the first political machine of "Conservative Democrats", whose power was to last 80 years until the demise of the Byrd Organization in the late 1960s.