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80th United States Congress

1947–1949 U.S. Congress


1947–1949 U.S. Congress

FieldValue
imageUSCapitol1956.jpg
imagedate1956
number80th
startJanuary 3, 1947
endJanuary 3, 1949
vpVacant
pro temArthur Vandenberg (R)
speakerJoseph W. Martin Jr. (R)
senators96
reps435
delegates3
s-majorityRepublican
h-majorityRepublican
sessionnumber11st
sessionstart1January 3, 1947
sessionend1December 19, 1947
sessionnumber2Special
sessionstart2November 17, 1947
sessionend2December 19, 1947
sessionnumber32nd
sessionstart3January 6, 1948
sessionend3December 31, 1948
sessionnumber4Special
sessionstart4July 26, 1948
sessionend4August 7, 1948
previous79th
next81st

|s-majority = Republican |h-majority = Republican The 80th United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C. from January 3, 1947, to January 3, 1949, during the third and fourth years of 33rd President Harry S. Truman's administration (1945–1953). This congressional term featured the most recent special Senate sessions. The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the 1940 United States census.

The Republicans won the majority in both chambers, marking the first time since the 71st Congress of 1929–1931 that they held full control of Congress, and the first time since the 72nd Congress of 1931–1933 that they held control of either of the two chambers. This also ended a 14-year Democratic overall federal government trifecta period, dating back to the 73rd Congress (1933–1935) when Truman's predecessor Franklin D. Roosevelt took office. This ties with the previous 14-year Republican trifecta from 1897 to 1911 as the longest trifectas of Congress, and is the last time (as of the year 2024) that a trifecta was achieved that lasted longer than a decade.

Although the 80th Congress passed a total of 906 public bills, President Truman nicknamed it during his campaign speeches and remarks as the "Do Nothing Congress" and, during the 1948 elections, campaigned as much against it as against his formal opponent, Thomas E. Dewey of New York, the Republican presidential nominee. The 80th Congress did, however, pass several significant bills with bipartisan support, most famously the Truman Doctrine (on Greece-Turkey anti-communists' aid in the developing Cold War with former ally the Soviet Union), the Marshall Plan (aid for devastated Europe after World War II), and the Taft–Hartley Act of 1947 on labor relations (over Truman's veto), but it opposed most of Truman's Fair Deal domestic programs bills.

Major events

  • January 3, 1947: Proceedings of the United States Congress were televised for the first time.
  • March 12, 1947: In a Joint Session of Congress, President Truman proclaimed the Truman Doctrine.
  • July 18, 1947: The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands in the southwest Pacific Ocean (occupied since 1943-1945 of the Second World War), entered into a trusteeship with the new international organization United Nations and administered by the United States for the next few decades.
  • November 24, 1947: The House of Representatives approved citations of contempt of Congress against the so-called Hollywood 10.
  • July 20, 1948: President Truman issued the second peacetime military draft in the United States amid increasing tensions of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, which endured until the early 1970s.
  • July 26, 1948:
    • Turnip Day Session begins, special session called by Truman on July 15, 1948, before November elections;
    • President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, ending racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces since the Reconstruction era of the 1860s/1870s.
  • August 25, 1948: House of Representatives Un-American Activities Committee held the first-ever televised congressional hearing: "Confrontation Day" between alleged Communist sympathizers from the 1930s of Time magazine journalist Whittaker Chambers and former friend State Department official Alger Hiss.
  • November 2, 1948: United States general elections, 1948:
    • Presidential election: Democrat incumbent President Harry Truman, in an upset victory, defeated Republican Thomas E. Dewey (Governor of New York), and third and fourth minority parties candidates: Governor of South Carolina (and longtime future U.S. Senator) Strom Thurmond, and former Vice President Henry A. Wallace;
    • Democrats regained majority control of both the Senate and the House of Representatives for the next two years in the coming 81st Congress.

Major legislation

Main article: List of United States federal legislation, 1901-2001

  • May 22, 1947: Assistance to Greece and Turkey Act (Truman Doctrine), Sess. 1, ch. 81, ,
  • June 23, 1947: Taft–Hartley Act, Sess. 1, ch. 120, ,
  • July 18, 1947: Presidential Succession Act of 1947, Sess. 1, ch. 264, ,
  • July 26, 1947: National Security Act of 1947, Sess. 1, ch. 343, ,
  • August 7, 1947: Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands, Sess. 1, ch. 513, ,
  • January 27, 1948: United States Information and Educational Exchange Act, Sess. 2, ch. 36, ,
  • April 3, 1948: Foreign Assistance Act (Marshall Plan), , Sess. 2, ch. 169,
  • April 3, 1948: Greek-Turkish Assistance Act of 1948 (Marshall Plan), Sess. 2, ch. 169, , Title III,
  • May 26, 1948: Civil Air Patrol Act, Sess. 2, ch. 349, ,
  • June 12, 1948: Women's Armed Services Integration Act, Sess. 2, ch. 449, ,
  • June 17, 1948: Reed-Bulwinkle Act, Sess. 2, ch. 491, ,
  • June 25, 1948: Codify and enact into law Title 3 of the United States Code"The President", Sess. 2, ch. 644, ,
  • June 28, 1948: Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act of 1948, ,
  • June 30, 1948: Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Sess. 2, ch. 758, ,
  • July 3, 1948: War Claims Act of 1948, Sess. 2, ch. 826, ,
  • July 3, 1948: Agricultural Act of 1948, Sess. 2, ch. 827, ,

Constitutional amendments

  • March 21, 1947: Approved an amendment to the United States Constitution setting a term limit for election and overall time of service to the office of President of the United States, and submitted it to the state legislatures for ratification
    • Amendment was later ratified on February 27, 1951, becoming the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution

Party summary

Senate

House of Representatives

From the beginning to the end of this Congress, there was no net change in party power. The Democrats lost one seat, which remained vacant until the next Congress.

AffiliationParty (Shading indicates majority caucus)TotalRepublicanDemocraticAmerican LaborProgressiveVacantEnd of [previous Congress](79th-united-states-congress)429nowrapBegin433nowrapEnd430Final voting share56.7%43.1%0.2%0.0%Beginning of the [next Congress](81st-united-states-congress)434
Republican Party (United States)}}"Democratic Party (United States)}}"American Labor Party}}"Progressive Party (United States)}}"
191236116
245187102
24218625
171262101

Leadership

Senate

  • President: Vacant
  • President pro tempore: Arthur Vandenberg (R)

Majority (Republican) leadership

  • Majority leader: Wallace H. White Jr.
  • Majority whip: Kenneth S. Wherry
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Eugene Millikin
  • Republican Conference Secretary: Milton Young
  • National Senatorial Committee Chair: Owen Brewster
  • Policy Committee Chairman: Robert A. Taft

Minority (Democratic) leadership

  • Minority leader: Alben W. Barkley
  • Minority whip: Scott W. Lucas
  • Democratic Caucus Secretary: Brien McMahon
  • Policy Committee Chairman: Alben W. Barkley

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)

Majority (Republican) leadership

  • Majority Leader: Charles A. Halleck
  • Republican Whip: Leslie C. Arends
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Roy O. Woodruff
  • Republican Campaign Committee Chairman: Leonard W. Hall

Minority (Democratic) leadership

  • Minority Leader: Sam Rayburn
  • Democratic Whip: John W. McCormack
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Aime Forand
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: Michael J. Kirwan

Caucuses

  • House Democratic Caucus
  • Senate Democratic Caucus

Members

Senate

Main article: List of United States senators in the 80th Congress

Senators are popularly elected statewide every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election, In this Congress, Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1948; Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1950; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1952.

[[List of United States senators from Alabama|Alabama]]

: 2. John J. Sparkman (D) : 3. J. Lister Hill (D)

[[List of United States senators from Arizona|Arizona]]

: 1. Ernest McFarland (D) : 3. Carl Hayden (D)

[[List of United States senators from Arkansas|Arkansas]]

: 2. John L. McClellan (D) : 3. J. William Fulbright (D)

[[List of United States senators from California|California]]

: 1. William Knowland (R) : 3. Sheridan Downey (D)

[[List of United States senators from Colorado|Colorado]]

: 2. Edwin C. Johnson (D) : 3. Eugene Millikin (R)

[[List of United States senators from Connecticut|Connecticut]]

: 1. Raymond E. Baldwin (R) : 3. Brien McMahon (D)

[[List of United States senators from Delaware|Delaware]]

: 1. John J. Williams (R) : 2. C. Douglass Buck (R)

[[List of United States senators from Florida|Florida]]

: 1. Spessard Holland (D) : 3. Claude Pepper (D)

[[List of United States senators from Georgia|Georgia]]

: 2. Walter F. George (D) : 3. Richard Russell Jr. (D)

[[List of United States senators from Idaho|Idaho]]

: 2. Henry Dworshak (R) : 3. Glen H. Taylor (D)

[[List of United States senators from Illinois|Illinois]]

: 2. Charles W. Brooks (R) : 3. Scott W. Lucas (D)

[[List of United States senators from Indiana|Indiana]]

: 1. William E. Jenner (R) : 3. Homer E. Capehart (R)

[[List of United States senators from Iowa|Iowa]]

: 2. George A. Wilson (R) : 3. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R)

[[List of United States senators from Kansas|Kansas]]

: 2. Arthur Capper (R) : 3. Clyde M. Reed (R)

[[List of United States senators from Kentucky|Kentucky]]

: 2. John Sherman Cooper (R) : 3. Alben Barkley (D)

[[List of United States senators from Louisiana|Louisiana]]

: 2. Allen J. Ellender (D) : 3. John H. Overton (D), until May 14, 1948 :: William C. Feazel (D), May 18, 1948 – December 30, 1948 :: Russell B. Long (D), from December 31, 1948

[[List of United States senators from Maine|Maine]]

: 1. Ralph Owen Brewster (R) : 2. Wallace H. White Jr. (R)

[[List of United States senators from Maryland|Maryland]]

: 1. Herbert O'Conor (D) : 3. Millard Tydings (D)

[[List of United States senators from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]

: 1. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R) : 2. Leverett Saltonstall (R)

[[List of United States senators from Michigan|Michigan]]

: 1. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R) : 2. Homer S. Ferguson (R)

[[List of United States senators from Minnesota|Minnesota]]

: 1. Edward John Thye (R) : 2. Joseph H. Ball (R)

[[List of United States senators from Mississippi|Mississippi]]

: 1. Theodore G. Bilbo (D), until August 21, 1947 :: John C. Stennis (D), from November 17, 1947 : 2. James Eastland (D)

[[List of United States senators from Missouri|Missouri]]

: 1. James P. Kem (R) : 3. Forrest C. Donnell (R)

[[List of United States senators from Montana|Montana]]

: 1. Zales Ecton (R) : 2. James E. Murray (D)

[[List of United States senators from Nebraska|Nebraska]]

: 1. Hugh A. Butler (R) : 2. Kenneth S. Wherry (R)

[[List of United States senators from Nevada|Nevada]]

: 1. George W. Malone (R) : 3. Patrick A. McCarran (D)

[[List of United States senators from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]

: 2. Styles Bridges (R) : 3. Charles W. Tobey (R)

[[List of United States senators from New Jersey|New Jersey]]

: 1. Howard Alexander Smith (R) : 2. Albert W. Hawkes (R)

[[List of United States senators from New Mexico|New Mexico]]

: 1. Dennis Chávez (D) : 2. Carl Hatch (D)

[[List of United States senators from New York|New York]]

: 1. Irving Ives (R) : 3. Robert F. Wagner (D)

[[List of United States senators from North Carolina|North Carolina]]

: 2. William B. Umstead (D), until December 30, 1948 :: J. Melville Broughton (D), from December 31, 1948 : 3. Clyde R. Hoey (D)

[[List of United States senators from North Dakota|North Dakota]]

: 1. William Langer (R-NPL) : 3. Milton Young (R)

[[List of United States senators from Ohio|Ohio]]

: 1. John W. Bricker (R) : 3. Robert A. Taft (R)

[[List of United States senators from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]]

: 2. Edward H. Moore (R) : 3. Elmer Thomas (D)

[[List of United States senators from Oregon|Oregon]]

: 2. Guy Cordon (R) : 3. Wayne Morse (R)

[[List of United States senators from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]

: 1. Edward Martin (R) : 3. Francis J. Myers (D)

[[List of United States senators from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]

: 1. J. Howard McGrath (D) : 2. Theodore F. Green (D)

[[List of United States senators from South Carolina|South Carolina]]

: 2. Burnet R. Maybank (D) : 3. Olin D. Johnston (D)

[[List of United States senators from South Dakota|South Dakota]]

: 2. Harlan J. Bushfield (R), until September 27, 1948 :: Vera C. Bushfield (R), October 6, 1948 – December 26, 1948 :: Karl E. Mundt (R), from December 31, 1948 : 3. John Chandler Gurney (R)

[[List of United States senators from Tennessee|Tennessee]]

: 1. Kenneth McKellar (D) : 2. Tom Stewart (D)

[[List of United States senators from Texas|Texas]]

: 1. Tom T. Connally (D) : 2. W. Lee O'Daniel (D)

[[List of United States senators from Utah|Utah]]

: 1. Arthur Vivian Watkins (R) : 3. Elbert D. Thomas (D)

[[List of United States senators from Vermont|Vermont]]

: 1. Ralph Flanders (R) : 3. George Aiken (R)

[[List of United States senators from Virginia|Virginia]]

: 1. Harry F. Byrd (D) : 2. A. Willis Robertson (D)

[[List of United States senators from Washington|Washington]]

: 1. Harry P. Cain (R) : 3. Warren G. Magnuson (D)

[[List of United States senators from West Virginia|West Virginia]]

: 1. Harley M. Kilgore (D) : 2. Chapman Revercomb (R)

[[List of United States senators from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]]

: 1. Joseph McCarthy (R) : 3. Alexander Wiley (R)

[[List of United States senators from Wyoming|Wyoming]]

: 1. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D) : 2. Edward V. Robertson (R)

Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 80th Congress in January 1947

]]

'''Percentage of members''' from each party by state at the opening of the 80th Congress, ranging from dark blue (most Democratic) to dark red (most Republican).

House of Representatives

Main article: List of United States representatives in the 80th Congress

The names of representatives elected statewide at-large, are preceded by an "At-large", and the names of those elected from districts, whether plural or single member, are preceded by their district numbers.

The congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress.

[[List of United States representatives from Alabama|Alabama]]

: . Frank W. Boykin (D) : . George M. Grant (D) : . George W. Andrews (D) : . Sam Hobbs (D) : . Albert Rains (D) : . Pete Jarman (D) : . Carter Manasco (D) : . Robert E. Jones Jr. (D), from January 28, 1947 : . Laurie C. Battle (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Arizona|Arizona]]

: . John R. Murdock (D) : . Richard F. Harless (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Arkansas|Arkansas]]

: . Ezekiel C. Gathings (D) : . Wilbur Mills (D) : . James William Trimble (D) : . William Fadjo Cravens (D) : . Brooks Hays (D) : . William F. Norrell (D) : . Oren Harris (D)

[[List of United States representatives from California|California]]

: . Clarence F. Lea (D) : . Clair Engle (D) : . J. Leroy Johnson (R) : . Franck R. Havenner (D) : . Richard J. Welch (R) : . George P. Miller (D) : . John J. Allen Jr. (R) : . Jack Z. Anderson (R) : . Bertrand W. Gearhart (R) : . Alfred J. Elliott (D) : . Ernest K. Bramblett (R) : . Richard Nixon (R) : . Norris Poulson (R) : . Helen Gahagan Douglas (D) : . Gordon L. McDonough (R) : . Donald L. Jackson (R) : . Cecil R. King (D) : . Willis W. Bradley (R) : . Chester E. Holifield (D) : . John Carl Hinshaw (R) : . Harry R. Sheppard (D) : . John R. Phillips (R) : . Charles K. Fletcher (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Colorado|Colorado]]

: . John A. Carroll (D) : . William S. Hill (R) : . John Chenoweth (R) : . Robert F. Rockwell (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Connecticut|Connecticut]]

: . William J. Miller (R) : . Horace Seely-Brown Jr. (R) : . Ellsworth Foote (R) : . John Davis Lodge (R) : . James T. Patterson (R) : . Antoni Sadlak (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Delaware|Delaware]]

: . J. Caleb Boggs (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Florida|Florida]]

: . J. Hardin Peterson (D) : . Emory H. Price (D) : . Robert L. F. Sikes (D) : . George Smathers (D) : . Joe Hendricks (D) : . Dwight L. Rogers (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Georgia|Georgia]]

: . Prince Hulon Preston Jr. (D) : . Edward E. Cox (D) : . Stephen Pace (D) : . Albert Sidney Camp (D) : . James C. Davis (D) : . Carl Vinson (D) : . Henderson Lovelace Lanham (D) : . William McDonald Wheeler (D) : . John S. Wood (D) : . Paul Brown (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Idaho|Idaho]]

: . Abe Goff (R) : . John C. Sanborn (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Illinois|Illinois]]

: . William L. Dawson (D) : . Richard B. Vail (R) : . Fred E. Busbey (R) : . Martin Gorski (D) : . Adolph J. Sabath (D) : . Thomas J. O'Brien (D) : . Thomas L. Owens (R), until June 7, 1948, vacant thereafter : . Thomas S. Gordon (D) : . Robert Twyman (R) : . Ralph E. Church (R) : . Chauncey W. Reed (R) : . Noah M. Mason (R) : . Leo E. Allen (R) : . Anton J. Johnson (R) : . Robert B. Chiperfield (R) : . Everett M. Dirksen (R) : . Leslie C. Arends (R) : . Edward H. Jenison (R) : . Rolla C. McMillen (R) : . Sid Simpson (R) : . George Evan Howell (R), until October 5, 1947, vacant thereafter : . Melvin Price (D) : . Charles W. Vursell (R) : . Roy Clippinger (R) : . C. W. Bishop (R) : . William Stratton (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Indiana|Indiana]]

: . Ray Madden (D) : . Charles A. Halleck (R) : . Robert A. Grant (R) : . George W. Gillie (R) : . Forest Harness (R) : . Noble J. Johnson (R), until July 1, 1948, vacant for remainder of term : . Gerald W. Landis (R) : . E. A. Mitchell (R) : . Earl Wilson (R) : . Raymond S. Springer (R), until August 28, 1947 :: Ralph Harvey (R), from November 4, 1947 : . Louis Ludlow (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Iowa|Iowa]]

: . Thomas E. Martin (R) : . Henry O. Talle (R) : . John W. Gwynne (R) : . Karl M. LeCompte (R) : . Paul H. Cunningham (R) : . James I. Dolliver (R) : . Ben F. Jensen (R) : . Charles B. Hoeven (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Kansas|Kansas]]

: . Albert M. Cole (R) : . Errett P. Scrivner (R) : . Herbert Alton Meyer (R) : . Edward Herbert Rees (R) : . Clifford R. Hope (R) : . Wint Smith (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Kentucky|Kentucky]]

: . Noble J. Gregory (D) : . Earle C. Clements (D), until January 6, 1948 :: John A. Whitaker (D), from April 17, 1948 : . Thruston Ballard Morton (R) : . Frank Chelf (D) : . Brent Spence (D) : . Virgil Chapman (D) : . Wendell H. Meade (R) : . Joe B. Bates (D) : . John M. Robsion (R), until February 17, 1948 :: William Lewis (R), from April 24, 1948

[[List of United States representatives from Louisiana|Louisiana]]

: . F. Edward Hébert (D) : . Hale Boggs (D) : . James R. Domengeaux (D) : . Overton Brooks (D) : . Otto Passman (D) : . James H. Morrison (D) : . Henry D. Larcade Jr. (D) : . A. Leonard Allen (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Maine|Maine]]

: . Robert Hale (R) : . Margaret Chase Smith (R) : . Frank Fellows (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Maryland|Maryland]]

: . Edward Tylor Miller (R) : . Hugh Meade (D) : . Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. (D), until May 16, 1947 :: . Edward Garmatz (D), from July 15, 1947 : . George Hyde Fallon (D) : . Lansdale G. Sasscer (D) : . James Glenn Beall (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]

: . John W. Heselton (R) : . Charles Clason (R) : . Philip J. Philbin (D) : . Harold Donohue (D) : . Edith Nourse Rogers (R) : . George J. Bates (R) : . Thomas J. Lane (D) : . Angier Goodwin (R) : . Charles L. Gifford (R), until August 23, 1947 :: . Donald W. Nicholson (R), from November 18, 1947 : . Christian Herter (R) : . John F. Kennedy (D) : . John W. McCormack (D) : . Richard B. Wigglesworth (R) : . Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Michigan|Michigan]]

: . George G. Sadowski (D) : . Earl C. Michener (R) : . Paul W. Shafer (R) : . Clare E. Hoffman (R) : . Bartel J. Jonkman (R) : . William W. Blackney (R) : . Jesse P. Wolcott (R) : . Fred L. Crawford (R) : . Albert J. Engel (R) : . Roy O. Woodruff (R) : . Fred Bradley (R), until May 24, 1947 :: Charles E. Potter (R), from August 26, 1947 : . John B. Bennett (R) : . Howard A. Coffin (R) : . Harold F. Youngblood (R) : . John Dingell Sr. (D) : . John Lesinski Sr. (D) : . George Anthony Dondero (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Minnesota|Minnesota]]

: . August H. Andresen (R) : . Joseph P. O'Hara (R) : . George MacKinnon (R) : . Edward Devitt (R) : . Walter Judd (R) : . Harold Knutson (R) : . Herman Carl Andersen (R) : . John Blatnik (DFL), until August 13, 1946 : . Harold Hagen (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Mississippi|Mississippi]]

: . John E. Rankin (D) : . Jamie L. Whitten (D) : . William M. Whittington (D) : . Thomas Abernethy (D) : . W. Arthur Winstead (D) : . William M. Colmer (D) : . John Bell Williams (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Missouri|Missouri]]

: . Samuel W. Arnold (R) : . Max Schwabe (R) : . William Clay Cole (R) : . C. Jasper Bell (D) : . Albert L. Reeves Jr. (R) : . Marion T. Bennett (R) : . Dewey Short (R) : . Parke M. Banta (R) : . Clarence Cannon (D) : . Orville Zimmerman (D), until April 7, 1948 :: Paul C. Jones (D), from November 2, 1948 : . Claude I. Bakewell (R) : . Walter C. Ploeser (R) : . Frank M. Karsten (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Montana|Montana]]

: . Mike Mansfield (D) : . Wesley A. D'Ewart (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Nebraska|Nebraska]]

: . Carl Curtis (R) : . Howard Buffett (R) : . Karl Stefan (R) : . Arthur L. Miller (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Nevada|Nevada]]

: . Charles H. Russell (R)

[[List of United States representatives from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]

: . Chester Earl Merrow (R) : . Norris Cotton (R)

[[List of United States representatives from New Jersey|New Jersey]]

: . Charles A. Wolverton (R) : . T. Millet Hand (R) : . James C. Auchincloss (R) : . Frank A. Mathews Jr. (R) : . Charles A. Eaton (R) : . Clifford P. Case (R) : . J. Parnell Thomas (R) : . Gordon Canfield (R) : . Harry L. Towe (R) : . Fred A. Hartley Jr. (R) : . Frank Sundstrom (R) : . Robert Kean (R) : . Mary T. Norton (D) : . Edward J. Hart (D)

[[List of United States representatives from New Mexico|New Mexico]]

: . Georgia Lee Lusk (D) : . Antonio M. Fernández (D)

[[List of United States representatives from New York|New York]]

: . W. Kingsland Macy (R) : . Leonard W. Hall (R) : . Henry J. Latham (R) : . Gregory McMahon (R) : . Robert Tripp Ross (R) : . Robert Nodar Jr. (R) : . John J. Delaney (D), until November 18, 1948 :: Vacant thereafter : . Joseph L. Pfeifer (D) : . Eugene J. Keogh (D) : . Andrew L. Somers (D) : . James J. Heffernan (D) : . John J. Rooney (D) : . Donald L. O'Toole (D) : . Leo F. Rayfiel (D), until September 13, 1947 :: Abraham J. Multer (D), from November 4, 1947 : . Emanuel Celler (D) : . Ellsworth B. Buck (R) : . Frederic René Coudert Jr. (R) : . Vito Marcantonio (AL) : . Arthur George Klein (D) : . Sol Bloom (D) : . Jacob Javits (R) : . Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D) : . Walter A. Lynch (D) : . Benjamin J. Rabin (D), until December 31, 1947 :: Leo Isacson (AL), from February 17, 1948 : . Charles A. Buckley (D) : . David M. Potts (R) : . Ralph W. Gwinn (R) : . Ralph A. Gamble (R) : . Katharine St. George (R) : . Jay Le Fevre (R) : . Bernard W. Kearney (R) : . William T. Byrne (D) : . Dean P. Taylor (R) : . Clarence E. Kilburn (R) : . Hadwen C. Fuller (R) : . R. Walter Riehlman (R) : . Edwin Arthur Hall (R) : . John Taber (R) : . W. Sterling Cole (R) : . Kenneth Keating (R) : . James W. Wadsworth Jr. (R) : . Walter G. Andrews (R) : . Edward J. Elsaesser (R) : . John Cornelius Butler (R) : . Daniel A. Reed (R)

[[List of United States representatives from North Carolina|North Carolina]]

: . Herbert Covington Bonner (D) : . John H. Kerr (D) : . Graham A. Barden (D) : . Harold D. Cooley (D) : . John Hamlin Folger (D) : . Carl T. Durham (D) : . J. Bayard Clark (D) : . Charles B. Deane (D) : . Robert L. Doughton (D) : . Hamilton C. Jones (D) : . Alfred L. Bulwinkle (D) : . Monroe Minor Redden (D)

[[List of United States representatives from North Dakota|North Dakota]]

: . William Lemke (R-NPL) : . Charles R. Robertson (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Ohio|Ohio]]

: . Charles H. Elston (R) : . William E. Hess (R) : . Raymond H. Burke (R) : . Robert Franklin Jones (R), until September 2, 1947 :: William Moore McCulloch (R), from November 4, 1947 : . Cliff Clevenger (R) : . Edward Oscar McCowen (R) : . Clarence J. Brown (R) : . Frederick Cleveland Smith (R) : . Homer A. Ramey (R) : . Thomas A. Jenkins (R) : . Walter E. Brehm (R) : . John M. Vorys (R) : . Alvin F. Weichel (R) : . Walter B. Huber (D) : . Percy W. Griffiths (R) : . Henderson H. Carson (R) : . J. Harry McGregor (R) : . Earl R. Lewis (R) : . Michael J. Kirwan (D) : . Michael A. Feighan (D) : . Robert Crosser (D) : . Frances P. Bolton (R) : . George H. Bender (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]]

: . George B. Schwabe (R) : . William G. Stigler (D) : . Carl Albert (D) : . Glen D. Johnson (D) : . A. S. Mike Monroney (D) : . Toby Morris (D) : . Preston E. Peden (D) : . Ross Rizley (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Oregon|Oregon]]

: . A. Walter Norblad (R) : . Lowell Stockman (R) : . Homer D. Angell (R) : . Harris Ellsworth (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]

: . James A. Gallagher (R) : . Robert N. McGarvey (R) : . Hardie Scott (R) : . Franklin J. Maloney (R) : . George W. Sarbacher Jr. (R) : . Hugh Scott (R) : . E. Wallace Chadwick (R) : . Charles L. Gerlach (R), until May 5, 1947 :: Franklin H. Lichtenwalter (R), from September 9, 1947 : . Paul B. Dague (R) : . James P. Scoblick (R) : . Mitchell Jenkins (R) : . Ivor D. Fenton (R) : . Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg (R) : . Wilson D. Gillette (R) : . Robert F. Rich (R) : . Samuel K. McConnell Jr. (R) : . Richard M. Simpson (R) : . John C. Kunkel (R) : . Leon H. Gavin (R) : . Francis E. Walter (D) : . Chester H. Gross (R) : . James E. Van Zandt (R) : . William J. Crow (R) : . Thomas E. Morgan (D) : . Louis E. Graham (R) : . Harve Tibbott (R) : . Augustine B. Kelley (D) : . Carroll D. Kearns (R) : . John McDowell (R) : . Robert J. Corbett (R) : . James G. Fulton (R) : . Herman P. Eberharter (D) : . Frank Buchanan (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]

: . Aime Forand (D) : . John E. Fogarty (D)

[[List of United States representatives from South Carolina|South Carolina]]

: . L. Mendel Rivers (D) : . John J. Riley (D) : . William Jennings Bryan Dorn (D) : . Joseph R. Bryson (D) : . James P. Richards (D) : . John L. McMillan (D)

[[List of United States representatives from South Dakota|South Dakota]]

: . Karl E. Mundt (R), until December 30, 1948, vacant thereafter : . Francis H. Case (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Tennessee|Tennessee]]

: . Dayton E. Phillips (R) : . John Jennings Jr. (R) : . Estes Kefauver (D) : . Albert Gore Sr. (D) : . Joe L. Evins (D) : . Percy Priest (D) : . W. Wirt Courtney (D) : . Tom J. Murray (D) : . Jere Cooper (D) : . Clifford Davis (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Texas|Texas]]

: . Wright Patman (D) : . Jesse M. Combs (D) : . Lindley Beckworth (D) : . Sam Rayburn (D) : . Joseph Franklin Wilson (D) : . Olin E. Teague (D) : . Tom Pickett (D) : . Albert Thomas (D) : . Joseph J. Mansfield (D), until July 12, 1947 :: Clark W. Thompson (D), from August 23, 1947 : . Lyndon B. Johnson (D) : . William R. Poage (D) : . Wingate H. Lucas (D) : . Ed Gossett (D) : . John E. Lyle Jr. (D) : . Milton H. West (D), until October 28, 1948 :: Lloyd Bentsen (D), from December 4, 1948 : . R. Ewing Thomason (D), until July 31, 1947 :: Kenneth M. Regan (D), from August 23, 1947 : . Omar Burleson (D) : . Eugene Worley (D) : . George H. Mahon (D) : . Paul J. Kilday (D) : . O. C. Fisher (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Utah|Utah]]

: . Walter K. Granger (D) : . William A. Dawson (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Vermont|Vermont]]

: . Charles A. Plumley (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Virginia|Virginia]]

: . S. Otis Bland (D) : . Porter Hardy Jr. (D) : . J. Vaughan Gary (D) : . Patrick H. Drewry (D), until December 21, 1947 :: Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D), from February 17, 1948 : . Thomas B. Stanley (D) : . J. Lindsay Almond (D), until April 17, 1948 :: Clarence G. Burton (D), from November 2, 1948 : . Burr Harrison (D) : . Howard W. Smith (D) : . John W. Flannagan Jr. (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Washington|Washington]]

: . Homer Jones (R) : . Henry M. Jackson (D) : . Fred B. Norman (R), until April 18, 1947 :: Russell V. Mack (R), from June 7, 1947 : . Hal Holmes (R) : . Walt Horan (R) : . Thor C. Tollefson (R)

[[List of United States representatives from West Virginia|West Virginia]]

: . Francis J. Love (R) : . Melvin C. Snyder (R) : . Edward G. Rohrbough (R) : . Hubert S. Ellis (R) : . John Kee (D) : . E. H. Hedrick (D)

[[List of United States representatives from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]]

: . Lawrence H. Smith (R) : . Glenn Robert Davis (R), from April 22, 1947 : . William H. Stevenson (R) : . John C. Brophy (R) : . Charles J. Kersten (R) : . Frank Bateman Keefe (R) : . Reid F. Murray (R) : . John W. Byrnes (R) : . Merlin Hull (R) : . Alvin O'Konski (R)

[[List of United States representatives from Wyoming|Wyoming]]

: . Frank A. Barrett (R)

Non-voting members

: . Bob Bartlett (D) : . Joseph Rider Farrington (R) : . Antonio Fernós-Isern (PPD/D)

Changes in membership

The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress

Senate

There were three deaths, two resignations, and one lost mid-term election. SORT by the date the seat became vacant

|- | Mississippi (1) | | Theodore G. Bilbo (D) | Died August 21, 1947. Successor was elected November 17, 1947. | | John C. Stennis (D) | November 17, 1947

|- | Louisiana (3) | | John H. Overton (D) | Died May 14, 1948. Successor was appointed to continue the term. | | William C. Feazel (D) | May 18, 1948

|- | South Dakota (2) | | Harlan J. Bushfield (R) | Died September 27, 1948. Successor was appointed to finish the term. | | Vera C. Bushfield (R) | October 6, 1948

|- | South Dakota (2) | | Vera C. Bushfield (R) | Interim appointee resigned December 26, 1948. Successor was appointed to finish the term. | | Karl E. Mundt (R) | December 31, 1948

|- | Louisiana (3) | | William C. Feazel (D) | Interim appointee retired when successor elected. Successor was elected December 31, 1948. | | Russell B. Long (D) | December 31, 1948

|- | North Carolina (2) | | William B. Umstead (D) | Interim appointee lost election to finish the term. Successor was elected December 31, 1948. | | J. Melville Broughton (D) | December 31, 1948

|}

House of Representatives

There were nine deaths and seven resignations.

Sorted Chronologically by date of vacancy

|- | | Vacant | | Robert E. Jones Jr. (D)

Seated January 28, 1947

| | Vacant | | Glenn Robert Davis (R)

Seated April 22, 1947

| | | Fred B. Norman (R) | | Russell V. Mack (R)

Seated June 7, 1947

| | | Charles L. Gerlach (R) | | Franklin H. Lichtenwalter (R)

Seated September 9, 1947

| | | Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. (D) | | Edward Garmatz (D)

Seated July 15, 1947

| | | Frederick Van Ness Bradley (R) | | Charles E. Potter (R)

Seated August 26, 1947

| | | Joseph J. Mansfield (D) | | Clark W. Thompson (D)

Seated August 23, 1947

| | | R. Ewing Thomason (D) | | Kenneth M. Regan (D)

Seated August 23, 1947

| | | Charles L. Gifford (R) | | Donald W. Nicholson (R)

Seated November 18, 1947

| | | Raymond S. Springer (R) | | Ralph Harvey (R)

Seated November 4, 1947

| | | Robert Franklin Jones (R) | | William Moore McCulloch (R)

Seated November 4, 1947

| | | Leo F. Rayfiel (D) | | Abraham J. Multer (D)

Seated November 4, 1947

| | | George Evan Howell (R) |- | | | Patrick H. Drewry (D) | | Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D)

Seated February 17, 1948

| | | Benjamin J. Rabin (D) | | Leo Isacson (AL)

Seated February 17, 1948

| | | Earle Clements (D) | | John A. Whitaker (D)

Seated April 17, 1948

| | | John M. Robsion (R) | | William Lewis (R)

Seated April 24, 1948

| | | Orville Zimmerman (D) | | Paul C. Jones (D)

Seated November 2, 1948

| | | J. Lindsay Almond (D) | | Clarence G. Burton (D)

Seated November 2, 1948

| | | Thomas L. Owens (R) |- | | | Noble J. Johnson (R) |- | | | Milton H. West (D) | | Lloyd Bentsen (D)

Seated December 4, 1948

| | | John J. Delaney (D) |- | | | Karl E. Mundt (R) |}

Committees

Senate

  • Agriculture and Forestry (Chairman: Arthur Capper; Ranking Member: Elmer Thomas)
  • Appropriations (Chairman: Styles Bridges; Ranking Member: Kenneth McKellar)
  • Armed Services (Chairman: Chan Gurney; Ranking Member: Millard E. Tydings)
  • Banking and Currency (Chairman: Charles W. Tobey; Ranking Member: Robert F. Wagner)
  • Civil Service (Chairman: William Langer; Ranking Member: Dennis Chavez)
  • District of Columbia (Chairman: C. Douglass Buck; Ranking Member: N/A)
  • Expenditures in Executive Departments (Chairman: George D. Aiken; Ranking Member: John L. McClellan)
  • Finance (Chairman: Eugene D. Millikin; Ranking Member: Walter F. George)
  • Foreign Relations (Chairman: Arthur H. Vandenberg; Ranking Member: Tom Connally)
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce (Chairman: Wallace H. White Jr.; Ranking Member: Edwin C. Johnson)
  • Investigate the National Defense Program (Special) (Chairman: Owen Brewster)
  • Judiciary (Chairman: Alexander Wiley; Ranking Member: Pat McCarran)
  • Labor and Public Welfare (Chairman: Robert A. Taft; Ranking Member: Elbert D. Thomas)
  • Petroleum Resources (Special)
  • Public Lands (Chairman: Hugh A. Butler; Ranking Member: Carl A. Hatch)
  • Public Works (Chairman: W. Chapman Revercomb; Ranking Member: John H. Overton)
  • Remodeling the Senate Chamber (Special)
  • Rules and Administration (Chairman: C. Wayland Brooks; Ranking Member: Carl Hayden)
  • Small Business Enterprises (Special) (Chairman: Kenneth S. Wherry)
  • Whole

House of Representatives

  • Agriculture (Chairman: Clifford R. Hope; Ranking Member: John W. Flannagan Jr.)
  • Appropriations (Chairman: John Taber; Ranking Member: Clarence Cannon)
  • Armed Services (Chairman: Walter G. Andrews; Ranking Member: Carl Vinson)
  • Banking and Currency (Chairman: Jesse P. Wolcott; Ranking Member: Brent Spence)
  • District of Columbia (Chairman: Everett M. Dirksen; Ranking Member: John L. McMillan)
  • Education and Labor (Chairman: Fred A. Hartley Jr.; Ranking Member: John Lesinski)
  • Expenditures in the Executive Departments (Chairman: Clare E. Hoffman; Ranking Member: Carter Manasco)
  • Foreign Affairs (Chairman: Charles Aubrey Eaton; Ranking Member: Sol Bloom)
  • Foreign Aid (Select) (Chairman: Charles Aubrey Eaton)
  • House Administration (Chairman: Karl M. LeCompte; Ranking Member: Mary Teresa Norton)
  • Investigate Commodity Transactions (Select) (Chairman: August H. Andresen)
  • Investigate Federal Communications Commission (Select) (Chairman: Forest A. Harness)
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce (Chairman: Charles A. Wolverton; Ranking Member: Clarence F. Lea)
  • Judiciary (Chairman: Earl C. Michener; Ranking Member: Emanuel Celler)
  • Merchant Marine and Fisheries (Chairman: Alvin F. Weichel; Ranking Member: S. Otis Bland)
  • Newsprint and Paper Supply (Select) (Chairman: N/A; Ranking Member: N/A)
  • Post Office and Civil Service (Chairman: Edward H. Rees; Ranking Member: Tom J. Murray)
  • Public Lands (Chairman: Richard J. Welch; Ranking Member: Andrew L. Somers)
  • Public Works (Chairman: George Anthony Dondero; Ranking Member: Joseph J. Mansfield then William M. Whittington)
  • Rules (Chairman: Leo E. Allen; Ranking Member: Adolph J. Sabath)
  • Small Business (Select) (Chairman: Walter C. Ploeser)
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Un-American Activities (Chairman: J. Parnell Thomas; Ranking Member: John S. Wood)
  • Veterans' Affairs (Chairman: Edith Nourse Rogers; Ranking Member: John E. Rankin)
  • Ways and Means (Chairman: Harold Knutson; Ranking Member: Robert L. Doughton)
  • Whole

Joint committees

  • Atomic Energy (Chairman: Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper; Vice Chairman: Rep. W. Sterling Cole)
  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Economic (Chairman: Sen. Robert A. Taft; Vice Chairman: Rep. Jesse P. Wolcott)
  • Disposition of Executive Papers
  • Foreign Economic Cooperation
  • Housing
  • Labor Management Relations
  • Legislative Budget
  • The Library (Chairman: Sen. C. Wayland Brooks)
  • To Study Pacific Islands
  • Printing (Chairman: Sen. William E. Jenner; Vice Chairman: Rep. Karl M. LeCompte)
  • Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures (Chairman: Sen. Harry F. Byrd; Vice Chairman: Rep. Robert L. Doughton)
  • Selective Service Deferments
  • Taxation (Chairman: Rep. Harold Knutson; Vice Chairman: Sen. Eugene D. Millikin)

Employees

[[List of federal agencies in the United States#United States Congress|Legislative branch agency]] directors

  • Architect of the Capitol: David Lynn
  • Attending Physician of the United States Congress: George Calver
  • Comptroller General of the United States: Lindsay C. Warren
  • Librarian of Congress: Luther H. Evans
  • Public Printer of the United States: Augustus E. Giegengack, until 1948
    • John J. Deviny, from 1948

Senate

  • Chaplain: Peter Marshall (Presbyterian)
  • Parliamentarian: Charles Watkins
  • Secretary: Carl A. Loeffler
  • Librarian: George W. Straubinger
  • Secretary for the Majority: J. Mark Trice
  • Secretary for the Minority: Felton McLellan Johnston
  • Sergeant at Arms: Edward F. McGinnis

House of Representatives

  • Chaplain: James Shera Montgomery (Methodist)
  • Clerk: John Andrews
  • Doorkeeper: M. L. Meletio
  • Parliamentarian: Lewis Deschler
  • Postmaster: Frank W. Collier, until October 15, 1948; vacant thereafter
  • Reading Clerks: George J. Maurer (D) and Alney E. Chaffee (R)
  • Sergeant at Arms: William F. Russell

Explanatory notes

Citations

References

  1. "Résumé of Congressional Activity Eightieth Congress". United States Senate.
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