100th United States Congress
{{Short description|1987–1989 U.S. Congress}}
{{Use American English|date = March 2019}}
{{Use mdy dates|date = March 2019}}
{{Infobox United States Congress
|number=100th
|image = Washington-02-Capitol-1980-gje.jpg
|imagename = United States Capitol
|imagedate = 1980
|start=January 3, 1987
|end=January 3, 1989
|vp=George H. W. Bush (R)
|pro tem=John C. Stennis (D)
|speaker=Jim Wright (D)
|reps=435
|senators=100
|delegates=5
|h-majority=Democratic
|s-majority=Democratic
|sessionnumber1=1st
|sessionstart1=January 6, 1987
|sessionend1=December 22, 1987
|sessionnumber2=2nd
|sessionstart2=January 25, 1988
|sessionend2=October 22, 1988
|previous=99th
|next=101st
}}
The 100th 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, 1987, to January 3, 1989, during the last two years of Ronald Reagan's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1980 United States census.
This is the most recent Congress with a Democratic senator from the state of Mississippi, John C. Stennis, who retired at the end of Congress, and a Republican senator from the state of Connecticut, Lowell Weicker, who lost re-election in 1988.
Both chambers had a Democratic majority, with the Democrats increasing their lead in the House, and regaining the Senate for the first time since the 96th Congress from 1979 to 1981.
{{TOClimit|2}}
Major events
File:Photograph of President Reagan giving the State of the Union Address to Congress - NARA - 198590.jpg with Vice President George Bush and House Speaker Jim Wright during the 1988 State of the Union Address, January 25, 1988]]
{{main|1987 in the United States|1988 in the United States|1989 in the United States}}
- July 16, 1987: The bicentennial of the Connecticut Compromise that resulted in Congress's present structure is marked, by an unprecedented joint meeting outside Washington, in Independence Hall.{{cite web | title=Special Joint Meeting | website=C-SPAN.org | date=July 16, 1987 | url=https://www.c-span.org/video/?150900-1/special-joint-meeting | access-date=May 10, 2024}}
- October 19, 1987: Black Monday: Stocks fell sharply on Wall Street and around the world
- October 23, 1987: The Senate rejected the nomination of Robert H. Bork to the United States Supreme Court on a vote of 42-58
- November 18, 1987: Iran–Contra affair: Senate and House panels released reports charging President Reagan with 'ultimate responsibility' for the affair
- January 25, 1988: 1988 State of the Union Address
- November 8, 1988: 1988 United States presidential election: George Bush was elected over Michael Dukakis; United States Senate elections, 1988 & United States House of Representatives elections, 1988: Democrats retained control of Congress
Major legislation
File:Ronald Reagan signing Japanese reparations bill.jpg into law, August 10, 1988.]]
{{main|List of United States federal legislation}}
- March 17, 1987: National Appliance Energy Conservation Act, {{USPL|100|12}}, {{USStat|101|103}}
- April 2, 1987: Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act, {{USPL|100|17}}, {{USStat|101|132}}
- July 22, 1987: McKinney–Vento Homeless Assistance Act, {{USPL|100|77}}, {{USStat|101|482}}
- August 20, 1987: Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Improvement Act of 1987, {{USPL|100|107}}, {{USStat|101|724}}
- September 29, 1987: Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Reaffirmation Act of 1987 (Gramm–Rudman–Hollings Balanced Budget Act), {{USPL|100|119}}, title I
- December 22, 1987: Anti-Terrorism Act of 1987, {{USPL|100|204}}, {{USStat|101|1406}}
- January 7, 1988: Computer Security Act of 1987, {{USPL|100|235}}, {{USStat|101|1724}}
- February 5, 1988: Housing and Community Development Act of 1987, {{USPL|100|242}}, {{USStat|101|1815}}
- March 22, 1988: Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1987 {{USPL|100|259}}
- April 28, 1988: Abandoned Shipwrecks Act, {{USPL|100|298}}, {{USStat|101|432}}
- June 27, 1988: Supreme Court Case Selections Act of 1988, {{USPL|100|352}}, {{USStat|102|662}}
- July 1, 1988: Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act, {{USPL|100|360}}, {{USStat|102|683}}
- August 4, 1988: Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, {{USPL|100|379}}, {{USStat|102|890}}
- August 10, 1988: Civil Liberties Act of 1988, {{USPL|100|383}}, title I, {{USStat|101|904}}
- August 23, 1988: Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act, {{USPL|100|418}}, {{USStat|102|1107}}
- October 13, 1988: Family Support Act, {{USPL|100|485}}, {{USStat|102|2343}}
- October 17, 1988: Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, {{USPL|100|497}}, {{USStat|102|2467}}
- October 24, 1988: Health Maintenance Organization Amendments of 1988, {{USPL|100|517}}, {{USStat|102|2578}}
- October 25, 1988: Department of Veterans Affairs Act, {{USPL|100|527}}, {{USStat|102|2635}}
- November 1, 1988: Medical Waste Tracking Act, {{USPL|100|582}}, {{USStat|102|2950}}
- November 3, 1988: Fair Credit and Charge Card Disclosure Act, {{USPL|100|583}}
- November 4, 1988: AIDS amendments of 1988, {{USPL|100|607}}, {{usstat|102|3048}}
- November 4, 1988: Genocide Convention Implementation Act, {{USPL|100|606}}, {{usstat|102|3045}}
- November 5, 1988: Video Privacy Protection Act, {{USPL|100|618}}
- November 10, 1988: Undetectable Firearms Act,{{USPL|100|649}}, {{usstat|102|3816}}
- November 17, 1988: Water Resources Development Act of 1988, {{USPL|100|676}}
- November 18, 1988: Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, {{USPL|100|690}}, including Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act and Alcoholic Beverage Labeling Act
- November 18, 1988: Chemical Diversion and Trafficking Act, {{USPL|100|690}}, {{USStat|102|4181}}
- November 23, 1988: Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, {{USPL|100|707}}, {{USStat|102|4689}}
Treaties ratified
- May 27, 1988: Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
Hearings
- May 6, 1987: Iran–Contra affair hearings began
- October 23, 1987: Robert Bork Supreme Court nomination: Senate rejected Robert Bork's nomination 42–58 to the Supreme Court of the United States
- February 3, 1988: Senate approved Anthony Kennedy's nomination 97–0 to the Supreme Court of the United States
Party summary
=Senate=
[[File:100th United States Congress Senators.svg|thumb|375px|Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 100th Congress in January 1987
{{legend|#0044aa|2 Democrats}}
{{legend|#660080|1 Democrat and 1 Republican}}
{{legend|#aa0000|2 Republicans}}]]
{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=100
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=R
| seats1_last=48
| seats2_last=52
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=55
| seats2_begin=45
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=54
| seats2_end=46
| seats_vacant_end=0
| seats1_next=55
| seats2_next=45
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}
=House of Representatives=
Image:100th US Congress House of Reps.svg
{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=100
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=R
| seats1_last=251
| seats2_last=180
| seats_vacant_last=4
| seats1_begin=258
| seats2_begin=177
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=255
| seats2_end=178
| seats_vacant_end=2
| seats1_next=259
| seats2_next=174
| seats_vacant_next=2
| delegates1=4
| delegates2=1
}}
Leadership
=Senate=
{{Multiple image
| align =
| direction =
| width =
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = Senate President
| image1 = Vice President George H. W. Bush portrait.jpg
| alt1 = VP George H. W. Bush
| caption1 = George H. W. Bush (R)
}}
{{multiple image
| header = Senate President pro Tempore
| total_width = 350
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| image1 = Senator John C. Stennis.jpg
| alt1 = John C. Stennis
| caption1 = John C. Stennis (D)
| image2 = George_John_Mitchell.jpg
| alt2 = George J. Mitchell
| caption2 = George J. Mitchell (D)
(Deputy)
}}
==Majority (Democratic) leadership==
==Minority (Republican) leadership==
=House of Representatives=
{{Multiple image
| align =
| direction =
| width =
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = House Speaker
| image1 = Speaker Jim Wright of Texas.jpg
| alt1 = Jim Wright
| caption1 = Jim Wright (D)
}}
- Speaker: Jim Wright (D)
==Majority (Democratic) leadership==
==Minority leadership==
- Minority Leader: Robert H. Michel
- Minority Whip: Trent Lott
- Chief Deputy Whip: Edward Rell Madigan
- Republican Conference Chairman: Dick Cheney
- Republican Conference Vice-Chairman: Lynn Morley Martin
- Republican Conference Secretary: Robert J. Lagomarsino
- Policy Committee Chairman: Jerry Lewis
- Republican Campaign Committee Chairman: Guy Vander Jagt
Caucuses
- Congressional Arts Caucus
- Congressional Automotive Caucus
- Congressional Black Caucus
- Congressional Fire Services Caucus
- Congressional Friends of Ireland Caucus
- Congressional Hispanic Caucus
- Congressional Pediatric & Adult Hydrocephalus Caucus
- Congressional Travel & Tourism Caucus
- Congresswomen's Caucus
- House Democratic Caucus
- Senate Democratic Caucus
Members
This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives are listed by district.
=Senate=
Senators are popularly elected statewide every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress, In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term ended with this Congress, facing re-election in 1988; Class 2 meant their term began in the last Congress, facing re-election in 1990; and Class 3 meant their term began in this Congress, facing re-election in 1992.
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
==[[List of United States senators from Alabama|Alabama]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Howell Heflin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Richard Shelby (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Alaska|Alaska]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Ted Stevens (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Frank Murkowski (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Arizona|Arizona]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Dennis DeConcini (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. John McCain (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Arkansas|Arkansas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. David Pryor (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Dale Bumpers (D)
==[[List of United States senators from California|California]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Pete Wilson (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Alan Cranston (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Colorado|Colorado]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. William L. Armstrong (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Tim Wirth (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Connecticut|Connecticut]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Lowell Weicker (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Chris Dodd (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Delaware|Delaware]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. William Roth (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Joe Biden (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Florida|Florida]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Lawton Chiles (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Bob Graham (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Georgia|Georgia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Sam Nunn (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Wyche Fowler (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Hawaii|Hawaii]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Spark Matsunaga (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Daniel Inouye (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Idaho|Idaho]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. James A. McClure (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Steve Symms (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Illinois|Illinois]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Paul Simon (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Alan J. Dixon (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Indiana|Indiana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Richard Lugar (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Dan Quayle (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Iowa|Iowa]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Tom Harkin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Chuck Grassley (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Kansas|Kansas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Nancy Kassebaum (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Bob Dole (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Kentucky|Kentucky]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Mitch McConnell (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Wendell Ford (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Louisiana|Louisiana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. J. Bennett Johnston (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. John Breaux (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Maine|Maine]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. George J. Mitchell (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. William Cohen (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Maryland|Maryland]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Paul Sarbanes (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Barbara Mikulski (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Ted Kennedy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. John Kerry (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Michigan|Michigan]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Donald Riegle (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Carl Levin (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Minnesota|Minnesota]]==
: {{Party stripe|Independent-Republicans of Minnesota}}1. David Durenberger (I-R){{efn | name=I-R | The Republican Party of Minnesota was officially known as the Independent-Republicans of Minnesota from November 15, 1975, until September 23, 1995, and are counted as Republicans.}}
: {{Party stripe|Independent-Republicans of Minnesota}}2. Rudy Boschwitz (I-R){{efn|name=I-R}}
==[[List of United States senators from Mississippi|Mississippi]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. John C. Stennis (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Thad Cochran (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Missouri|Missouri]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. John Danforth (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Kit Bond (R)
{{col-2}}
==[[List of United States senators from Montana|Montana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. John Melcher (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Max Baucus (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Nebraska|Nebraska]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Edward Zorinsky (D), until March 6, 1987
:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}David Karnes (R), from March 11, 1987, until January 3, 1989
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. J. James Exon (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Nevada|Nevada]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Chic Hecht (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Harry Reid (D)
==[[List of United States senators from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Gordon J. Humphrey (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Warren Rudman (R)
==[[List of United States senators from New Jersey|New Jersey]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Frank Lautenberg (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Bill Bradley (D)
==[[List of United States senators from New Mexico|New Mexico]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Jeff Bingaman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Pete Domenici (R)
==[[List of United States senators from New York|New York]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Al D'Amato (R)
==[[List of United States senators from North Carolina|North Carolina]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Jesse Helms (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Terry Sanford (D)
==[[List of United States senators from North Dakota|North Dakota]]==
: {{Party stripe|North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party}}1. Quentin Burdick (D-NPL){{efn | name=DFLNPL | The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) and the North Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party (D-NPL) are the Minnesota and North Dakota affiliates of the U.S. Democratic Party and are counted as Democrats.}}
: {{Party stripe|North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party}}3. Kent Conrad (D-NPL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
==[[List of United States senators from Ohio|Ohio]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Howard Metzenbaum (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. John Glenn (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. David Boren (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Don Nickles (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Oregon|Oregon]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Mark Hatfield (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Bob Packwood (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. John Heinz (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Arlen Specter (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. John Chafee (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Claiborne Pell (D)
==[[List of United States senators from South Carolina|South Carolina]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Strom Thurmond (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Fritz Hollings (D)
==[[List of United States senators from South Dakota|South Dakota]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Larry Pressler (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Tom Daschle (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Tennessee|Tennessee]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Jim Sasser (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Al Gore (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Texas|Texas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Lloyd Bentsen (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Phil Gramm (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Utah|Utah]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Orrin Hatch (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Jake Garn (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Vermont|Vermont]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Robert Stafford (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Patrick Leahy (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Virginia|Virginia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Paul Trible (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. John Warner (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Washington|Washington]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Daniel J. Evans (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Brock Adams (D)
==[[List of United States senators from West Virginia|West Virginia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Robert Byrd (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Jay Rockefeller (D)
==[[List of United States senators from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. William Proxmire (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Bob Kasten (R)
==[[List of United States senators from Wyoming|Wyoming]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Malcolm Wallop (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Alan Simpson (R)
{{col-break}}
{{multiple image
| total_width = 350
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = Senate majority leadership
| image1 = Byrdrobert.jpg
| alt1 = Robert Byrd
| caption1 = Democratic leader
Robert Byrd
| image2 = Walter Mondale with Senator Alan Cranston - NARA - 176249 (cropped).jpg
| alt2 = Alan Cranston
| caption2 = Democratic whip
Alan Cranston
}}
{{multiple image
| total_width = 350
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = Senate minority leadership
| image1 = Robert_J._Dole_crop.jpg
| alt1 = Bob Dole
| caption1 = Republican leader
Bob Dole
| image2 = Alan Kooi Simpson.jpg
| alt2 = Alan K. Simpson
| caption2 = Republican whip
Alan K. Simpson
}}
{{col-end}}
=House of Representatives=
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
==[[List of United States representatives from Alabama|Alabama]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|1|1}}. Sonny Callahan (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|2|2}}. William Louis Dickinson (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|3|3}}. Bill Nichols (D), until December 13, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|4|4}}. Tom Bevill (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|5|5}}. Ronnie Flippo (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|6|6}}. Ben Erdreich (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alabama|7|7}}. Claude Harris Jr. (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Alaska|Alaska]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Alaska|AL|At-large}}. Don Young (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Arizona|Arizona]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arizona|1|1}}. John Jacob Rhodes III (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arizona|2|2}}. Mo Udall (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arizona|3|3}}. Bob Stump (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arizona|4|4}}. Jon Kyl (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arizona|5|5}}. Jim Kolbe (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Arkansas|Arkansas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. William Vollie Alexander Jr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. Tommy F. Robinson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. John Paul Hammerschmidt (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. Beryl Anthony Jr. (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from California|California]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|1|1}}. Douglas H. Bosco (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|2|2}}. Wally Herger (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|3|3}}. Bob Matsui (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|4|4}}. Vic Fazio (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|5|5}}. Sala Burton (D), until February 1, 1987
:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Nancy Pelosi (D), from June 2, 1987
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|6|6}}. Barbara Boxer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|7|7}}. George Miller (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|8|8}}. Ron Dellums (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|9|9}}. Pete Stark (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|10|10}}. Don Edwards (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|11|11}}. Tom Lantos (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|12|12}}. Ernie Konnyu (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|13|13}}. Norman Mineta (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|14|14}}. Norman D. Shumway (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|15|15}}. Tony Coelho (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|16|16}}. Leon Panetta (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|17|17}}. Chip Pashayan (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|18|18}}. Richard H. Lehman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|19|19}}. Robert J. Lagomarsino (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|20|20}}. Bill Thomas (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|21|21}}. Elton Gallegly (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|22|22}}. Carlos Moorhead (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|23|23}}. Anthony Beilenson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|24|24}}. Henry Waxman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|25|25}}. Edward R. Roybal (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|26|26}}. Howard Berman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|27|27}}. Mel Levine (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|28|28}}. Julian Dixon (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|29|29}}. Augustus Hawkins (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|30|30}}. Matthew G. Martínez (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|31|31}}. Mervyn Dymally (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|32|32}}. Glenn M. Anderson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|33|33}}. David Dreier (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|34|34}}. Esteban Edward Torres (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|35|35}}. Jerry Lewis (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|36|36}}. George Brown Jr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|37|37}}. Al McCandless (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|38|38}}. Bob Dornan (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|39|39}}. William E. Dannemeyer (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|40|40}}. Robert Badham (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|41|41}}. Bill Lowery (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|42|42}}. Dan Lungren (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|43|43}}. Ron Packard (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|44|44}}. Jim Bates (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|California|45|45}}. Duncan L. Hunter (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Colorado|Colorado]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. Pat Schroeder (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. David Skaggs (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|3|3}}. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|4|4}}. Hank Brown (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|5|5}}. Joel Hefley (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Colorado|6|6}}. Dan Schaefer (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Connecticut|Connecticut]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|1|1}}. Barbara B. Kennelly (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|2|2}}. Sam Gejdenson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|3|3}}. Bruce Morrison (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Stewart McKinney (R), until May 7, 1987
:{{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Chris Shays (R), from August 18, 1987
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|5|5}}. John G. Rowland (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Connecticut|6|6}}. Nancy Johnson (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Delaware|Delaware]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-large}}. Tom Carper (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Florida|Florida]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. Earl Hutto (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. James W. Grant (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. Charles E. Bennett (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|4|4}}. Bill Chappell (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|5|5}}. Bill McCollum (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|6|6}}. Buddy MacKay (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|7|7}}. Sam Gibbons (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|8|8}}. Bill Young (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|9|9}}. Michael Bilirakis (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|10|10}}. Andy Ireland (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|11|11}}. Bill Nelson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|12|12}}. Tom Lewis (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|13|13}}. Connie Mack III (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|14|14}}. Dan Mica (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|15|15}}. Clay Shaw (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|16|16}}. Lawrence J. Smith (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|17|17}}. William Lehman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|18|18}}. Claude Pepper (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Florida|19|19}}. Dante Fascell (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Georgia|Georgia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|1|1}}. Lindsay Thomas (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|2|2}}. Charles Floyd Hatcher (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|3|3}}. Richard Ray (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|4|4}}. Pat Swindall (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|5|5}}. John Lewis (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|6|6}}. Newt Gingrich (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|7|7}}. George Darden (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|8|8}}. J. Roy Rowland (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|9|9}}. Ed Jenkins (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Georgia|10|10}}. Doug Barnard Jr. (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Hawaii|Hawaii]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Hawaii|1|1}}. Pat Saiki (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Hawaii|2|2}}. Daniel Akaka (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Idaho|Idaho]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Idaho|1|1}}. Larry Craig (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Idaho|2|2}}. Richard H. Stallings (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Illinois|Illinois]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|1|1}}. Charles Hayes (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|2|2}}. Gus Savage (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|3|3}}. Marty Russo (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|4|4}}. Jack Davis (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. Bill Lipinski (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. Henry Hyde (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Cardiss Collins (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. Dan Rostenkowski (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. Sidney R. Yates (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. John Porter (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|11|11}}. Frank Annunzio (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|12|12}}. Phil Crane (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|13|13}}. Harris Fawell (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|14|14}}. Dennis Hastert (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. Edward Madigan (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. Lynn Morley Martin (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. Lane Evans (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. Robert H. Michel (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. Terry L. Bruce (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. Dick Durbin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. Melvin Price (D), until April 22, 1988
:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jerry Costello (D), from August 9, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. Kenneth J. Gray (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Indiana|Indiana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. Pete Visclosky (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Philip Sharp (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. John P. Hiler (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. Dan Coats (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. Jim Jontz (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. Dan Burton (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. John T. Myers (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. Frank McCloskey (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Lee Hamilton (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. Andrew Jacobs Jr. (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Iowa|Iowa]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Jim Leach (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. Tom Tauke (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. David R. Nagle (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. Neal Smith (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. Jim Ross Lightfoot (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. Fred Grandy (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Kansas|Kansas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. Pat Roberts (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. Jim Slattery (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Jan Meyers (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kansas|4|4}}. Dan Glickman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kansas|5|5}}. Bob Whittaker (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Kentucky|Kentucky]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|1|1}}. Carroll Hubbard (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|2|2}}. William Natcher (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|3|3}}. Romano Mazzoli (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|4|4}}. Jim Bunning (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|5|5}}. Hal Rogers (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|6|6}}. Larry J. Hopkins (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Kentucky|7|7}}. Chris Perkins (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Louisiana|Louisiana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. Bob Livingston (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Lindy Boggs (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. Billy Tauzin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Buddy Roemer (D), until March 14, 1988
:{{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Jim McCrery (R), from April 16, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Jerry Huckaby (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. Richard Baker (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. Jimmy Hayes (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Louisiana|8|8}}. Clyde C. Holloway (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Maine|Maine]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. Joseph E. Brennan (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Olympia Snowe (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Maryland|Maryland]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. Roy Dyson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. Helen Delich Bentley (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Ben Cardin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. Tom McMillen (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Steny Hoyer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. Beverly Byron (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|7|7}}. Kweisi Mfume (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Maryland|8|8}}. Connie Morella (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. Silvio O. Conte (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Edward Boland (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|3|3}}. Joseph D. Early (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|4|4}}. Barney Frank (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|5|5}}. Chester G. Atkins (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|6|6}}. Nicholas Mavroules (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|7|7}}. Ed Markey (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Joseph P. Kennedy II (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. Joe Moakley (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. Gerry Studds (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. Brian J. Donnelly (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Michigan|Michigan]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. John Conyers (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. Carl Pursell (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. Howard Wolpe (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Fred Upton (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. Paul B. Henry (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. Milton Robert Carr (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|7|7}}. Dale Kildee (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|8|8}}. J. Bob Traxler (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|9|9}}. Guy Vander Jagt (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|10|10}}. Bill Schuette (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|11|11}}. Robert William Davis (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. David Bonior (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|13|13}}. George Crockett Jr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|14|14}}. Dennis Hertel (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|15|15}}. William D. Ford (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|16|16}}. John Dingell (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|17|17}}. Sander Levin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Michigan|18|18}}. William Broomfield (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Minnesota|Minnesota]]==
: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. Tim Penny (DFL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
: {{Party stripe|Independent-Republicans of Minnesota}}{{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. Vin Weber (I-R){{efn|name=I-R}}
: {{Party stripe|Independent-Republicans of Minnesota}}{{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Bill Frenzel (I-R){{efn|name=I-R}}
: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Bruce Vento (DFL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. Martin Olav Sabo (DFL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Gerry Sikorski (DFL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
: {{Party stripe|Independent-Republicans of Minnesota}}{{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. Arlan Stangeland (I-R){{efn|name=I-R}}
: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. Jim Oberstar (DFL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
==[[List of United States representatives from Mississippi|Mississippi]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. Jamie Whitten (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Mike Espy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Mississippi|3|3}}. Sonny Montgomery (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Mississippi|4|4}}. Wayne Dowdy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Mississippi|5|5}}. Trent Lott (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Missouri|Missouri]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|1|1}}. Bill Clay (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|2|2}}. Jack Buechner (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|3|3}}. Dick Gephardt (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|4|4}}. Ike Skelton (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|5|5}}. Alan Wheat (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. Tom Coleman (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Gene Taylor (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|8|8}}. Bill Emerson (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Missouri|9|9}}. Harold Volkmer (D)
{{col-2}}
==[[List of United States representatives from Montana|Montana]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Montana|1|1}}. Pat Williams (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Montana|2|2}}. Ron Marlenee (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Nebraska|Nebraska]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. Doug Bereuter (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Hal Daub (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. Virginia D. Smith (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Nevada|Nevada]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Nevada|1|1}}. James Bilbray (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Nevada|2|2}}. Barbara Vucanovich (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Bob Smith (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Judd Gregg (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from New Jersey|New Jersey]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|1|1}}. James Florio (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|2|2}}. William J. Hughes (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|3|3}}. James J. Howard (D), until March 25, 1988
:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Frank Pallone (D), from November 8, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|4|4}}. Chris Smith (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|5|5}}. Marge Roukema (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|6|6}}. Bernard J. Dwyer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|7|7}}. Matthew John Rinaldo (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|8|8}}. Robert A. Roe (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Robert Torricelli (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Peter W. Rodino (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|11|11}}. Dean Gallo (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|12|12}}. Jim Courter (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|13|13}}. Jim Saxton (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Jersey|14|14}}. Frank Joseph Guarini (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from New Mexico|New Mexico]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Mexico|1|1}}. Manuel Lujan Jr. (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Mexico|2|2}}. Joe Skeen (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New Mexico|3|3}}. Bill Richardson (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from New York|New York]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|1|1}}. George J. Hochbrueckner (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|2|2}}. Thomas Downey (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|3|3}}. Robert J. Mrazek (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|4|4}}. Norman F. Lent (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|5|5}}. Raymond J. McGrath (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Floyd Flake (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|7|7}}. Gary Ackerman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|8|8}}. James H. Scheuer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|9|9}}. Thomas J. Manton (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|10|10}}. Chuck Schumer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|11|11}}. Edolphus Towns (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|12|12}}. Major Owens (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|13|13}}. Stephen Solarz (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|14|14}}. Guy Molinari (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|15|15}}. Bill Green (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|16|16}}. Charles Rangel (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|17|17}}. Ted Weiss (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|18|18}}. Robert Garcia (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Mario Biaggi (D), until August 5, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|20|20}}. Joe DioGuardi (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|21|21}}. Hamilton Fish IV (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|22|22}}. Benjamin Gilman (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|23|23}}. Samuel S. Stratton (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|24|24}}. Gerald Solomon (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|25|25}}. Sherwood Boehlert (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|26|26}}. David O'Brien Martin (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|27|27}}. George C. Wortley (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|28|28}}. Matthew F. McHugh (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|29|29}}. Frank Horton (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|30|30}}. Louise Slaughter (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|31|31}}. Jack Kemp (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|32|32}}. John LaFalce (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Henry J. Nowak (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|New York|34|34}}. Amo Houghton (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from North Carolina|North Carolina]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. Walter B. Jones Sr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. Tim Valentine (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. Martin Lancaster (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. David Price (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. Stephen L. Neal (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. Howard Coble (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. Charlie Rose (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. Bill Hefner (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|9|9}}. Alex McMillan (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|10|10}}. Cass Ballenger (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|North Carolina|11|11}}. James M. Clarke (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from North Dakota|North Dakota]]==
: {{Party stripe|North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party}}{{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Byron Dorgan (D-NPL){{efn|name=DFLNPL}}
==[[List of United States representatives from Ohio|Ohio]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Tom Luken (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. Bill Gradison (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Tony P. Hall (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. Mike Oxley (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. Del Latta (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. Bob McEwen (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Mike DeWine (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. Donald "Buz" Lukens (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|9|9}}. Marcy Kaptur (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|10|10}}. Clarence E. Miller (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|11|11}}. Dennis E. Eckart (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|12|12}}. John Kasich (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Don Pease (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. Tom Sawyer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. Chalmers Wylie (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. Ralph Regula (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. Jim Traficant (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|18|18}}. Douglas Applegate (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|19|19}}. Ed Feighan (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|20|20}}. Mary Rose Oakar (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Ohio|21|21}}. Louis Stokes (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|1|1}}. Jim Inhofe (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|2|2}}. Mike Synar (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|3|3}}. Wes Watkins (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|4|4}}. Dave McCurdy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|5|5}}. Mickey Edwards (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oklahoma|6|6}}. Glenn English (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Oregon|Oregon]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oregon|1|1}}. Les AuCoin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oregon|2|2}}. Bob Smith (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oregon|3|3}}. Ron Wyden (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oregon|4|4}}. Peter DeFazio (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Oregon|5|5}}. Denny Smith (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|1}}. Thomas M. Foglietta (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|2}}. William H. Gray III (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|3}}. Robert A. Borski Jr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|4}}. Joseph P. Kolter (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. Richard T. Schulze (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. Gus Yatron (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. Curt Weldon (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. Peter H. Kostmayer (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. Bud Shuster (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. Joseph M. McDade (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Paul Kanjorski (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. John Murtha (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. Lawrence Coughlin (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. William J. Coyne (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Donald L. Ritter (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. Bob Walker (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. George Gekas (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. Doug Walgren (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. Bill Goodling (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|20}}. Joseph M. Gaydos (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|21}}. Tom Ridge (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|22}}. Austin Murphy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|23}}. William Clinger (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. Fernand St. Germain (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Rhode Island|2|2}}. Claudine Schneider (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from South Carolina|South Carolina]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|1|1}}. Arthur Ravenel Jr. (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|2|2}}. Floyd Spence (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. Butler Derrick (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Liz J. Patterson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. John Spratt (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. Robin Tallon (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from South Dakota|South Dakota]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|South Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Tim Johnson (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Tennessee|Tennessee]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. Jimmy Quillen (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. John Duncan Sr. (R), until June 21, 1988
:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. Jimmy Duncan (R), from November 8, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. Marilyn Lloyd (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. Jim Cooper (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. Bill Boner (D), until October 5, 1987
:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. Bob Clement (D), from January 19, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. Bart Gordon (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Don Sundquist (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Ed Jones (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Harold Ford Sr. (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Texas|Texas]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Jim Chapman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Charlie Wilson (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. Steve Bartlett (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Ralph Hall (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. John Wiley Bryant (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Joe Barton (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|7|7}}. Bill Archer (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|8|8}}. Jack Fields (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|9|9}}. Jack Brooks (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|10|10}}. J. J. Pickle (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. Marvin Leath (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. Jim Wright (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. Beau Boulter (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|14|14}}. Mac Sweeney (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|15|15}}. Kika de la Garza (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|16|16}}. Ronald D. Coleman (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|17|17}}. Charles Stenholm (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|18|18}}. Mickey Leland (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|19|19}}. Larry Combest (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|20|20}}. Henry B. González (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|21|21}}. Lamar Smith (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|22|22}}. Tom DeLay (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|23|23}}. Albert Bustamante (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|24|24}}. Martin Frost (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|25|25}}. Michael A. Andrews (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|26|26}}. Dick Armey (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Texas|27|27}}. Solomon P. Ortiz (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Utah|Utah]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Utah|1|1}}. Jim Hansen (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Utah|2|2}}. Wayne Owens (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Utah|3|3}}. Howard C. Nielson (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Vermont|Vermont]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Vermont|AL|At-large}}. Jim Jeffords (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Virginia|Virginia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. Herbert H. Bateman (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Owen B. Pickett (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. Thomas J. Bliley Jr. (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|4|4}}. Norman Sisisky (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|5|5}}. Dan Daniel (D), until January 23, 1988
::{{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lewis F. Payne Jr. (D), from June 14, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|6|6}}. Jim Olin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|7|7}}. D. French Slaughter Jr. (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|8|8}}. Stanford Parris (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|9|9}}. Rick Boucher (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Virginia|10|10}}. Frank Wolf (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Washington|Washington]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|1|1}}. John Miller (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|2|2}}. Al Swift (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|3|3}}. Don Bonker (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|4|4}}. Sid Morrison (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|5|5}}. Tom Foley (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|6|6}}. Norm Dicks (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|7|7}}. Mike Lowry (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Washington|8|8}}. Rod Chandler (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from West Virginia|West Virginia]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|West Virginia|1|1}}. Alan Mollohan (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|West Virginia|2|2}}. Harley O. Staggers Jr. (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|West Virginia|3|3}}. Bob Wise (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|West Virginia|4|4}}. Nick Rahall (D)
==[[List of United States representatives from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]]==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|1|1}}. Les Aspin (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Robert Kastenmeier (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. Steve Gunderson (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. Jerry Kleczka (D)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. Jim Moody (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. Tom Petri (R)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. Dave Obey (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. Toby Roth (R)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. Jim Sensenbrenner (R)
==[[List of United States representatives from Wyoming|Wyoming]]==
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Wyoming|AL|At-large}}. Dick Cheney (R)
==Non-voting members==
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|American Samoa|AL|American Samoa}}. Fofō Iosefa Fiti Sunia (D), until September 6, 1988
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|District of Columbia|AL|District of Columbia}}. Walter Fauntroy (D)
: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{ushr|Guam|AL|Guam}}. Vicente T. Blaz (R)
: {{Party stripe|Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)}}{{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Jaime Fuster (PPD)
: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{ushr|United States Virgin Islands|AL|Virgin Islands}}. Ron de Lugo (D)
{{col-break}}
{{multiple image
| total_width = 350
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = House majority leadership
| image1 = Tom foley.jpg
| alt1 = Tom Foley
| caption1 = Democratic leader
Tom Foley
| image2 = Tony Coelho.jpg
| alt2 = Tony Coelho
| caption2 = Democratic whip
Tony Coelho
}}
{{multiple image
| total_width = 350
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = House minority leadership
| image1 = Robert H. Michel--95th Congress.png
| alt1 = Bob Michel
| caption1 = Republican leader
Bob Michel
| image2 = Trent Lott 98th Congress.png
| alt2 = Trent Lott
| caption2 = Republican whip
Trent Lott
}}
{{col-end}}
Changes in membership
=Senate=
{{see also|List of special elections to the United States Senate}}
{{Ordinal US Congress change|Senate}}
|-
| Nebraska
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Edward Zorinsky (D)
| Died March 6, 1987.
Successor was appointed to finish the term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | David Karnes (R)
| March 11, 1987
|}
= House of Representatives =
{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}
{{Ordinal US Congress change|House}}
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Sala Burton (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 1, 1987
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Nancy Pelosi (D)
| June 2, 1987
|-
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Stewart McKinney (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died May 7, 1987
| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Chris Shays (R)
| August 18, 1987
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Bill Boner (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned October 5, 1987
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Bob Clement (D)
| January 19, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Dan Daniel (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 23, 1988
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Lewis F. Payne Jr. (D)
| June 14, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Buddy Roemer (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned March 14, 1988, after being elected Governor of Louisiana
| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Jim McCrery (R)
| April 16, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | James J. Howard (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died March 25, 1988
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Frank Pallone (D)
| November 8, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Melvin Price (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 22, 1988
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Jerry Costello (D)
| August 9, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Republican}} | John Duncan Sr. (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 21, 1988
| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Jimmy Duncan (R)
| November 8, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Mario Biaggi (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 5, 1988
| colspan=2 rowspan=3| Vacant to the end of this Congress
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Fofó I. F. Sunia (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 6, 1988
|-
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Bill Nichols (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died December 13, 1988
|}
Committees
{{List of Congressional Committees instructions}}
= Senate =
- Aging (Special) (Chair: John Melcher)
- Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry (Chair: Patrick Leahy; Ranking Member: Richard G. Lugar)
- Agricultural Credit (Chair: David L. Boren; Ranking Member: Rudy Boschwitz)
- Agricultural Production and Stabilization of Prices (Chair: John Melcher; Ranking Member: Jesse Helms)
- Agricultural Research and General Legislation (Chair: Kent Conrad; Ranking Member: Pete Wilson)
- Domestic, Foreign Marketing and Product Promotion (Chair: David Pryor; Ranking Member: Thad Cochran)
- Nutrition and Investigations (Chair: Tom Harkin; Ranking Member: Bob Dole)
- Rural Development and Rural Electrification (Chair: Howell Heflin; Ranking Member: Mitch McConnell)
- Appropriations (Chair: John C. Stennis; Ranking Member: Mark O. Hatfield)
- Agriculture, Rural Development and Related Agencies (Chair: Quentin N. Burdick; Ranking Member: Thad Cochran)
- Commerce, Justice, State, Judiciary and Related Agencies (Chair: Ernest Hollings; Ranking Member: Warren Rudman)
- Defense (Chair: John Stennis; Ranking Member: Ted Stevens)
- District of Columbia (Chair: Tom Harkin; Ranking Member: Don Nickles)
- Energy and Water Development (Chair: J. Bennett Johnston; Ranking Member: Mark O. Hatfield)
- Foreign Operations (Chair: Daniel Inouye; Ranking Member: Bob Kasten)
- HUD-Independent Agencies (Chair: William Proxmire; Ranking Member: Jake Garn)
- Interior and Related Agencies (Chair: Robert C. Byrd; Ranking Member: James A. McClure)
- Labor-Health, Human Services, Education and Related Agencies (Chair: Lawton Chiles; Ranking Member: Lowell P. Weicker)
- Legislative Branch (Chair: Dale Bumpers; Ranking Member: Chuck Grassley)
- Military Construction (Chair: Jim Sasser; Ranking Member: Arlen Specter)
- Transportation and Related Agencies (Chair: Frank Lautenberg; Ranking Member: Al D'Amato)
- Treasury, Postal Service and General Government (Chair: Dennis DeConcini; Ranking Member: Pete Domenici)
- Armed Services (Chair: Sam Nunn; Ranking Member: John W. Warner)
- Conventional Forces and Alliance Defense (Chair: Carl Levin; Ranking Member: Dan Quayle)
- Defense Industry and Technology (Chair: Jeff Bingaman; Ranking Member: Phil Gramm)
- Manpower and Personnel (Chair: John Glenn; Ranking Member: Pete Wilson)
- Projection Forces and Regional Defense (Chair: Ted Kennedy; Ranking Member: William S. Cohen)
- Readiness, Sustainability and Support (Chair: Alan Dixon; Ranking Member: Gordon J. Humphrey)
- Strategic Forces and Nuclear Detterence (Chair: J. James Exon; Ranking Member: Strom Thurmond)
- Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs (Chair: William Proxmire; Ranking Member: Jake Garn)
- Consumer Affairs (Chair: Chris Dodd; Ranking Member: Phil Gramm)
- Housing and Urban Affairs (Chair: Alan Cranston; Ranking Member: Al D'Amato)
- International Finance and Monetary Policy (Chair: Paul Sarbanes; Ranking Member: H. John Heinz III)
- Securities (Chair: Donald W. Riegle; Ranking Member: William L. Armstrong)
- Budget (Chair: Lawton Chiles; Ranking Member: Pete Domenici)
- Commerce, Science and Transportation (Chair: Ernest Hollings; Ranking Member: John C. Danforth)
- Aviation (Chair: Wendell H. Ford; Ranking Member: Nancy Kassebaum)
- Communications (Chair: Daniel Inouye; Ranking Member: Bob Packwood)
- Consumer (Chair: Al Gore; Ranking Member: John McCain)
- Foreign Commerce and Tourism (Chair: Jay Rockefeller; Ranking Member: Paul S. Trible Jr.)
- Merchant Marine (Chair: John Breaux; Ranking Member: Ted Stevens)
- Science, Technology and Space (Chair: Donald W. Riegle; Ranking Member: Larry Pressler)
- Surface Transportation (Chair: J. James Exon; Ranking Member: Bob Kasten)
- National Ocean Policy Study (Chair: Ernest Hollings; Ranking Member: John C. Danforth)
- Energy and Natural Resources (Chair: J. Bennett Johnston; Ranking Member: James A. McClure)
- Energy Regulation and Conservation (Chair: Howard M. Metzenbaum; Ranking Member: Don Nickles)
- Natural Resources Development and Production (Chair: John Melcher; Ranking Member: Chic Hecht)
- Public Lands, National Parks and Forests (Chair: Dale Bumpers; Ranking Member: Malcolm Wallop)
- Research and Development (Chair: Wendell H. Ford; Ranking Member: Pete Domenici)
- Water and Power (Chair: Bill Bradley; Ranking Member: Daniel J. Evans)
- Environment and Public Works (Chair: Quentin N. Burdick; Ranking Member: Robert T. Stafford)
- Environmental Protection (Chair: George J. Mitchell; Ranking Member: John H. Chafee)
- Hazardous Wastes and Toxic Substances (Chair: Max Baucus; Ranking Member: David Durenberger)
- Nuclear Regulation (Chair: John Breaux; Ranking Member: Alan K. Simpson)
- Superfund and Environmental Oversight (Chair: Frank Lautenberg; Ranking Member: John W. Warner)
- Water Resources, Transportation and Infrastructure (Chair: Daniel Moynihan; Ranking Member: Steve Symms)
- Ethics (Select) (Chair: Howell Heflin; Vice Chair: Warren Rudman)
- Finance (Chair: Lloyd Bentsen; Ranking Member: Bob Packwood)
- Energy and Agricultural Taxation (Chair: David L. Boren; Ranking Member: Malcolm Wallop)
- Health (Chair: George J. Mitchell; Ranking Member: David Durenberger)
- International Debt (Chair: Bill Bradley; Ranking Member: William V. Roth Jr.)
- International Trade (Chair: Spark Matsunaga; Ranking Member: John C. Danforth)
- Private Retirement Plans and Oversight of the Internal Revenue Service (Chair: David Pryor; Ranking Member: H. John Heinz III)
- Social Security and Family Policy (Chair: Daniel Moynihan; Ranking Member: Bob Dole)
- Taxation and Debt Management (Chair: Max Baucus; Ranking Member: John H. Chafee)
- Foreign Relations (Chair: Claiborne Pell; Ranking Member: Jesse Helms)
- African Affairs (Chair: Paul Simon; Ranking Member: Nancy Kassebaum)
- East Asian and Pacific Affairs (Chair: Alan Cranston; Ranking Member: Frank H. Murkowski)
- European Affairs (Chair: Joe Biden; Ranking Member: Daniel J. Evans)
- International Economic Policy, Trade, Oceans and Environment (Chair: John Kerry; Ranking Member: Rudy Boschwitz)
- Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs (Chair: Paul Sarbanes; Ranking Member: Rudy Boschwitz)
- Terrorism, Narcotics and International Communications (Chair: Brock Adams; Ranking Member: Mitch McConnell)
- Western Hemisphere and Peace Corps Affairs (Chair: Chris Dodd; Ranking Member: Richard G. Lugar)
- Governmental Affairs (Chair: John Glenn; Ranking Member: William V. Roth Jr.)
- Federal Services, Post Office and Civil Service (Chair: David Pryor; Ranking Member: Ted Stevens)
- Federal Spending, Budget and Accounting (Chair: Lawton Chiles; Ranking Member: Warren Rudman)
- Energy, Nuclear Proliferation and Federal Services (Chair: Jim Sasser; Ranking Member: N/A)
- Government Efficiency, Federalism and the District of Columbia (Chair: Jim Sasser; Ranking Member: H. John Heinz III)
- Oversight of Government Management (Chair: Carl Levin; Ranking Member: William S. Cohen)
- Investigations (Chair: Carl Levin; Ranking Member: N/A)
- Indian Affairs (Select) (Chair: Daniel Inouye)
- Judiciary (Chair: Joe Biden; Ranking Member: Strom Thurmond)
- Antitrust, Monopolies and Business Rights (Chair: Howard M. Metzenbaum; Ranking Member: Strom Thurmond)
- Constitution (Chair: Paul Simon; Ranking Member: Arlen Specter)
- Courts and Administration Practice (Chair: Howell Heflin; Ranking Member: Chuck Grassley)
- Immigration and Refugee Affairs (Chair: Ted Kennedy; Ranking Member: Alan K. Simpson)
- Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks (Chair: Dennis DeConcini; Ranking Member: Orrin Hatch)
- Technology and the Law (Chair: Patrick Leahy; Ranking Member: Gordon J. Humphrey)
- Intelligence (Select) (Chair: David L. Boren; Vice Chair: William S. Cohen)
- Labor and Human Resources (Chair: Ted Kennedy; Ranking Member: Orrin Hatch)
- Aging (Chair: Spark Matsunaga; Ranking Member: Thad Cochran)
- Children, Family, Drugs and Alcoholism (Chair: Chris Dodd; Ranking Member: Strom Thurmond)
- Education, Arts and Humanities (Chair: Claiborne Pell; Ranking Member: Robert T. Stafford)
- Employment and Productivity (Chair: Paul Simon; Ranking Member: Gordon J. Humphrey)
- Handicapped (Chair: Tom Harkin; Ranking Member: Lowell P. Weicker)
- Labor (Chair: Howard M. Metzenbaum; Ranking Member: Dan Quayle)
- Nutrition and Human Needs (Select) (Chair: {{Data missing|date=March 2020}})
- Rules and Administration (Chair: Wendell H. Ford; Ranking Member: Ted Stevens)
- Small Business (Chair: Dale Bumpers; Ranking Member: Lowell P. Weicker)
- Competition and Antitrust Enforcement (Chair: Tom Harkin; Ranking Member: Malcolm Wallop)
- Export Expansion (Chair: Jim Sasser; Ranking Member: Rudy Boschwitz)
- Government Contracting and Paperwork Reduction (Chair: Alan Dixon; Ranking Member: Bob Kasten)
- Innovation, Technology and Productivity (Chair: Carl Levin; Ranking Member: Warren B. Rudman)
- Export Promotion and Market Development (Chair: Jim Sasser)
- Rural Economy and Family Farming (Chair: Max Baucus; Ranking Member: Al D'Amato)
- Urban and Minority-Owned Business Development (Chair: John Kerry; Ranking Member: Kit Bond)
- Secret Military Assistance to Iran and the Nicaraguan Opposition (Select) (Chair: Daniel Inouye; Vice Chair: Warren Rudman)
- Veterans' Affairs (Chairman: Alan Cranston; Ranking Member: Frank H. Murkowski)
- Whole
= House of Representatives =
- Aging (Select) (Chair: Edward Roybal; Ranking Member: Matthew J. Rinaldo)
- Agriculture (Chair: Kika de la Garza; Ranking Member: Edward Madigan)
- Conservation, Credit and Rural Development (Chair: Ed Jones; Ranking Member: E. Thomas Coleman)
- Cotton, Rice and Sugar (Chair: Jerry Huckaby; Ranking Member: Arlan Stangeland)
- Department Operations, Research and Foreign Agriculture (Chair: George E. Brown Jr.; Ranking Member: Pat Roberts)
- Domestic Marketing, Consumer Relations and Nutrition (Chair: Leon Panetta; Ranking Member: Bill Emerson)
- Forests, Family Farms and Energy (Chair: Harold Volkmer; Ranking Member: Sid Morrison)
- Livestock, Dairy and Poultry (Chair: Charles Stenholm; Ranking Member: Jim Jeffords)
- Tobacco and Peanuts (Chair: Charlie Rose; Ranking Member: Larry J. Hopkins)
- Wheat, Soybeans and Feed Grains (Chair: Dan Glickman; Ranking Member: Ron Marlenee)
- Appropriations (Chair: Jamie L. Whitten; Ranking Member: Silvio O. Conte)
- Commerce, Justice, State and the Judiciary (Chair: Neal Edward Smith; Ranking Member: Hal Rogers)
- Defense (Chair: William V. Chappell; Ranking Member: Joseph M. McDade)
- District of Columbia (Chair: Julian C. Dixon; Ranking Member: Lawrence Coughlin)
- Energy and Water Development (Chair: Tom Bevill)
- Foreign Operations (Chair: David Obey; Ranking Member: John T. Myers)
- HUD-Independent Agencies (Chair: Edward P. Boland; Ranking Member: Mickey Edwards)
- Interior and Related Agencies (Chair: Sidney Yates; Ranking Member: Bill Green)
- Labor-Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies (Chair: William H. Natcher; Ranking Member: Ralph Regula)
- Legislative (Chair: Victor Fazio; Ranking Member: Jerry Lewis)
- Military Construction (Chair: Bill Hefner; Ranking Member: Bill Lowery)
- Agriculture, Rural Development and Related Agencies (Chair: Jamie Whitten; Ranking Member: Virginia Smith)
- Transportation and Related Agencies (Chair: William Lehman; Ranking Member: Lawrence Coughlin)
- Treasury, Postal Service and General Government (Chair: Edward Roybal; Ranking Member: Joe Skeen)
- Armed Services (Chair: Les Aspin; Ranking Member: William L. Dickinson)
- Investigations (Chair: Bill Nichols; Ranking Member: Larry J. Hopkins)
- Military Installations and Facilities (Chair: Ron Dellums; Ranking Member: David O'B. Martin)
- Military Personnel and Compensation (Chair: Beverly Byron; Ranking Member: Herbert H. Bateman)
- Procurement and Military Nuclear Systems (Chair: Samuel S. Stratton; Ranking Member: Robert E. Badham)
- Readiness (Chair: Dan Daniel; Ranking Member: John R. Kasich)
- Research and Development (Chair: Charles Melvin Price; Ranking Member: William L. Dickinson)
- Seapower, Strategic and Critical Materials (Chair: Charles E. Bennett; Ranking Member: Floyd Spence)
- Acquisition Policy Panel (Chair: Nicholas Mavroules; Ranking Member: Jim Courter)
- Defense Policy Panel (Chair: Les Aspin; Ranking Member: William L. Dickinson)
- Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs (Chair: Fernand St. Germain; Ranking Member: Chalmers P. Wylie)
- Consumer Affairs and Coinage (Chair: Frank Annunzio; Ranking Member: John P. Hiler)
- Domestic Monetary Policy (Chair: Stephen L. Neal; Ranking Member: Bill McCollum)
- Economic Stabilization (Chair: Mary Rose Oakar; Ranking Member: Norman D. Shumway)
- Financial Institutions Supervision, Regulation and Insurance (Chair: Fernand St. Germain; Ranking Member: Stanford Parris)
- General Oversight and Investigations (Chair: Carroll Hubbard; Ranking Member: Stanford Parris)
- Housing and Community Development (Chair: Henry B. Gonzalez; Ranking Member: Chalmers P. Wylie)
- International Development Institutions and Finance (Chair: Walter E. Fauntroy; Ranking Member: Doug Bereuter)
- International Finance, Trade and Monetary Policy (Chair: Robert Garcia; Ranking Member: Jim Leach)
- Budget (Chair: William H. Gray; Ranking Member: Del Latta)
- Budget Process (Chair: Butler Derrick; Ranking Member: Willis D. Gradison Jr.)
- Community and Natural Resources (Chair: Howard Wolpe; Ranking Member: Mickey Edwards)
- Defense and International Affairs (Chair: Vic Fazio; Ranking Member: Del Latta)
- Economic and Trade Policy (Chair: Mike Lowry; Ranking Member: Beau Boulter)
- Health (Chair: Martin Frost; Ranking Member: Nancy Johnson)
- Human Resources (Chair: Pat Williams; Ranking Member: Bill Goodling)
- Income Security (Chair: Marty Russo; Ranking Member: Connie Mack III)
- State and Local Government (Chair: George Miller; Ranking Member: Denny Smith)
- Children, Youth and Families (Select) (Chair: George Miller; Ranking Member: Dan Coats)
- District of Columbia (Chair: Ron Dellums; Ranking Member: Stanford Parris)
- Fiscal Affairs and Health (Chair: Walter E. Fauntroy; Ranking Member: Stanford Parris)
- Government Operations and Metropolitan Affairs (Chair: Alan Wheat; Ranking Member: Larry Combest)
- Judiciary and Education (Chair: Mervyn M. Dymally; Ranking Member: Thomas J. Bliley Jr.)
- Education and Labor (Chair: Augustus F. Hawkins; Ranking Member: Jim Jeffords)
- Elementary, Secondary and Vocational Education (Chair: Augustus F. Hawkins; Ranking Member: Jim Jeffords)
- Employment Opportunities (Chair: Matthew G. Martinez; Ranking Member: Bill Goodling)
- Health and Safety (Chair: Joseph M. Gaydos; Ranking Member: Paul B. Henry)
- Labor-Management Relations (Chair: Bill Clay; Ranking Member: Marge Roukema)
- Labor Standards (Chair: Austin J. Murphy; Ranking Member: Tom Petri)
- Human Resources (Chair: Dale Kildee; Ranking Member: Tom Tauke)
- Postsecondary Education (Chair: Pat Williams; Ranking Member: E. Thomas Coleman)
- Select Education (Chair: Major R. Owens; Ranking Member: Steve Bartlett)
- Energy and Commerce (Chair: John Dingell; Ranking Member: Norman F. Lent)
- Commerce, Transportation and Tourism (Chair: James J. Florio; Ranking Member: William E. Dannemeyer)
- Energy and Power (Chair: Phil Sharp; Ranking Member: Carlos J. Moorhead)
- Health and the Environment (Chair: Henry Waxman; Ranking Member: Edward R. Madigan)
- Oversight and Investigations (Chair: John Dingell; Ranking Member: Norman F. Lent)
- Telecommunications and Finance (Chair: Ed Markey; Ranking Member: Matthew J. Rinaldo)
- Transportation, Tourism and Hazardous Materials (Chair: Tom Luken; Ranking Member: Bob Whittaker)
- Foreign Affairs (Chair: Dante Fascell; Ranking Member: William S. Broomfield)
- Africa (Chair: Howard Wolpe; Ranking Member: Dan Burton)
- Arms Control, International Security and Science (Chair: Dante Fascell; Ranking Member: William S. Broomfield)
- Asian and Pacific Affairs (Chair: Stephen Solarz; Ranking Member: Jim Leach)
- Europe and the Middle East (Chair: Lee H. Hamilton; Ranking Member: Benjamin A. Gilman)
- Human Rights and International Organizations (Chair: Gus Yatron; Ranking Member: Gerald B.H. Solomon)
- International Economic Policy and Trade (Chair: Don Bonker; Ranking Member: Toby Roth)
- International Operations (Chair: Dan Mica; Ranking Member: Olympia Snowe)
- Western Hemisphere Affairs (Chair: George W. Crockett; Ranking Member: Robert J. Lagomarsino)
- Government Operations (Chair: Jack Brooks; Ranking Member: Frank Horton)
- Commerce, Consumer and Monetary Affairs (Chair: Doug Barnard; Ranking Member: Larry E. Craig)
- Employment and Housing (Chair: Tom Lantos; Ranking Member: Joseph J. DioGuardi)
- Environment, Energy and Natural Resources (Chair: Mike Synar; Ranking Member: William F. Clinger Jr.)
- Government Activities and Transportation (Chair: Cardiss Collins; Ranking Member: Howard C. Nielson)
- Government Information, Justice and Agriculture (Chair: Glenn English; Ranking Member: Al McCandless)
- Human Resources and Ingovernmental Relations (Chair: Ted Weiss; Ranking Member: Jim Ross Lightfoot)
- Legislation and National Security (Chair: Jack Brooks; Ranking Member: Frank Horton)
- House Administration (Chair: Frank Annunzio; Ranking Member: Bill Frenzel)
- Accounts (Chair: Joseph M. Gaydos; Ranking Member: Robert E. Badham)
- Elections (Chair: Al Swift; Ranking Member: Bill Thomas)
- Libraries and Memorials (Chair: Mary Rose Oakar; Ranking Member: Newt Gingrich)
- Office Systems (Chair: Charlie Rose; Ranking Member: Bill Thomas)
- Personnel and Police (Chair: Leon E. Panetta; Ranking Member: Pat Roberts)
- Procurement and Printing (Chair: Ed Jones; Ranking Member: Newt Gingrich)
- Task Force on Legislative Service Organizations (Chair: Jim Bates; Ranking Member: Pat Roberts)
- Hunger (Select) (Chair: Mickey Leland; Ranking Member: Marge Roukema)
- Interior and Insular Affairs (Chair: Mo Udall; Ranking Member: Don Young)
- Energy and the Environment (Chair: Morris K. Udall; Ranking Member: Manuel Lujan Jr.)
- General Oversight, Northwest Power and Forest Management (Chair: Sam Gejdenson; Ranking Member: Denny Smith)
- Insular and International Affairs (Chair: Ron de Lugo; Ranking Member: Robert J. Lagomarsino)
- Mining and Natural Resources (Chair: Nick Rahall; Ranking Member: Larry E. Craig)
- National Parks and Public Lands (Chair: Bruce Vento; Ranking Member: Ron Marlenee)
- Water and Power Resources (Chair: George Miller; Ranking Member: Chip Pashayan Jr.)
- Investigate Covert Arms Transactions with Iran (Select) (Chair: Lee H. Hamilton; Ranking Member: Dick Cheney)
- Judiciary (Chair: Peter W. Rodino; Ranking Member: Hamilton Fish IV)
- Administrative Law and Governmental Relations (Chair: Barney Frank; Ranking Member: E. Clay Shaw Jr.)
- Civil and Constitutional Rights (Chair: Don Edwards; Ranking Member: James Sensenbrenner)
- Courts, Civil Liberties and the Administration of Justice (Chair: Robert W. Kastenmeier; Ranking Member: Carlos J. Moorhead)
- Crime (Chair: William J. Hughes; Ranking Member: Bill McCollum)
- Criminal Justice (Chair: John Conyers; Ranking Member: George W. Gekas)
- Immigration, Refugees and International Law (Chair: Romano L. Mazzoli; Ranking Member: Pat Swindall)
- Monopolies and Commercial Law (Chair: Peter W. Rodino; Ranking Member: Hamilton Fish IV)
- Merchant Marine and Fisheries (Chair: Walter B. Jones Sr.; Ranking Member: Robert W. Davis)
- Coast Guard and Navigation (Chair: Earl Hutto; Ranking Member: Robert W. Davis)
- Fisheries, Wildlife Conservation and the Environment (Chair: Gerry Studds; Ranking Member: Don Young)
- Merchant Marine (Chair: Mario Biaggi; Ranking Member: Norman F. Lent)
- Oceanography (Chair: Mike Lowry; Ranking Member: Norman D. Shumway)
- Oversight and Investigations (Chair: Walter B. Jones Sr.; Ranking Member: Claudine Schneider)
- Panama Canal and Outer Continental Stuff (Chair: Billy Tauzin; Ranking Member: Jack Fields)
- Narcotics Abuse and Control (Select) (Chair: Charles B. Rangel; Ranking Member: Benjamin A. Gilman)
- Post Office and Civil Service (Chair: William D. Ford; Ranking Member: Gene Taylor)
- Census and Population (Chair: Mervyn M. Dymally; Ranking Member: Connie Morella)
- Civil Service (Chair: Patricia Schroeder; Ranking Member: Chip Pashayan)
- Compensation and Employee Benefits (Chair: Gary Ackerman; Ranking Member: John T. Myers)
- Human Resources (Chair: Gerry Sikorski; Ranking Member: Dan Burton)
- Investigations (Chair: William D. Ford; Ranking Member: Gene Taylor)
- Postal Operations and Services (Chair: Mickey Leland; Ranking Member: Frank Horton)
- Postal Personnel and Modernization (Chair: Frank McCloskey; Ranking Member: Don Young)
- Public Works and Transportation (Chair: James J. Howard, then Glenn M. Anderson; Ranking Member: John Paul Hammerschmidt)
- Aviation (Chair: Norman Y. Mineta; Ranking Member: Newt Gingrich)
- Economic Development (Chair: Gus Savage; Ranking Member: E. Clay Shaw Jr.)
- Investigations and Oversight (Chair: Jim Oberstar; Ranking Member: William F. Clinger Jr.)
- Public Buildings and Grounds (Chair: Fofo I.F. Sunia; Ranking Member: Guy Molinari)
- Surface Transportation (Chair: Glenn M. Anderson; Ranking Member: Bud Shuster)
- Water Resources (Chair: Henry J. Nowak; Ranking Member: Arlan Stangeland)
- Rules (Chair: Claude Pepper; Ranking Member: Jimmy Quillen)
- Rules of the House (Chair: Joe Moakley; Ranking Member: Gene Taylor)
- The Legislative Process (Chair: Butler Derrick; Ranking Member: Trent Lott)
- Science and Technology (Chair: Robert A. Roe; Ranking Member: Manuel Lujan Jr.)
- Energy Research and Development (Chair: Marilyn Lloyd; Ranking Member: Sid Morrison)
- International Scientific Cooperation (Chair: Ralph M. Hall; Ranking Member: James Sensenbrenner)
- Investigations and Oversight (Chair: Robert A. Roe; Ranking Member: Don Ritter)
- Natural Resources, Agriculture Research and Environment (Chair: James H. Scheuer; Ranking Member: Claudine Schneider)
- Science, Research and Technology (Chair: Doug Walgren; Ranking Member: Sherwood Boehlert)
- Space Science and Applications (Chair: Bill Nelson; Ranking Member: Robert S. Walker)
- Transportation, Aviation and Materials (Chair: Dave McCurdy; Ranking Member: Tom Luken)
- Small Business (Chair: John J. LaFalce; Ranking Member: Joseph M. McDade)
- Antitrust, Impact of Deregulation and Privatization (Chair: Dennis E. Eckart; Ranking Member: John Hiler)
- Energy and Agriculture (Chair: Charles Hatcher; Ranking Member: David Dreier)
- Exports, Tourism and Special Problems (Chair: Ike Skelton; Ranking Member: Andy Ireland)
- Procurement, Innovation and Minority Enterprise Development (Chair: Nicholas Mavroules; Ranking Member: Silvio O. Conte)
- Regulation and Business Opportunities (Chair: Ron Wyden; Ranking Member: William S. Broomfield)
- SBA and the General Economy (Chair: John J. LaFalce; Ranking Member: Joseph M. McDade)
- Standards of Official Conduct (Chair: Julian C. Dixon; Ranking Member: Floyd Spence)
- Veterans' Affairs (Chair: Gillespie V. Montgomery; Ranking Member: Gerald B.H. Solomon)
- Hospitals and Health Care (Chair: Gillespie V. Montgomery; Ranking Member: John Paul Hammerschmidt)
- Compensation, Pension and Insurance (Chair: Douglas Applegate; Ranking Member: Bill McCollum)
- Education, Training and Employment (Chair: Wayne Dowdy; Ranking Member: Chris Smith)
- Oversight and Investigations (Chair: Lane Evans; Ranking Member: Bob Stump)
- Housing and Memorial Affairs (Chair: Marcy Kaptur; Ranking Member: Dan Burton)
- Ways and Means (Chair: Dan Rostenkowski; Ranking Member: John J. Duncan)
- Health (Chair: Pete Stark; Ranking Member: Willis D. Gradison Jr.)
- Oversight (Chair: J.J. Pickle; Ranking Member: Richard T. Schulze)
- Public Assistance and Unemployment Compensation (Chair: Thomas J. Downey; Ranking Member: Hank Brown)
- Select Revenue Measures (Chair: Charles Rangel; Ranking Member: Guy Vander Jagt)
- Social Security (Chair: Andrew Jacobs Jr.; Ranking Member: Bill Archer)
- Trade (Chair: Sam Gibbons; Ranking Member: Phil Crane)
- Whole
= Joint committees=
- Deficit Reduction
- Economic (Chair: Sen. Paul Sarbanes; Vice Chair: Rep. Lee H. Hamilton)
- Taxation (Chair: Rep. Dan Rostenkowski; Vice Chair: Sen. Lloyd Bentsen)
- The Library (Chair: Sen. Claiborne Pell; Vice Chair: Rep. Frank Annunzio)
- Printing (Chair: Rep. Frank Annunzio; Vice Chair: Sen. Wendell Ford)
Employees
=[[List of federal agencies in the United States#United States Congress|Legislative branch agency]] directors=
- Architect of the Capitol: George Malcolm White
- Attending Physician of the United States Congress: William Narva
- Comptroller General of the United States: Charles A. Bowsher
- Director of the Congressional Budget Office: Rudolph G. Penner, until April 28, 1987
- Edward Gramlich, April 28, 1987–December 1987
- James L. Blum Jr. (acting), starting December 1987
- Librarian of Congress: Daniel J. Boorstin, until September 12, 1987
- James H. Billington, from September 14, 1987
- Public Printer of the United States: Ralph E. Kennickell Jr., until 1988
- Joseph E. Jenifer, from 1988
=Senate=
- Secretary: Walter J. Stewart
- Librarian: Roger K. Haley
- Secretary for the Majority: C. Abbott Saffold
- Secretary for the Minority: Howard O. Greene Jr.
- Sergeant at Arms: Henry K. Giugni
- Parliamentarian: Alan Frumin
- Curator: James R. Ketchum
- Historian: Richard A. Baker
- Chaplain: Richard C. Halverson (Presbyterian)
=House of Representatives=
- Clerk: Donnald K. Anderson
- Sergeant at Arms: Jack Russ
- Doorkeeper: James T. Molloy
- Parliamentarian: William Holmes Brown
- Postmaster: Robert V. Rota
- Reading Clerks:
- Meg Goetz (D)
- Bob Berry along with Paul Hays (starting 1988) (R)
- Historian: Ray Smock
- Chaplain: James D. Ford (Lutheran)
- See also: [https://web.archive.org/web/20110623164506/http://clerk.house.gov/legislative/rules/rule2.html Rules of the House: "Other officers and officials"]
See also
- List of new members of the 100th United States Congress
- 1986 United States elections (elections leading to this Congress)
- 1986 United States Senate elections
- 1986 United States House of Representatives elections
- 1988 United States elections (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
- 1988 United States presidential election
- 1988 United States Senate elections
- 1988 United States House of Representatives elections
Notes
{{Notelist}}
References
{{reflist}}
- {{cite book|title=The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress|last=Martis|first=Kenneth C.|year=1989|publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company| location=New York}}
- {{cite book|title=The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts|last=Martis|first=Kenneth C.|year=1982|publisher = Macmillan Publishing Company|location= New York}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060601025644/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/hd108-222/index.html Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060601013451/http://clerk.house.gov/histHigh/Congressional_History/index.html U.S. House of Representatives: Congressional History]
- [https://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/stats_and_lists.htm U.S. Senate: Statistics and Lists]
- {{cite web |title=Videos of House of Representatives Sessions for the 100th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org |url= http://www.c-span.org/search/?sdate=01%2F03%2F1987&edate=01%2F02%2F1989&searchtype=Videos&sort=Most+Recent+Event&text=0&all%5B%5D=House&all%5B%5D=Session }}
- {{cite web |title=Videos of Senate Sessions for the 100th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org |url= http://www.c-span.org/search/?sdate=01%2F03%2F1987&edate=01%2F02%2F1989&searchtype=Videos&sort=Most+Recent+Event&text=0&all%5B%5D=Senate&all%5B%5D=Session }}
- {{cite web |title=Videos of Committees from the House and Senate for the 100th Congress from www.C-SPAN.org |url= https://www.c-span.org/search/?sdate=01%2F03%2F1987&edate=01%2F02%2F1989&searchtype=Videos&sort=Most+Recent+Event&text=0&all%5B%5D=Committee }}
- {{cite book |title=House of Representatives Session Calendar for the 100th Congress |url=http://library.clerk.house.gov/reference-files/House_Calendar_100th_Congress.pdf#page=1 |access-date=December 11, 2018 |archive-date=September 20, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180920221931/http://library.clerk.house.gov/reference-files/House_Calendar_100th_Congress.pdf#page=1 |url-status=dead }}
- {{cite book |title=Congressional Pictorial Directory for the 100th Congress |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293012373969;view=1up;seq=3 }}
- {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 100th Congress |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293012374397;view=1up;seq=3 }}
{{USCongresses}}