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List of new members of the 119th United States Congress

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The 119th United States Congress is the next meeting of the United States Congress. New members will be elected in the November 2024 elections and will assume office on January 3, 2025.

Senate

[edit]

Taking office January 3, 2025

[edit]
State Image Senator Seniority Switched party Prior background Birth year Ref
Arizona Ruben Gallego (D) 1st
(91st overall)
Yes
Open seat; replacing Kyrsten Sinema (I)[1]
U.S. House of Representatives[a]
Arizona House of Representatives
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Corporal
1979
Delaware Lisa Blunt Rochester (D) 3rd
(93rd overall)
No
Open seat; replacing Tom Carper (D)[2]
U.S. House of Representatives[b]
Delaware Secretary of Labor
1962
Indiana Jim Banks (R) 2nd
(92nd overall)
No
Open seat; replacing Mike Braun (R)[3]
U.S. House of Representatives[c]
Indiana Senate
1979
Maryland Angela Alsobrooks (D) 8th
(98th overall)
No
Open seat; replacing Ben Cardin (D)[4]
Prince George's County Executive
Prince George's County State Attorney
1971
Michigan Elissa Slotkin (D) 5th
(95th overall)
No
Open seat; replacing Debbie Stabenow (D)[5]
U.S. House of Representatives[d]
Assistant Secretary of Defense (ISA)
Central Intelligence Agency
1976
Montana Tim Sheehy (R) 9th
(99th overall)
Yes
Defeated Jon Tester (D)
CEO of Bridger Aerospace
Aerial firefighter
U.S. Navy SEAL
1985
Ohio Bernie Moreno (R) 7th
(97th overall)
Yes
Defeated Sherrod Brown (D)
Car sales businessman 1967
Pennsylvania David McCormick (R) 6th
(96th overall)
Yes
Defeated Bob Casey Jr. (D)
Under Secretary of the Treasury
Under Secretary of Commerce
CEO of Bridgewater Associates
1965
Utah John Curtis (R) 4th
(94th overall)
No
Open seat; replacing Mitt Romney (R)[6]
U.S. House of Representatives[e]
Mayor of Provo
1960
West Virginia Jim Justice (R) TBD Yes
Open seat; replacing Joe Manchin (I)[7]
Governor of West Virginia
Owner of The Greenbrier
1951

Taking office during the Congress

[edit]
State Image Senator Took office Switched party Prior background Birth year Ref
Florida TBD TBD TBD
Appointed; replacing Marco Rubio (R)
TBD
Ohio TBD TBD TBD
Appointed; replacing JD Vance (R)
TBD

House of Representatives

[edit]

Taking office January 3, 2025

[edit]
District Image Representative Switched party Prior background Birth year Ref
Alabama 2 Shomari Figures (D) New seat Deputy chief of staff to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland 1985
Alaska at-large Nick Begich III (R) Yes
Defeated Mary Peltola (D)
Software businessman
Alaska Policy Forum Board
1977
Arizona 3 Yassamin Ansari (D) No
Open seat; replacing Ruben Gallego (D)
Phoenix City Council 1992
Arizona 8 Abraham Hamadeh (R) No
Open seat; replacing Debbie Lesko (R)
Prosecutor
U.S. Army Intelligence Officer
1991
California 12 Lateefah Simon (D) No
Open seat; replacing Barbara Lee (D)
Bay Area Rapid Transit Board of Directors 1977
California 13 Adam Gray (D) Yes
Defeated John Duarte (R)
California State Assembly 1977
California 16 Sam Liccardo (D) No
Open seat; replacing Anna Eshoo (D)
Mayor of San Jose
San Jose City Council
1970
California 27 George T. Whitesides (D) Yes
Defeated Mike Garcia (R)
CEO of Virgin Galactic
Chief of Staff of NASA
1974
California 29 Luz Rivas (D) No
Open seat; replacing Tony Cárdenas (D)
California State Assembly 1974
California 30 Laura Friedman (D) No
Open seat; replacing Adam Schiff (D)
California State Assembly
Mayor of Glendale
1966
California 31 Gil Cisneros (D) No
Open seat; replacing Grace Napolitano (D)
Under Secretary of Defense (P&R)
U.S. House of Representatives[f]
U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander
1971
California 45 Derek Tran (D) Yes
Defeated Michelle Steel (R)
Attorney U.S. Army Veteran 1980
California 47 Dave Min (D) No
Open seat; replacing Katie Porter (D)
California State Senate 1976
Colorado 3 Jeff Hurd (R) No
Open seat; replacing Lauren Boebert (R)[g]
Attorney 1979
Colorado 5 Jeff Crank (R) No
Open seat; replacing Doug Lamborn (R)
Outdoorsman
Radio show host
1967
Colorado 8 Gabe Evans (R) Yes
Defeated Yadira Caraveo (D)
Colorado House of Representatives
Arvada Police Department
U.S. Army Captain
1986
Delaware at-large Sarah McBride (D) No
Open seat; replacing Lisa Blunt Rochester (D)
Delaware Senate 1990
Florida 8 Mike Haridopolos (R) No
Open seat; replacing Bill Posey (R)
President of the Florida Senate
Florida House of Representatives
1970
Georgia 3 Brian Jack (R) No
Open seat; replacing Drew Ferguson (R)
White House Director of Political Affairs 1988
Indiana 3 Marlin Stutzman (R) No
Open seat; replacing Jim Banks (R)
U.S. House of Representatives[h]
Indiana Senate
Indiana House of Representatives
1976
Indiana 6 Jefferson Shreve (R) No
Open seat; replacing Greg Pence (R)
Indianapolis City-County Council 1965
Indiana 8 Mark Messmer (R) No
Open seat; replacing Larry Bucshon (R)
Majority Leader of the Indiana Senate
Indiana House of Representatives
1967
Kansas 2 Derek Schmidt (R) No
Open seat; replacing Jake LaTurner (R)
Kansas Attorney General
Kansas Senate
1968
Louisiana 6 Cleo Fields (D) Yes
Open seat; replacing Garret Graves (R)
U.S. House of Representatives[i]
Louisiana Senate
1962
Maryland 2 Johnny Olszewski (D) No
Open seat; replacing Dutch Ruppersberger (D)
Baltimore County Executive
Maryland House of Delegates
1982
Maryland 3 Sarah Elfreth (D) No
Open seat; replacing John Sarbanes (D)
Maryland Senate 1988
Maryland 6 April McClain-Delaney (D) No
Open seat; replacing David Trone (D)
Lawyer
U.S. Department of Commerce official
1964
Michigan 7 Tom Barrett (R) Yes
Open seat; replacing Elissa Slotkin (D)
Michigan Senate
Michigan House of Representatives
Michigan Army National Guard
1981
Michigan 8 Kristen McDonald Rivet (D) No
Open seat; replacing Dan Kildee (D)
Michigan Senate 1970
Minnesota 3 Kelly Morrison (DFL) No
Open seat; replacing Dean Phillips (DFL)
Minnesota Senate
Minnesota House of Representatives
1969
Missouri 1 Wesley Bell (D) No
Defeated Cori Bush (D) in a primary
St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney 1974
Missouri 3 Bob Onder (R) No
Open seat; replacing Blaine Luetkemeyer (R)
Missouri Senate
Missouri House of Representatives
1962
Montana 2 Troy Downing (R) No
Open seat; replacing Matt Rosendale (R)
Montana State Auditor 1967
New Hampshire 2 Maggie Goodlander (D) No
Open seat; replacing Annie Kuster (D)
Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division 1986
New Jersey 3 Herb Conaway (D) No
Open seat; replacing Andy Kim (D)
New Jersey General Assembly 1963
New Jersey 9 Nellie Pou (D) No
Open seat; replacing Bill Pascrell (D)
New Jersey Senate
New Jersey General Assembly
1956
New York 4 Laura Gillen (D) Yes
Defeated Anthony D'Esposito (R)
Town Supervisor of Hempstead 1969
New York 16 George Latimer (D) No
Defeated Jamaal Bowman (D) in a primary
Westchester County Executive
New York State Senate
New York State Assembly
Westchester County Board of Legislators
1953
New York 19 Josh Riley (D) Yes
Defeated Marc Molinaro (R)
Lawyer 1981
New York 22 John Mannion (D) Yes
Defeated Brandon Williams (R)
New York State Senate 1968
North Carolina 6 Addison McDowell (R) New seat Healthcare lobbyist 1994
North Carolina 8 Mark Harris (R) No
Open seat; replacing Dan Bishop (R)
Pastor 1966
North Carolina 10 Pat Harrigan (R) No
Open seat; replacing Patrick McHenry (R)
Firearms manufacturer 1987
North Carolina 13 Brad Knott (R) Yes
Open seat; replacing Wiley Nickel (D)
Attorney 1986
North Carolina 14 Tim Moore (R) Yes
Open seat; replacing Jeff Jackson (D)
Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives 1970
North Dakota at-large Julie Fedorchak (R) No
Open seat; replacing Kelly Armstrong (R)
North Dakota Public Service Commission 1968
Ohio 2 David Taylor (R) No
Open seat; replacing Brad Wenstrup (R)
Attorney 1969
Oregon 3 Maxine Dexter (D) No
Open seat; replacing Earl Blumenauer (D)
Oregon House of Representatives 1972
Oregon 5 Janelle Bynum (D) Yes
Defeated Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R)
Oregon House of Representatives 1975
Pennsylvania 7 Ryan Mackenzie (R) Yes
Defeated Susan Wild (D)
Pennsylvania House of Representatives 1982
Pennsylvania 8 Rob Bresnahan (R) Yes
Defeated Matt Cartwright (D)
Businessman 1990
South Carolina 3 Sheri Biggs (R) No
Open seat; replacing Jeff Duncan (R)
Nurse practitioner 1970
Texas 12 Craig Goldman (R) No
Open seat; replacing Kay Granger (R)
Texas House of Representatives 1968
Texas 18 Sylvester Turner (D) No
Open seat; replacing Erica Lee Carter (D)[j]
Mayor of Houston
Texas House of Representatives
1954
Texas 26 Brandon Gill (R) No
Open seat; replacing Michael C. Burgess (R)
Conservative media website founder 1994
Texas 32 Julie Johnson (D) No
Open seat; replacing Colin Allred (D)
Texas House of Representatives 1966
Utah 3 Mike Kennedy (R) No
Open seat; replacing John Curtis (R)
Utah Senate
Utah House of Representatives
1969
Virginia 5 John McGuire (R) No
Defeated Bob Good (R) in a primary
Virginia Senate
Virginia House of Delegates
1968
Virginia 7 Eugene Vindman (D) No
Open seat; replacing Abigail Spanberger (D)
U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel
Legal advisor to the National Security Council
1975
Virginia 10 Suhas Subramanyam (D) No
Open seat; replacing Jennifer Wexton (D)
Virginia Senate
Virginia House of Delegates
1986
Washington 5 Michael Baumgartner (R) No
Open seat; replacing Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R)
Treasurer of Spokane County
Washington Senate
1975
Washington 6 Emily Randall (D) No
Open seat; replacing Derek Kilmer (D)
Washington Senate 1985
West Virginia 2 Riley Moore (R) No
Open seat; replacing Alex Mooney (R)
West Virginia State Treasurer
West Virginia House of Delegates
1980

Non-voting delegates

[edit]
District Image Delegate Switched party Prior background Birth year Ref
Northern Mariana Islands at-large Kimberlyn King-Hinds (R) Yes
Open seat; replacing Gregorio Sablan (D)
Chair of the Commonwealth Ports Authority Board of Directors
Puerto Rico at-large Pablo Hernández Rivera (PDP/D) Yes
Open seat; replacing Jenniffer González-Colón (PNP/R)
Popular Democratic Party official 1991

Taking office during the Congress

[edit]
District Image Representative Took office Switched party Prior background Birth year Ref
Florida 1 TBD TBD
Succeeding Matt Gaetz (R)
Florida 6 TBD TBD
Succeeding Michael Waltz (R)
New York 21 TBD TBD
Succeeding Elise Stefanik (R)

Notes

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  1. ^ Elected to the 114th Congress, serving from 2015 to 2023 in Arizona's 7th congressional district and Arizona's 3rd congressional district since 2023.
  2. ^ Elected to the 115th Congress, serving since 2017 in Delaware's at-large congressional district.
  3. ^ Elected to the 115th Congress, serving since 2017 in Indiana's 3rd congressional district.
  4. ^ Elected to the 116th Congress, serving since 2019 in Michigan's 7th congressional district.
  5. ^ Elected to the 115th Congress, serving since 2017 in Utah's 3rd congressional district.
  6. ^ Previously elected to the 116th Congress, serving from 2019 to 2021 in California's 39th congressional district.
  7. ^ Incumbent Republican Lauren Boebert ran in the 4th district, in which in turn is held by incumbent Greg Lopez, who is retiring at the end of the previous Congress.
  8. ^ Previously elected to the 111th Congress, serving from 2010 to 2017.
  9. ^ Previously elected to the 103rd Congress, serving from 1993 to 1997 in Louisiana's 4th congressional district.
  10. ^ Elected in the special election to replace Sheila Jackson Lee.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Raju, Manu (March 5, 2024). "Sinema announces she's retiring". CNN. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
  2. ^ Newman, Meredith. "U.S. Sen. Tom Carper to retire from politics after nearly 50 years in office". Delaware Online. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  3. ^ Wren, Adam. "Braun to run for Indiana governor, opening Senate seat in 2024". POLITICO.
  4. ^ Barkin, Jeff (May 1, 2023). "Maryland U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin says 'I have run my last election,' as candidates line up to seek vacant seat". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  5. ^ "Sen. Stabenow will not seek re-election in 2024". Upper Michigan Source. TV6 News Team. January 5, 2023. Retrieved January 5, 2023.
  6. ^ "Romney Won't Run for Reelection, Opening GOP Primary Fight". Cook Political. September 13, 2023.
  7. ^ Weaver, Al (November 9, 2023). "Manchin won't seek reelection in West Virginia". The Hill. Archived from the original on November 9, 2023. Retrieved November 9, 2023.
Preceded by New members of the 119th Congress
2025
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