There are 43 African American Members serving in the 112th
Congress, all in the House of Representatives. There have been 133
African American Members of Congress: 127 have been elected to the
House; 5 have been elected to the Senate; and 1 has been appointed
to the Senate. There have been 104 Democrats, 101 in the House and
3 in the Senate; and 29 Republicans, 26 in the House and 3 in the
Senate. The number of African American Members has steadily
increased since the first African Americans entered Congress in
1870. There were fewer than 10 Members until the 91st Congress
(1969-1971). In the 98th Congress (1983-1985), the number surpassed
20 for the first time and then jumped to 40 in the 103rd Congress
(1993-1995). Since the 106th Congress (1999-2001), the number has
remained between 39 and 44 serving at any one time. The first
African American Member of Congress was Hiram Rhodes Revels (R-MS),
who served in the Senate in the 41st Congress (served 1870-1871).
The first African American Member of the House was Joseph H. Rainey
(R-SC), who also served in the 41st Congress. Shirley Chisholm
(D-NY), elected to the 91st through 97th Congresses (1969-1983),
was the first African American woman in Congress. Since that time,
30 other African American women have been elected, including
Senator Carol Moseley-Braun (D-IL, 1993-1999), who is the only
African American woman, as well as the first African American
Democrat, elected to the Senate. Representative John Conyers, Jr.
(D-MI, 1965-present), the current chair of the House Judiciary
Committee, holds the record for length of service by an African
American Member (46 years). He was first elected to the 89th
Congress (1965-1967) and has served since January 3, 1965.
Representative James E. Clyburn (D-SC, 1993-present) and former
Representatives William H. Gray III (D-PA, 1979-1991) and J.C.
Watts (R-OK, 1995-2003) have been elected to the highest leadership
positions held by African American Members of Congress.
Representative Clyburn, the House Assistant Democratic leader in
the 112th Congress, served as the House majority whip in the 110th
and 111th Congresses and as vice chair of the House Democratic
Caucus in the 108th and 109th Congresses. Representative Gray was
chair of the House Democratic Caucus in 1989 (101st Congress).
Later in that Congress, when a vacancy occurred, he was elected
House majority whip, a position he held until his resignation from
Congress in September 1991 (102nd Congress). Representative Watts
served as chair of the House Republican Conference in the
106th-107th Congresses (1997-2001). Twenty African Americans have
served as committee chairs, 19 in the House and 1 in the Senate.
The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), whose origins date back to
1969, currently has 43 members. Over its 40-year history, the CBC
has been one of the most influential caucuses in Congress.
General
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