The Green Papers
The Green Papers
Political Party Breakdown of the
Congress of the United States

Show Notes

Boldface (with superscript C) numbers indicate the majority Party in each house. Red (with superscript P) numbers (boldface or not) indicate the Party of the President in any event.

(sort)
President
sorted by
Party
(sort)
Congress
United States Senate House of Representatives
 OppositionAdministrationothervacanciesOppositionAdministrationother
Washington(none)1st 1789-1791717CP  2435CP 
  2nd 1791-17931016CP112443CP 
  3rd 1793-17951515P  55C50P 
  4th 1795-17971218CP  54C51P 
 DemocratNational
Republican
othervacanciesDemocratNational
Republican
other
JacksonDemocrat23rd 1833-183531CP17     
 DemocratWhigothervacanciesDemocratWhigother
  24th 1835-183732CP16     
Van BurenDemocrat25th 1837-183939CP13     
  26th 1839-184132CP17 3   
PolkDemocrat29th 1845-184729CP25     
  30th 1847-184933CP23     
PierceDemocrat33rd 1853-185537CP1924   
 DemocratRepublicanothervacanciesDemocratRepublicanother
  34th 1855-185737CP1564   
BuchananDemocrat35th 1857-185938CP204    
  36th 1859-186138CP2521   
ClevelandDemocrat49th 1885-188735P41C     
  50th 1887-188937P39C     
  53rd 1893-189544CP3833   
  54th 1895-189739P44C41   
WilsonDemocrat63rd 1913-191552CP44     
  64th 1915-191756CP40     
  65th 1917-191953CP412    
  66th 1919-192147P48C1    
Roosevelt, F.D.Democrat73rd 1933-193559CP361 313CP1175
  74th 1935-193769CP252 322CP10310
  75th 1937-193975CP174 333CP8913
  76th 1939-194169CP234 262CP1694
  77th 1941-194366CP282 267CP1626
  78th 1943-194557CP381 222CP2094
Roosevelt, F.D./
Truman
Democrat79th 1945-194757CP381 243CP1902
TrumanDemocrat80th 1947-194945P51C  188P246C1
  81st 1949-195154CP42  263CP1711
  82nd 1951-195348CP471 234CP1992
KennedyDemocrat87th 1961-196364CP36  263CP174 
Kennedy/
Johnson, L.B.
Democrat88th 1963-196567CP33  259CP176 
Johnson, L.B.Democrat89th 1965-196768CP32  295CP140 
  90th 1967-196964CP36  248CP187 
CarterDemocrat95th 1977-197961CP381 292CP143 
  96th 1979-198158CP411 277CP158 
ClintonDemocrat103rd 1993-199557CP43  258CP1761
  104th 1995-199747P53C  204P230C1
  105th 1997-199945P55C  207P226C2
  106th 1999-200145P55C  211P223C1
ObamaDemocrat114th 2015-201744P53C3 188P247C 
  111th 2009-201157CP412 257CP178 
  112th 2011-201351CP463 193P242C 
  113th 2013-201553CP443 201P234C 
BidenDemocratic117th 2021-2023       
 Democratic
Republican
National
Republican
othervacanciesDemocratic
Republican
National
Republican
other
JacksonDemocratic
Republican
21st 1829-183126CP211    
  22nd 1831-183329CP19     
 RepublicanFederalistothervacanciesRepublicanFederalistother
Adams, J.Federalist5th 1797-17991120CP1 4759CP 
  6th 1799-18011219CP1 4363CP 
JeffersonRepublican7th 1801-180316CP151 64CP42 
  8th 1803-180525CP9     
  9th 1805-180727CP7     
  10th 1807-180928CP6     
MadisonRepublican11th 1809-181127CP7     
  12th 1811-181326CP8     
  13th 1813-181526CP10     
  14th 1815-181722CP12 2   
MonroeRepublican15th 1817-181929CP11     
  16th 1819-182136CP8     
  17th 1821-182343CP4 1   
  18th 1823-182543CP4 1   
 Jackson
Republican
Adams
Republican
othervacanciesJackson
Republican
Adams
Republican
other
Adams, J.Q.Republican19th 1825-182726C17P41 P 
  20th 1827-182925C21P2  P 
 DemocratRepublicanothervacanciesDemocratRepublicanother
LincolnRepublican37th 1861-18632231CP114   
  38th 1863-18651334CP122   
Lincoln/
Johnson, A.
Republican39th 1865-18671336CP122   
Johnson, A.Republican40th 1867-18691042CP220   
GrantRepublican41st 1869-1871956CP18   
  42nd 1871-18731556CP21   
  43rd 1873-18751854CP11   
  44th 1875-18772644CP31   
HayesRepublican45th 1877-18793239CP41   
  46th 1879-188140C32P4    
Garfield/
Arthur
Republican47th 1881-18833638CP2    
ArthurRepublican48th 1883-18853640CP     
Harrison, B.Republican51st 1889-18913745CP     
  52nd 1891-18934145CP2    
McKinleyRepublican55th 1897-18993648CP51   
  56th 1899-19012854CP44   
McKinley/
Roosevelt, T.
Republican57th 1901-19033054CP42   
Roosevelt, T.Republican58th 1903-19053357CP     
  59th 1905-19073257CP 1   
  60th 1907-19092960CP 1   
TaftRepublican61st 1909-19113260CP     
  62nd 1911-19134150CP 1   
HardingRepublican67th 1921-19233759CP     
Harding/
Coolidge
Republican68th 1923-19254252CP2    
CoolidgeRepublican69th 1925-19274054CP2    
  70th 1927-1929 P     
HooverRepublican71st 1929-1931 P     
  72nd 1931-1933 P     
EisenhowerRepublican83rd 1953-19554748CP1 213221CP1
  84th 1955-195748C47P1 232C203P 
  85th 1957-195949C47P  234C201P 
  86th 1959-196164C34P  283C153P 
NixonRepublican91st 1969-197158C42P  243C192P 
  92nd 1971-197354C44P2 255C180P 
Nixon/
Ford
Republican93rd 1973-197556C42P2 242C192P1
FordRepublican94th 1975-197760C38P2 291C144P 
ReaganRepublican97th 1981-19834653CP1 242C192P1
  98th 1983-19854654CP  269C166P 
  99th 1985-19874753CP  253C182P 
  100th 1987-198955C45P  258C177P 
Bush, G.H.W.Republican101st 1989-199155C45P  260C175P 
  102nd 1991-199356C44P  267C167P1
Bush, G.W.Republican107th 2001-20035050P  212221CP2
  108th 2003-20054852CP  205229CP1
  109th 2005-20074456CP  202232CP1
  110th 2007-20094949P2 233C202P 
TrumpRepublican115th 2017-2019 P     
  116th 2019-2021 P     
 DemocratWhigothervacanciesDemocratWhigother
Harrison, W.H./
Tyler
Whig27th 1841-18432427CP 1   
TylerWhig28th 1843-18452428CP     
Taylor/
Fillmore
Whig31st 1849-185132C27P1    
FillmoreWhig32nd 1851-185334C24P22   
(sort)
President
sorted by
Party
(sort)
Congress
United States Senate House of Representatives
 

The political breakdown of each Congress as it appears on the above chart is that of the division of each house of Congress among the Parties "as elected"- that is, it reflects the sum total of the number of seats won by the Parties as solely determined by the winners of the election for each seat in each house of Congress in a regular General election for a given Congress (or, in the Senate only, a Special Election held on the same date or soon enough after the regular, General Election [provided said Special Election takes place prior to the beginning of the terms of those elected to that incoming Congress]). It is intended that the political breakdown of the Parties in a particular Congress for purposes of this chart be determined, as closely as is practicable, by the "intention of the electors" ("electors" seen here as starting with a small 'e' to distinguish these from the Presidential Electors of the Electoral College: "electors" in this case means those who have done the actual choosing of United States Senators and Representatives in Congress- the voters in each State or Congressional District [and, prior to the effectiveness of the 17th Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, the members of the State Legislatures electing their States' U.S. Senators]).

A few general considerations...

Throughout pretty much the entire history of the House of Representatives, as well as in the United States Senate since the 64th Congress (as a result of the aforementioned 17th Amendment, which provided for popular election of the Senators from each State), some person has always been elected to a given seat in either house in a General Election- even should that seat be contested or that person predecease the incoming Congress to which he or she has been elected (or, perhaps, even be elected after having already died, as was the case in the election for a U.S. Senate seat from Missouri in 2000). As a result, there is no column provided for vacancies in that portion of the above chart relating to the House of Representatives, since- theoretically- a regular General Election (however disputed the results of same might turn out to be) has always been held- every two years- for every seat in that body: even for seats which may, in fact, turn out to have been vacated by the time the Congress has actually convened, met and/or organized following said election.

This same situation as generally regards the House would also hold true for the United States Senate since the 64th Congress: that is, there would- under normal circumstances- be no true "vacancies" in the Senate from the General Election of 1914 on, as- at least in theory- someone has always been elected to a Senate seat in such a regular General Election ever since that date. Such General Election results for the House throughout its history and the Senate since the implementation of the 17th Amendment (even where the apparent Election Night winner of a seat is later denied that seat for any of a variety of reasons) would, by definition, best reflect the "intention of the electors" as to which Party was to, under ordinary circumstances, hold how many seats as a result of the regular General Elections for those seats; accordingly, the numbers seen in the above chart reflect this ideal.

Issues re: the UNITED STATES SENATE into the 63rd Congress (1913)...

Up through the 63rd Congress, however, the United States Senate, in particular, has caused often considerable difficulties in best determining "intention of the electors" by providing- during the period leading up to the convening of said 63rd Congress in 1913- what amounts to a special exception to what has been written in the previous paragraphs, as- again- it was the Legislatures of the several States which were responsible for the regular "General Election" of Senators prior to the ratification of the 17th Amendment: therefore, insofar as this chart is concerned, "as elected" refers to those Senators who had been elected for a particular Senate seat on or before the Saturday immediately preceding the first Monday in December of the odd-numbered year in which the terms of those serving in a given Congress had begun on the 4th of March immediately preceding. The verbiage within the previous sentence might well have been more than a bit confusing, so herewith an explanation:

The only mention, in the original text of the Constitution of the United States, regarding an actual date in relation to the assembling of each Congress is as follows:

The Congress shall assemble at least once in every Year, and such Meeting shall be on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by Law appoint a different Day. [Article I, Section 4, clause 2]

The debate on the floor of the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia regarding this provision (and there was not all that much discussion, to be sure) suggests that this particular date for the convening of Congress- the first Monday in December- was chosen because it, at the time, appeared to be the most convenient (given the transportation technology and infrastructure available to late 18th Century America) in relation to the various dates for Election Day in most, if not all, of the 13 original States as set in the State' own Constitutions and/or Laws; this implies that it might well also have been intended by the Framers to be the beginning date for terms of U.S. Senators and Representatives in Congress but for the fact that the dying Confederation Congress, in the course of setting the schedule for the first Presidential Election and the convening of the 1st Congress in the wake of ratification of the new Federal Constitution, later decided that the new Federal Government could effectively take over from the Confederation on the first Wednesday in March, 1789 (which happened to be 4 March that year, a date which, ever after- at least until the adoption of the 20th Amendment in 1933, determined the beginning of the terms of Senators and Congressmen). Thus, from the very start of American federal governance, there was a nine month (give or take) discrepancy between the date the terms of members of a given Congress began and the date stated in the Constitution as to when said Congress was actually to convene!

As a result of this discrepancy, it was always rather possible for a State's legislature (especially one that was not scheduled to itself convene until well into the odd-numbered year [limited biennial sessions (one legislative session every two years, with limits as to its length) being far more common than nowadays]) to not actually choose a Senator (whether this be a regular election for a full six-year term or a Special Election to fill a vacancy in the midst of a six-year term) until after- in some cases, well after- the 4 March in that same odd-numbered year on which the term of the Senator-yet-to-be-chosen was to have begun. For the purposes of the above chart, therefore, it is presumed that a Senator elected in a regular election to a full six-year term is not to be counted in the political party breakdown unless that person was chosen by his State's legislature on or before the Saturday immediately preceding the first Monday in December on which Congress was, under normal circumstances, constitutionally required to assemble (the theory here is that, in the America of 1789 through 1913, no legislature would meet on a Sunday- it being the universal [Christian] day of rest- so that this Saturday would be the latest a Senator could be elected and still, if only theoretically [until towards the end of this period, when better transportation to the Nation's Capital- such as the railroads- became available], be eligible to be sworn into Congress on or before the first Monday in December of the odd-numbered year).

The same issue might also affect a Special Election in which a State's legislature was (prior to 1913, obviously) called upon to choose a person to fill a vacancy in the Senate: if said Special Election was held on or before the Saturday immediately preceding the first Monday in December of an odd-numbered year, then the political party of the person chosen to fill the vacancy is the one counted in the above chart: otherwise the political party of the person replaced in the Special Election is that which is counted (so long as that person was still serving as a Senator on 4 March of that same odd-numbered year, of course). In any case where no one had been elected to the full six-year term re: a given Senate seat- or where a Senator had already vacated a given Senate seat through death or resignation- by 4 March of an odd-numbered year and no successor to the same seat was to have been elected by the affected State's legislature by the Saturday immediately preceding the ensuing first Monday in December, only then is the Senate seat considered to have been vacant for purposes of the above chart; for this reason, a column is provided- in the portion of the above chart relating to the United States Senate- for vacancies.

Issues re: the U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES through the 45th Congress (1878)...

In addition, many more difficulties in determining "intention of the electors" are provided by the once-common practice of many States holding their regular, General Elections to the House of Representatives in odd-numbered years, perhaps even after a particular Congress had already officially begun its term of office on the 4th of March in that same odd-numbered year (yet still before that Congress was actually to first convene no later than the first Monday in December following, as required in that same Article I, Section 4, clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution quoted earlier); this practice of odd-year General Elections to the House was not finally abandoned altogether until the Elections of 1878 (due to a series of Federal statutes, passed during the course of the 1870s, which came to require that all popularly-elected members of Congress must be "regularly elected" [as opposed to "specially elected"- that is, in a General Election as opposed to a Special Election to fill a vacancy] on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of the even-numbered year next preceding the odd-numbered year in which the given Congress to which such members were being elected was to take office (on 4 March, until- again- the 20th Amendment changed that date to the 3 January beginning with the 74th Congress in 1935).

Thus, through the 45th Congress, "as elected"- for the purposes of the above chart- refers to any Congressmen elected in any regular, General Election for a given Congress (but, please note, not Special Elections to fill vacancies in seats for which someone had already been elected to that Congress- even where such a Special Election in one State may actually have, in fact, predated the General Election for the House in another State) so long as that General Election was held prior to the Saturday immediately preceding the first Monday in Decmber in an odd-numbered year (on a theory similar to the reason for the use of this admittedly arbitrary date re: the Senate-- no election would have been held on a Sunday [the Christian Sabbath and, hence, the universal day of rest during the period in question] and, therefore, the latest anyone could have been elected to Congress in time to, however theoretically, be sworn in as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives on the date constitutionally set aside for the annual convening of Congress would have been the preceding Saturday).

Some final thoughts...

All in all, the political breakdown of Congress as seen in the above chart may, at least from time to time, reflect what might best be considered as a "theoretical" model of the numerical relationship of the political parties to each other in each Congress rather than the actual breakdown of Political Parties in a given Congress at any specific time; that is, it is best that the chart above be taken as merely a guide to the political breakdown of Congress as intended by those who chose its members at whatever time it happened to choose them instead of its being seen as an actual tabulation of how many bodies from what Party actually filled seats in either house of Congress!

The reason for this is that it is the considered opinion of the Staff of 'The Green Papers' that the only fair way to compare any election to another is to compare the results of one election to the results in another (rather than comparing the results of a given election to how many persons from each political party happened to be serving in either house of Congress on the eve of that election [for the numbers re: each party might well be significantly different by then than those gleaned from the preceding election]): the "rules"- as stated above- for dealing with the United States Senate up through 1913 and the U.S. House of Representatives prior to the 1878 elections are an attempt to mathematically make Congresses whose members- re: both houses- were, in that long ago past, chosen in rather different manners than these same elected officials are chosen today that much more comparable to the more recent congressional elections.

It should also here be noted that a Senator having officially changed his political Party in the midst of his or her term of office is not at all recognized in the above chart unless and until an election- whether regular or special- of that same person as a candidate of his or her new Party has intervened (thus, for example, Senator Jeffords of Vermont is still counted as a "Republican" in both the 108th and 109th Congresses on the above chart, even though he switched to being an Independent during the 107th Congress: the reason for this is that the intention of the voters who went to the polls in the 2000 election in which he was re-elected was that he be so re-elected as a Republican and that intention cannot be changed simply because the Senator himself has decided to change his Party affiliation on his own). The only exceptions to this rule, as regards the above chart, involve the 19th and 20th Congresses (covering the period 1825-1829)- during which the so-called "old" Republicans split into a pro-Andrew Jackson faction and a pro-John Quincy Adams faction, each of which gave rise to- eventually- the Democratic and the Whig Parties, respectively- and the 34th and 35th Congresses (covering the period 1855-1859)- during which the Whig Party disintegrated and the new Republican Party first emerged as the principal Major Party in opposition to the Democrats: during each of these two exceptional periods (and, in at least some cases, some time thereafter), a Senator elected as a member of a given Party might well have to be counted, later in the same six-year term, as being a member of a different Party without an intervening election as a candidate of that Party... but it should be noted that these two periods in question were, indeed, exceptional within the general stream of American political history.

In addition: none of what has been noted in the previous paragraph applies at all to members of the U.S. House of Representatives, since there is a new General Election for all members of that chamber every two years and any changes of Congressmen from one Party to another (whether during those two historically exceptional periods in question or not) between Congresses will always be noted as a matter of course as flowing from the summation of the results of each and every congressional election!

Modified .