Senate Democratic Caucus Explained

Senate Democratic Caucus
Leader1 Title:Part of
Leader1 Name:United States Senate
Leader2 Title:Chair and Floor Leader
Leader2 Name:Chuck Schumer (NY)
Leader3 Title:Floor Whip
Leader3 Name:Dick Durbin (IL)
Leader4 Title:Vice Chairs
Leader4 Name:Mark Warner (VA)
Leader5 Title:Secretary
Leader5 Name:Tammy Baldwin (WI)
Affiliation1 Title:Affiliation
Affiliation1:Democratic Party
Seats1 Title:Seats
Colors: Blue
Position:Center-left
Ideology:Modern liberalism
Website:democrats.senate.gov
Country:United States

The Democratic Caucus of the United States Senate, sometimes referred to as the Democratic Conference, is the formal organization of all senators who are part of the Democratic Party in the United States Senate. For the makeup of the 118th Congress, the caucus additionally includes four independent senators (Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Angus King of Maine, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, and Joe Manchin of West Virginia) who caucus with the Democrats, bringing the current total to 51 members. The central organizational front for Democrats in the Senate, its primary function is communicating the party's message to all of its members under a single banner. The present chair of the Senate Democratic Caucus is Chuck Schumer of New York.

Current leadership

Effective with the start of the 118th Congress, the conference leadership is as follows:

History

The conference was formally organized on March 6, 1903, electing a chair to preside over its members and a secretary to keep minutes. Until that time, this caucus was often disorganized, philosophically divided and had neither firm written rules of governance nor a clear mission.

Chairs of the Senate Democratic Caucus

Since Oscar Underwood's election in 1920, the chair of the Senate Democratic Caucus has also concurrently served as the floor leader as part of an unwritten tradition.

CongressLeaderStateTook officeLeft officeMajority Leader
43rdJohn W. Stevenson
KentuckyNo data
44th
45thWilliam A. Wallace
Pennsylvania
46th
47thGeorge H. Pendleton
Ohio
48th
49thJames B. Beck
Kentucky
50th
51st
Arthur Pue Gorman
Maryland Unknown
52nd
53rd Himself
54th Unknown
55th
David Turpie
Indiana
56thJames Kimbrough Jones
Arkansas
57th
58thArthur Pue Gorman
Maryland
59th
Joseph Clay Stiles Blackburn
Kentucky
60thCharles Allen Culberson
Texas
61st
Hernando Money
Mississippi
62ndThomas S. Martin
Virginia
63rdJohn W. Kern
Indiana Himself
64th
65thThomas S. Martin
Virginia Himself
66th 
Gilbert Hitchcock
Nebraska
Oscar Underwood
Alabama
67th
68th
Joseph Taylor Robinson
Arkansas 
69th
70th
71st 
72nd
73rd Himself
74th
75th
Alben W. Barkley
Kentucky Himself
76th
77th
78th
79th
80th 
81stScott W. Lucas
Illinois Himself
82ndErnest McFarland
Arizona Himself
83rdLyndon B. Johnson
Texas 
 
84th Himself
85th
86th
87thMike Mansfield
Montana Himself
88th
89th
90th
91st
92nd
93rd
94th
95thRobert Byrd
West Virginia Himself
96th
97th 
98th
99th 
100th Himself
101stGeorge J. Mitchell
Maine Himself
102nd
103rd
104thTom Daschle
South Dakota 
 
105th
106th
107th Himself
 
 Himself
 
108th 
109thHarry Reid
Nevada
110th Himself
111th
112th
113th
114th 
115thChuck Schumer
New YorkIncumbent
116th
117th
 Himself
118th

Notes

Vice chair

After the victory of Democrats in the midterm elections of 2006, an overwhelming majority in the conference wanted to reward Chuck Schumer, then the chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, with a position in the leadership hierarchy. In response, then-Democratic Leader Harry Reid created the position of vice-chair when Democrats formally took control in 2007.[1] Schumer ascended to Reid's position following his retirement after the 2016 elections. The position was then split, with one co-chair awarded to Mark Warner and the other awarded to Elizabeth Warren.

Caucus secretary

The United States Senate Democratic Conference Secretary, also called the Caucus Secretary was previously considered the number-three position, behind the party's floor leader and the party's whip, until in 2006, when Democratic leader Harry Reid created the new position of Vice-Chairman of the caucus. Now, the secretary is the fourth-highest ranking position. The conference secretary is responsible for taking notes and aiding the party leadership when senators of the party meet or caucus together.[2]

The first conference secretary was Sen. Edward W. Carmack of Tennessee, who was elected in March 1903.[3]

The current conference secretary is Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, who assumed the office in January 2017.

OfficeholderStateTerm
Edward W. Carmack TN1903–1907
Robert Owen OK1907–1911
William E. Chilton WV1911–1913
Willard Saulsbury Jr.DE1913–1916
Key Pittman
NV1916–1917
William H. King UT1917–1927
Hugo Black AL1927–1937
Joshua B. Lee OK1937–1943
Francis T. Maloney CT1943–1945
Brien McMahon CT1945–1952
Thomas Hennings MO1953–1960
George Smathers FL1960–1966
Robert Byrd WV1967–1971
Ted Moss UT1971–1977
Daniel Inouye HI1977–1989
David Pryor AR1989–1995
Barbara Mikulski MD1995–2005
Debbie Stabenow MI2005–2007
Patty Murray WA2007–2017
Tammy Baldwin WI2017–present

Deputy Caucus Secretary

On December 8, 2022, Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii was elected to the newly created position of Deputy Caucus Secretary, assuming the office at the beginning of the 118th Congress on January 3, 2023.[4] This was an elevation from his previous leadership role as Senate Democratic Chief Deputy Whip.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Bolton . Alexander . Schumer becomes new Senate majority leader . January 23, 2021 . The Hill . January 20, 2021.
  2. Web site: Conference Secretaries. U.S. Senate.
  3. Web site: Senate Democratic Caucus Organized. U.S. Senate.
  4. Web site: Schumer reelected as Senate majority leader. The Hill.