United States Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs explained

Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee
Type:standing
Chamber:senate
Congress:118th
Status:active
Formed:October 26, 1970
Chair:Jon Tester
Chair Party:D
Chair Since:February 3, 2021
Ranking Member:Jerry Moran
Rm Party:R
Rm Since:February 3, 2021
Seats:19 members
Majority1:D
Majority1 Seats:6
Majority2:I
Majority2 Seats:4
Minority1:R
Minority1 Seats:9
Oversight:Department of Veterans Affairs
Counterpart:House Committee on Veterans' Affairs

The United States Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs deals with oversight of United States veterans problems and issues.

Description

The committee was created in 1970 to transfer responsibilities for veterans from the Finance and Labor committees to a single panel. From 1947 to 1970, matters relating to veterans compensation and veterans generally were referred to the Committee on Finance, while matters relating to the vocational rehabilitation, education, medical care, civil relief, and civilian readjustment of veterans were referred to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare.

Congressional legislation affecting veterans changed over the years. For the members of the armed forces and their families in the nation's early wars – the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War and the Spanish–American War – the response of the federal government had been essentially financial. This was clearly the legislative mission of the Senate Committee on Pensions which was created as one of the Senate's original standing committees in 1816 and continued until its termination in the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946.

During World War I the nature of the congressional response to veterans' needs changed towards a more diversified set of programs. A war risk insurance program, which was referred to the Senate Finance Committee, changed the consideration of veterans benefits in the Senate. The Finance Committee was the Senate standing committee most responsible for veterans programs from 1917 to 1946. After World War II, the Finance Committee handled the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, the GI Bill of Rights, which extended to servicemen and their families, a number of benefits including unemployment assistance, education, vocational training, housing and business loan guarantees, as well as the traditional medical and pension benefits of previous times. Many experts believe this law was one of the most important elements in the expansion of the middle class following World War II.

The Veterans' Affairs Committee had nine members in its initial congress, the 92nd Congress (1971–73). It now has a total of 19 members.[1]

Members, 118th Congress

According to committee members' official online biographies, two of the eighteen members are veterans: Richard Blumenthal and Dan Sullivan.

Chairs of the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, 1971–present

NamePartyStateYears
Vance HartkeDemocraticIndiana19711977
Alan CranstonDemocraticCalifornia19771981
Alan K. SimpsonRepublicanWyoming19811985
Frank MurkowskiRepublicanAlaska19851987
Alan CranstonDemocraticCalifornia19871993
Jay RockefellerDemocraticWest Virginia19931995
Alan K. SimpsonRepublicanWyoming19951997
Arlen SpecterRepublicanPennsylvania19972001
Jay RockefellerDemocraticWest Virginia20012003
Arlen SpecterRepublicanPennsylvania20032005
Larry CraigRepublicanIdaho20052007
Daniel AkakaDemocraticHawaii20072011
Patty MurrayDemocraticWashington20112013
Bernie SandersIndependentVermont20132015
Johnny IsaksonRepublicanGeorgia20152019
Jerry MoranRepublicanKansas20202021
Jon TesterDemocraticMontana2021present

Historical committee rosters

117th Congress

Source:[4]

115th Congress

Source:[5]

114th Congress

Source:[6]

113th Congress

Source: to 297

112th Congress

Source:

111th Congress

Source: and

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About: United States Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs. United States Senate. en. 2017-04-07.
  2. (118th Congress)
  3. (118th Congress)
  4. Web site: United States Veteran Affair's Committee Member List. United States Veteran's Affairs. 2021-01-03 . 2021-10-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211005173836/https://www.senate.gov/general/committee_membership/committee_memberships_SSVA.htm . October 5, 2021 . live . mdy-all .
  5. Web site: U.S. Senate: Committee on Veterans' Affairs. www.senate.gov. January 8, 2017.
  6. Web site: Committee on Veterans' Affairs Members, 2015-2016 . Ballotpedia .