释义 |
- Role of the committee
- Members, 116th Congress
- Historical membership rosters 115th Congress
- Subcommittees
- History
- Chairmen Committee on Commerce and Manufactures Committee on Commerce Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee on Energy and Commerce
- See also
- References
- External links
{{update|date=January 2019}}{{United States House of Representatives}}The Committee on Energy and Commerce is one of the oldest standing committees of the United States House of Representatives. Established in 1795, it has operated continuously—with various name changes and jurisdictional changes—for more than 200 years. The two other House standing committees with such continuous operation are the House Ways and Means Committee and the House Rules Committee. The Committee has served as the principal guide for the House in matters relating to the promotion of commerce and to the public’s health and marketplace interests, with the relatively recent addition of energy considerations among them. Role of the committeeThe House Committee on Energy and Commerce has developed what is arguably the broadest (non-tax-oriented) jurisdiction of any congressional committee. The Committee maintains principal responsibility for legislative oversight relating to telecommunications, consumer protection, food and drug safety, public health, air quality and environmental health, the supply and delivery of energy, and interstate and foreign commerce.[1] This jurisdiction extends over five Cabinet-level departments and seven independent agencies—from the Department of Energy, Health and Human Services, the Transportation Department to the Federal Trade Commission, Food and Drug Administration, and Federal Communications Commission—and sundry quasi-governmental organizations. Members, 116th Congress Majority | Minority | - Frank Pallone, New Jersey, Chair
- Bobby Rush, Illinois
- Anna Eshoo, California
- Eliot Engel, New York
- Diana DeGette, Colorado
- Mike Doyle, Pennsylvania
- Jan Schakowsky, Illinois
- G. K. Butterfield, North Carolina
- Doris Matsui, California
- Kathy Castor, Florida
- John Sarbanes, Maryland
- Jerry McNerney, California
- Peter Welch, Vermont
- Ben Ray Luján, New Mexico
- Paul Tonko, New York
- Yvette Clarke, New York, Vice Chair
- Dave Loebsack, Iowa
- Kurt Schrader, Oregon
- Joe Kennedy III, Massachusetts
- Tony Cárdenas, California
- Raul Ruiz, California
- Scott Peters, California
- Debbie Dingell, Michigan
- Marc Veasey, Texas
- Ann McLane Kuster, New Hampshire
- Robin Kelly, Illinois
- Nanette Barragán, California
- Donald McEachin, Virginia
- Lisa Blunt Rochester, Delaware
- Darren Soto, Florida
- Tom O'Halleran, Arizona
| - Greg Walden, Oregon, Ranking Member
- Fred Upton, Michigan
- John Shimkus, Illinois
- Michael C. Burgess, Texas
- Steve Scalise, Louisiana
- Bob Latta, Ohio
- Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Washington
- Brett Guthrie, Kentucky
- Pete Olson, Texas
- David McKinley, West Virginia
- Adam Kinzinger, Illinois
- Morgan Griffith, Virginia
- Gus Bilirakis, Florida
- Bill Johnson, Ohio
- Billy Long, Missouri
- Larry Bucshon, Indiana
- Bill Flores, Texas
- Susan Brooks, Indiana
- Markwayne Mullin, Oklahoma
- Richard Hudson, North Carolina
- Tim Walberg, Michigan
- Buddy Carter, Georgia
- Jeff Duncan, South Carolina
- Greg Gianforte, Montana
|
Sources: {{USBill|116|HRes|7}} (Chair), {{USBill|115|HRes|8}} (Ranking Member), {{USBill|116|HRes|42}} (D), {{USBill|116|HRes|68}} (R) Historical membership rosters115th Congress Majority | Minority | - Greg Walden, Oregon, Chair
- Joe Barton, Texas, Vice Chair
- Fred Upton, Michigan
- John Shimkus, Illinois
- Michael C. Burgess, Texas
- Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee
- Steve Scalise, Louisiana
- Bob Latta, Ohio
- Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Washington
- Gregg Harper, Mississippi
- Leonard Lance, New Jersey
- Brett Guthrie, Kentucky
- Pete Olson, Texas
- David McKinley, West Virginia
- Adam Kinzinger, Illinois
- Morgan Griffith, Virginia
- Gus Bilirakis, Florida
- Bill Johnson, Ohio
- Billy Long, Missouri
- Larry Bucshon, Indiana
- Bill Flores, Texas
- Susan Brooks, Indiana
- Markwayne Mullin, Oklahoma
- Richard Hudson, North Carolina
- Kevin Cramer, North Dakota
- Tim Walberg, Michigan
- Mimi Walters, California
- Ryan Costello, Pennsylvania
- Buddy Carter, Georgia
- Chris Collins, New York (removed August 8, 2018)
| - Frank Pallone, New Jersey, Ranking Member
- Bobby Rush, Illinois
- Anna Eshoo, California
- Eliot Engel, New York
- Gene Green, Texas
- Diana DeGette, Colorado
- Mike Doyle, Pennsylvania
- Jan Schakowsky, Illinois
- G. K. Butterfield, North Carolina
- Doris Matsui, California
- Kathy Castor, Florida, Vice Ranking Member
- John Sarbanes, Maryland
- Jerry McNerney, California
- Peter Welch, Vermont
- Ben Ray Luján, New Mexico
- Paul Tonko, New York
- Yvette Clarke, New York
- Dave Loebsack, Iowa
- Kurt Schrader, Oregon
- Joseph P. Kennedy III, Massachusetts
- Tony Cárdenas, California
- Raul Ruiz, California
- Scott Peters, California
- Debbie Dingell, Michigan
|
Sources: {{USBill|115|HRes|6}} (Chair), {{USBill|115|HRes|7}} (Ranking Member), {{USBill|115|HRes|29}} (R) and {{USBill|115|HRes|45}} (D). SubcommitteesTo manage the wide variety of issues it encounters, the Committee relies on the front-line work of six subcommittees, one more than during the 111th Congress. During the 111th Congress, Chairman Henry Waxman combined the traditionally separate energy and environment subcommittees into a single subcommittee.[2] New Chairman Fred Upton restored them as separate subcommittees at the start of the 112th Congress. Subcommittee | Chair | Ranking Member | Communications and Technology | Mike Doyle (D-PA) | Bob Latta (R-OH) | Consumer Protection and Commerce | Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) | Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) | Energy | Bobby Rush (D-IL) | Fred Upton (R-MI) | Environment and Climate Change | Paul Tonko (D-NY) | John Shimkus (R-IL) | Health | Anna Eshoo (D-CA) | Michael Burgess (R-TX) | Oversight and Investigations | Diana DeGette (D-CO) | Brett Guthrie (R-KY) |
HistoryThe Committee was originally formed as the Committee on Commerce and Manufactures on December 14, 1795. Prior to this, legislation was drafted in the Committee of the Whole or in special ad hoc committees, appointed for specific limited purposes. However the growing demands of the new nation required that Congress establish a permanent committee to manage its constitutional authority under the Commerce Clause to "regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States." From this time forward, as the nation grew and Congress dealt with new public policy concerns and created new committees, the Energy and Commerce Committee has maintained its central position as Congress's monitor of commercial progress—a focus reflected in its changing jurisdiction, both in name and practice. In 1819, the Committee’s name was changed to the Committee on Commerce, reflecting the creation of a separate Manufacturers Committee and also the increasing scope of and complexity of American commercial activity, which was expanding the Committee’s jurisdiction from navigational aids and the nascent general health service to foreign trade and tariffs. Thomas J. Bliley, who chaired the Committee from 1995 to 2000, chose to use this traditional name, which underscores the Committee's role for Congress on this front. In 1891, in emphasis of the Committee's evolving activities, the name was again changed to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce—a title it maintained until 1981, when, under incoming Chairman John Dingell, the Committee first assumed what is now its present name to emphasize its lead role in guiding the energy policy of the United States. Dingell regained chairmanship of the committee in 2007 after having served as ranking member since 1995. In late 2008, Henry Waxman initiated a successful challenge to unseat Dingell as chairman. His challenge was unusual as the party caucus traditionally elects chairmen based on committee seniority. Waxman formally became chairman at the start of the 111th Congress.[3] ChairmenCommittee on Commerce and Manufactures Chairman | Party | State | Years |
---|
Benjamin Goodhue | Federalist | Massachusetts | 1795–1796 | John Swanwick | Democratic-Republican | Pennsylvania | 1796–1797 | Edward Livingston | Democratic-Republican | New York | 1797–1798 | Samuel Smith | Democratic-Republican | Maryland | 1798–1803 | Samuel L. Mitchill | Democratic-Republican | New York | 1803–1805 | Jacob Crowninshield | Democratic-Republican | Massachusetts | 1805–1806 | Gurdon S. Mumford | Democratic-Republican | New York | 1806–1807 | Thomas Newton, Jr. | Democratic-Republican | Virginia | 1807–1819 |
Committee on Commerce Chairman | Party | State | Years |
---|
Thomas Newton, Jr. | Democratic-Republican | Virginia | 1819–1827 | Churchill C. Cambreleng | Democratic | New York | 1827–1833 | Joel B. Sutherland | Democratic | Pennsylvania | 1833–1837 | Francis O. J. Smith | Democratic | Maine | 1837–1838 | Samuel Cushman | Democratic | New Hampshire | 1838–1839 | Edward Curtis | Whig | New York | 1839–1841 | John P. Kennedy | Whig | Maryland | 1841–1843 | Isaac E. Holmes | Democratic | South Carolina | 1843–1845 | Robert McClelland | Democratic | Michigan | 1845–1847 | Washington Hunt | Whig | New York | 1847–1849 | Robert Milligan McLane | Democratic | Maryland | 1849–1851 | David L. Seymour | Democratic | New York | 1851–1853 | Thomas J. D. Fuller | Democratic | Maine | 1853–1855 | Elihu B. Washburne | Republican | Illinois | 1855–1857 | John Cochrane | Democratic | New York | 1857–1859 | Elihu B. Washburne | Republican | Illinois | 1859–1868 | Thomas D. Eliot | Republican | Massachusetts | 1868–1869 | Nathan F. Dixon II | Republican | Rhode Island | 1869–1871 | Samuel Shellabarger | Republican | Ohio | 1871–1873 | William A. Wheeler | Republican | New York | 1873–1875 | Frank Hereford | Democratic | West Virginia | 1875–1877 | Elijah Ward | Democratic | New York | 1877 | John H. Reagan | Democratic | Texas | 1877–1881 | Horace F. Page | Republican | California | 1881–1883 | John H. Reagan | Democratic | Texas | 1883–1887 | Martin L. Clardy | Democratic | Missouri | 1887–1889 | Charles S. Baker | Republican | New York | 1889–1891 |
Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce Chairman | Party | State | Years |
---|
Roger Q. Mills | Democratic | Texas | 1891–1892 | George D. Wise | Democratic | Virginia | 1892–1895 | William Peters Hepburn | Republican | Iowa | 1895–1909 | James Robert Mann | Republican | Illinois | 1909–1911 | William C. Adamson | Democratic | Georgia | 1911–1917 | Thetus W. Sims | Democratic | Tennessee | 1917–1919 | John J. Esch | Republican | Wisconsin | 1919–1921 | Samuel Winslow | Republican | Massachusetts | 1921–1925 | James S. Parker | Republican | New York | 1925–1931 | Sam Rayburn | Democratic | Texas | 1931–1937 | Clarence F. Lea | Democratic | California | 1937–1947 | Charles A. Wolverton | Republican | New Jersey | 1947–1949 | Robert Crosser | Democratic | Ohio | 1949–1953 | Charles A. Wolverton | Republican | New Jersey | 1953–1955 | Percy Priest | Democratic | Tennessee | 1955–1956 | Oren Harris | Democratic | Arkansas | 1957–1966 | Harley Orrin Staggers | Democratic | West Virginia | 1966–1981 |
Committee on Energy and Commerce Chairman | Party | State | Years |
---|
John Dingell | Democratic | Michigan | 1981–1995 | Thomas Bliley | Republican | Virginia | 1995–2001 | Billy Tauzin | Republican | Louisiana | 2001–2004 | Joe Barton | Republican | Texas | 2004–2007 | John Dingell | Democratic | Michigan | 2007–2009 | Henry Waxman | Democratic | California | 2009–2011 | Fred Upton | Republican | Michigan | 2011–2017 | Greg Walden | Republican | Oregon | 2017–2019 | Frank Pallone | Democratic | New Jersey | 2019– |
See also- List of current United States House of Representatives committees
References1. ^https://energycommerce.house.gov/about/ 2. ^{{cite web |url=http://energycommerce.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1462&Itemid=93 |title=House Energy and Commerce Committee announces Subcommittee Chairs and Membership |date=January 8, 2009 |publisher=Energy and Commerce Committee Press Release |accessdate=January 8, 2009}} 3. ^{{USBill|111|HRes|8}}
External links- {{Official|http://energycommerce.house.gov/ }} ([https://www.loc.gov/item/lcwa00hsif00/ Archive])
- [https://www.congress.gov/committee/house-energy-and-commerce/hsif00 House Energy and Commerce Committee]. Legislation activity and reports, Congress.gov.
- [https://www.congress.gov/committees/video/house-energy-and-commerce/hsif00 House Energy and Commerce Committee Hearings and Meetings Video]. Congress.gov
{{United States congressional committees}} 4 : Committees of the United States House of Representatives|Energy in the United States|1795 establishments in the United States|Organizations established in 1795 |