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118th United States Congress

The 118th United States Congress is the current meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It convened in Washington, D.C., on January 3, 2023, and will end on January 3, 2025, during the third and fourth years of President Joe Biden's term in office.

For a general discussion of the United States government's legislative branch, see United States Congress.

118th United States Congress

100 senators
435 representatives
6 non-voting delegates

In the 2022 midterm elections, the Republican Party won control of the House 222–213, taking the majority for the first time since the 115th Congress, while the Democratic Party gained one seat in the Senate, where they already had effective control, and giving them a 51–49 seat majority (with a caucus of 48 Democrats and three independents).[b] With Republicans winning the House, the 118th Congress ended the federal government trifecta Democrats held in the 117th.[1]


This congress also features the first female Senate president pro tempore (Patty Murray), the first Black party leader (Hakeem Jeffries) in congressional history, and the longest-serving Senate party leaders (Mitch McConnell and Dick Durbin).[c] The Senate has the highest number of Independent members in a single Congress since the ratification of the 17th Amendment after Joe Manchin left the Democratic Party become an independent.[2]


The 118th Congress has been characterized as a uniquely ineffectual Congress, with its most notable events pointing towards political dysfunction.[3] The intense gridlock, particularly in the Republican-controlled House, where the Republican Conference's majority was often undercut by internal disputes amongst its members,[4] resulted in it passing the lowest number of laws for the first year of session since the Richard Nixon administration, and possibly ever.[5] The unproductive session demotivated many seasoned legislators, with five committee chairs amongst the dozens declaring resignations before the end of the session, three of whom were eligible to reprise their positions if the Republican Party retained their majority for 2025.[6]


The Congress began with a multi-ballot election for Speaker of the House, which had not happened since the 68th Congress in 1923. Kevin McCarthy was eventually elected speaker on the 15th ballot. After relying on Democratic votes to get out of a debt ceiling crisis and government shutdown threats, McCarthy became the first speaker to ever be removed from the role during a legislative session on October 3, 2023.[7] Following three failed attempts by various representatives to fill the post, on October 25, Mike Johnson was elected as speaker. Johnson would advance four more bipartisan continuing resolutions from November into March to avoid shutdowns.[8][9] Congress finalized the 2024 United States federal budget on March 23, 2024, through two separate minibus packages.[10] Following a contentious foreign aid vote, a motion to vacate against Johnson was defeated through a motion to table with bipartisan support.[11]


Partisan disciplinary actions have also increased. With the expulsion of New York Representative George Santos from the House in December 2023 over the opposition of the Speaker, this was the first congress since the 107th in which a member was expelled, and the first ever in which a Republican was. There was also an increase of censures passed in the House,[12] being the first congress with multiple censures since the 1983 congressional page sex scandal and the most in one year since 1870. In December 2023, House Republicans authorized an impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden,[13] followed by the impeachment of Alejandro Mayorkas in February 2024, the first time a cabinet secretary has been the target of impeachment proceedings since William W. Belknap in 1876, and only the second such cabinet impeachment in history.[14][15] The charges were dismissed by the Senate, the first time the Senate dismissed impeachment articles without trial after the reading.[16]

January 3, 2023, 12 p.m. : Congress convenes. Members-elect of the United States Senate are sworn in, but members-elect of the United States House of Representatives can't be sworn as the House adjourns for the day without electing a speaker.[17]

EST

January 3–7, 2023: takes 15 ballots. Kevin McCarthy is ultimately elected as speaker, but only after 6 representatives-elect vote "present", lowering the threshold to be elected from 218 to 215.[18]

The election for the House speakership

February 2, 2023: House votes 218–211 to remove Representative of Minnesota from the Committee on Foreign Affairs for her comments about Israel and concerns over her objectivity.[19]

Ilhan Omar

February 7, 2023: Joe Biden delivers the 2023 State of the Union Address.

President

April 27, 2023: South Korean President addresses a joint session of Congress.

Yoon Suk Yeol

June 3, 2023: The ends with the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023.

2023 debt-ceiling crisis

June 21, 2023: House votes 213–209 to censure Representative of California for his actions during the congressional investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and the first impeachment of Donald Trump.[20]

Adam Schiff

June 22, 2023: Indian Prime Minister addresses a joint session of Congress.

Narendra Modi

July 12, 2023: casts her 31st tie-breaking vote as Vice President, tying the record set by John C. Calhoun, to invoke cloture on Kalpana Kotagal's nomination to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.[21]

Kamala Harris

September 12, 2023: House opens an .

impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden

September 29, 2023: Senator of California dies.[22]

Dianne Feinstein

October 3, 2023: House votes 216–210 to from the position of Speaker of the House through a motion to vacate the chair by Matt Gaetz of Florida.[23] Patrick McHenry becomes Speaker pro tempore.

remove Kevin McCarthy

October 17–25, 2023:

October 2023 Speaker election

October 19, 2023: President Biden gives a primetime oval office address, calling for a new aid package for and Ukraine, amid the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and the Israel–Hamas war.[24]

Israel

October 25, 2023: is elected Speaker of the House of Representatives.[25]

Mike Johnson

November 8, 2023: House votes 234–188 to censure Representative of Michigan for her comments condemning Israel in the midst of the Israel–Hamas war.[26]

Rashida Tlaib

December 1, 2023: Over the opposition of the Speaker, the House votes 311–114–2 to Representative George Santos of New York following a United States House Committee on Ethics report that unanimously found substantial evidence Santos violated federal criminal law.[27][28]

expel

December 5, 2023: Kamala Harris casts her , surpassing the record set by John C. Calhoun, to invoke cloture and then confirm the nomination of Loren AliKhan to serve as a judge on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.[29]

32nd and 33rd tie-breaking votes

December 7, 2023: House votes 214–191 to censure Representative of New York for pulling a fire alarm in the Capitol in October.[30]

Jamaal Bowman

February 6, 2024: House votes to impeach Alejandro Mayorkas, but the vote fails 214–216.[31]

Secretary of Homeland Security

February 13, 2024: House votes again to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, succeeding 214–213.[15]

impeach

February 28, 2024: Senator announces he will step down as Republican Senate Leader at the end of the 118th Congress, in January 2025.[32]

Mitch McConnell

March 7, 2024: President Biden delivers the .

2024 State of the Union Address

April 11, 2024: Japanese Prime Minister addresses a joint session of Congress.[33]

Fumio Kishida

April 16–17, 2024: Two articles of impeachment against Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas are delivered and read in the Senate, with to dismiss both articles without a full trial, 51–48 and 51–49.[34]

votes on the following day

April 24, 2024: Representative of New Jersey dies.[35]

Donald Payne Jr.

May 8, 2024: House votes 359–43 to table a resolution removing Mike Johnson from the position of Speaker of the House with 11 Republicans opposed.

[36]

May 31, 2024: Senator of West Virginia leaves the Democratic Party and registers as an Independent.[37]

Joe Manchin

June 12, 2024: House voted 216–207 to hold Merrick Garland in criminal contempt of Congress for his refusal to comply with the House Oversight Committee's request to turn over audiotapes of Biden regarding his classified document incident.[38]

Attorney General

March 20, 2023: , S. 619

COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023

June 3, 2023: , H.R. 3746

Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023

September 30, 2023: , H.R. 5860

Continuing Appropriations Act, 2024 and Other Extensions Act

November 17, 2023: , H.R. 6363

Further Continuing Appropriations and Other Extensions Act, 2024

December 22, 2023: , H.R. 2670

National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024

January 19, 2024: Further Additional Continuing Appropriations and Other Extensions Act, 2024,

H.R. 2872

March 1, 2024: Extension of Continuing Appropriations and Other Matters Act, 2024,

H.R. 7463

March 9, 2024: , H.R. 4366

Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024

March 23, 2024: Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024,

H.R. 2882

April 20, 2024: Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act,

H.R. 7888

April 24, 2024: , H.R. 815

National Security Act, 2024

May 16, 2024: FAA Reauthorization Act, 2024,

H.R. 3935

: Adopting the Rules of the House of Representatives for the One Hundred Eighteenth Congress, and for other purposes.

H.Res. 5

: Establishing a Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government as a select investigative subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary.

H.Res. 12

: Removing Ilhan Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

H.Res. 76

: Censuring Adam Schiff and referring his conduct to the House Ethics Committee for further investigation.

H.Res. 521

: Censuring Rashida Tlaib for statements on the Israel–Hamas war considered antisemitic.

H.Res. 845

: Expelling George Santos for alleged fraud and campaign finance violations.

H.Res. 878

: Censuring Jamaal Bowman for unlawfully pulling a fire alarm in the Capitol.

H.Res. 914

: Terminating the national emergency concerning COVID-19 declared by the President on March 13, 2020.

H.J.Res. 7

: Disapproving the action of the District of Columbia Council in approving the Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022.

H.J.Res. 26

: Clarifying the dress code for the floor of the Senate.

S.Res. 376

All four self-identified independents caucus with the Democrats.

: Kamala Harris (D)

President

: Patty Murray (D)[51]

President pro tempore

Architect of the Capitol

Brett Blanton

: Brian P. Monahan

Attending Physician

List of new members of the 118th United States Congress

2022 United States elections

2022 United States Senate elections

2024 United States elections

2024 United States Senate elections