Committee of the United States Senate
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Senate Armed Services Committee Standing committee Formed January 2, 1947 Chair Jack Reed (D ) Since February 3, 2021Ranking member Jim Inhofe (R ) Since February 3, 2021Seats 26 members[a] Political parties Majority (13)
Democratic (12)
Independent (1)
Minority (13)
Policy areas Defense policy , military operationsOversight authority Department of Defense , Armed Forces House counterpart House Armed Services Committee www.armed-services.senate.gov
^ Democrats are in the majority due to the tiebreaking power of Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris , who serves ex officio as the president of the Senate.
Chairman
Carl Levin (D-MI) and Ranking Member
John Warner (R-VA) listen to Admiral
Mike Mullen 's confirmation hearing before the Armed Services Committee to become
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in July 2007. The Armed Services Committee is the prime scene of discussion regarding U.S. military in the Senate.
In June 2009, Armed Services Committee senators
Joe Lieberman ,
Carl Levin (chair), and
John McCain , listen to Secretary of the Navy
Ray Mabus deliver his opening remarks for the fiscal year 2010 budget request in June 2009.
Hearing regarding "
Don't Ask, Don't Tell ,"
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates greets Ranking member,
John McCain . December 2, 2010.
Hearing on sexual assault in the military, June 4, 2013
The Committee on Armed Services (sometimes abbreviated SASC for Senate Armed Services Committee ) is a committee of the United States Senate empowered with legislative oversight of the nation's military , including the Department of Defense , military research and development , nuclear energy (as pertaining to national security ), benefits for members of the military, the Selective Service System and other matters related to defense policy. The Armed Services Committee was created as a result of the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 following U.S. victory in the Second World War . The bill merged the responsibilities of the Committee on Naval Affairs (established in 1816) and the Committee on Military Affairs (also established in 1816).
Considered one of the most powerful Senate committees, its broad mandate allowed it to report some of the most extensive and revolutionary legislation during the Cold War years, including the National Security Act of 1947 . The committee tends to take a more bipartisan approach than other committees, as many of its members formerly served in the military or have major defense interests located in the states they come from.[1] The Committee's regular legislative product is the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which has been passed by Congress and signed into law each year since 1962.[2]
The current Chair is Democrat Jack Reed of Rhode Island, and the Ranking Member is Republican Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma.
Jurisdiction [ ]
According to the Standing Rules of the United States Senate , all proposed legislation, messages, petitions, memorials, and other matters relating to the following subjects are referred to the Armed Services Committee:[3]
Aeronautical and space activities pertaining to or primarily associated with the development of weapons systems or military operations.
Common defense.
Department of Defense, the Department of the Army , the Department of the Navy , and the Department of the Air Force , generally.
Maintenance and operation of the Panama Canal, including administration, sanitation, and government of the Canal Zone.
Military research and development.
National security aspects of nuclear energy.
Naval petroleum reserves, except those in Alaska.
Pay, promotion, retirement, and other benefits and privileges of members of the Armed Forces, including overseas education of civilian and military dependents.
Selective service system.
Strategic and critical materials necessary for the common defense.
Members, 117th Congress [ ]
Main article: 117th United States Congress
Majority
Minority
Jack Reed , Rhode Island, Chair
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
Mazie Hirono , Hawaii
Tim Kaine , Virginia
Angus King , Maine[4]
Elizabeth Warren , Massachusetts
Gary Peters , Michigan
Joe Manchin , West Virginia
Tammy Duckworth , Illinois
Jacky Rosen , Nevada
Mark Kelly , Arizona
Jim Inhofe , Oklahoma, Ranking Member
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Deb Fischer , Nebraska
Tom Cotton , Arkansas
Mike Rounds , South Dakota
Joni Ernst , Iowa
Thom Tillis , North Carolina
Dan Sullivan , Alaska
Kevin Cramer , North Dakota
Rick Scott , Florida
Marsha Blackburn , Tennessee
Josh Hawley , Missouri
Tommy Tuberville , Alabama
Subcommittees [ ]
Chairs [ ]
Committee on Military Affairs, 1816–1947 [ ]
Chair
Party
State
Years
John Williams
Democratic-Republican
Tennessee
1816–1817
George M. Troup
Democratic-Republican
Georgia
1817–1818
John Williams
Democratic-Republican
Tennessee
1818–1823
Andrew Jackson
Jackson Republican
Tennessee
1823–1825
William Henry Harrison
Adams
Ohio
1825–1828
Thomas H. Benton
Jacksonian /Democratic
Missouri
1828–1841
William Preston
Whig
South Carolina
1841–1842
John J. Crittenden
Whig
Kentucky
1842–1845
Thomas H. Benton
Democratic
Missouri
1845–1849
Jefferson Davis
Democratic
Mississippi
1849–1851
James Shields
Democratic
Illinois
1851–1855
John Weller
Democratic
California
1855–1857
Jefferson Davis
Democratic
Mississippi
1857–1861
Robert Ward Johnson
Democratic
Arkansas
1861
Henry Wilson
Republican
Massachusetts
1861–1872
John A. Logan
Republican
Illinois
1872–1877
George E. Spencer
Republican
Alabama
1877–1879
Theodore Randolph
Democratic
New Jersey
1879–1881
John A. Logan
Republican
Illinois
1881–1886
Joseph R. Hawley
Republican
Connecticut
1887–1893
Edward Walthall
Democratic
Mississippi
1893–1894
Joseph R. Hawley
Republican
Connecticut
1894–1905
Francis E. Warren
Republican
Wyoming
1905–1911
Henry A. du Pont
Republican
Delaware
1911–1913
Joseph F. Johnston
Democratic
Alabama
1913[5]
George E. Chamberlain
Democratic
Oregon
1913–1919
James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr.
Republican
New York
1919–1927
David Reed
Republican
Pennsylvania
1927–1933
Morris Sheppard
Democratic
Texas
1933–1941
Robert R. Reynolds
Democratic
North Carolina
1942–1945
Elbert Thomas
Democratic
Utah
1945–1947
Committee on Naval Affairs, 1816–1947 [ ]
Chair
Party
State
Years
Charles Tait
Republican
Georgia
1816–1818
Nathan Sanford
Republican
New York
1818–1819
James Pleasants
Republican
Virginia
1819–1823
James Lloyd
Adams-Clay Federalist
Massachusetts
1823–1825
Robert Y. Hayne
Jacksonian
South Carolina
1825–1832
George M. Dallas
Jacksonian
Pennsylvania
1832–1833
Samuel Southard
Anti-Jackson
New Jersey
1833–1836
William Rives
Jacksonian /Democratic
Virginia
1836–1839
Reuel Williams
Democratic
Maine
1839–1841
Willie P. Mangum
Whig
North Carolina
1841–1842
Richard Bayard
Whig
Delaware
1842–1845
John Fairfield
Democratic
Maine
1845–1847
David Yulee
Democratic
Florida
1847–1851
William Gwin
Democratic
California
1851–1855
Stephen Mallory
Democratic
Florida
1855–1861
John R. Thomson
Democratic
New Jersey
1861
John Hale
Republican
New Hampshire
1861–1864
James Grimes
Republican
Iowa
1864–1870
Aaron Cragin
Republican
New Hampshire
1870–1877
Aaron A. Sargent
Republican
California
1877–1879
John R. McPherson
Democratic
New Jersey
1879–1881
James Donald Cameron
Republican
Pennsylvania
1881–1893
John R. McPherson
Democratic
New Jersey
1893–1895
James Donald Cameron
Republican
Pennsylvania
1895–1897
Eugene Hale
Republican
Maine
1897–1909
George C. Perkins
Republican
California
1909–1913
Benjamin Tillman
Democratic
South Carolina
1913–1918
Claude A. Swanson
Democratic
Virginia
1918–1919
Carroll S. Page
Republican
Vermont
1919–1923
Frederick Hale
Republican
Maine
1923–1933
Park Trammell
Democratic
Florida
1933–1937
David I. Walsh
Democratic
Massachusetts
1937–1947
Committee on Armed Services, 1947–present [ ]
Chair
Party
State
Years
Chan Gurney
Republican
South Dakota
1947–1949
Millard E. Tydings
Democratic
Maryland
1949–1951
Richard Russell Jr.
Democratic
Georgia
1951–1953
Leverett Saltonstall
Republican
Massachusetts
1953–1955
Richard Russell Jr.
Democratic
Georgia
1955–1969
John C. Stennis
Democratic
Mississippi
1969–1981
John Tower
Republican
Texas
1981–1985
Barry Goldwater
Republican
Arizona
1985–1987
Sam Nunn
Democratic
Georgia
1987–1995
Strom Thurmond
Republican
South Carolina
1995–1999
John W. Warner
Republican
Virginia
1999–2001
Carl Levin
Democratic
Michigan
2001[6]
John W. Warner
Republican
Virginia
2001
Carl Levin
Democratic
Michigan
2001–2003[7]
John W. Warner
Republican
Virginia
2003–2007
Carl Levin
Democratic
Michigan
2007–2015
John McCain
Republican
Arizona
2015–2018[8]
James Inhofe
Republican
Oklahoma
2018–2021
Jack Reed
Democratic
Rhode Island
2021–present
Historical committee rosters [ ]
111th Congress [ ]
Majority
Minority
Carl Levin , Michigan, Chair
Joseph Lieberman , Connecticut[9]
Jack Reed , Rhode Island
Daniel Akaka , Hawaii
Bill Nelson , Florida
Ben Nelson , Nebraska
Evan Bayh , Indiana
Jim Webb , Virginia
Claire McCaskill , Missouri
Mark Udall , Colorado
Kay Hagan , North Carolina
Mark Begich , Alaska
Roland Burris , Illinois, until November 2010
Jeff Bingaman , New Mexico
Ted Kaufman , Delaware, until November 2010
Carte Goodwin , West Virginia, until November 2010
Joe Manchin , West Virginia, from November 2010
Chris Coons , Delaware, from November 2010
John McCain , Arizona, Ranking Member
James Inhofe , Oklahoma
Jeff Sessions , Alabama
Saxby Chambliss , Georgia
Lindsey Graham , South Carolina
John Thune , South Dakota
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
George LeMieux , Florida
Scott Brown , Massachusetts
Richard Burr , North Carolina
David Vitter , Louisiana
Susan Collins , Maine
Source: 2010 Congressional Record , Vol. 156, Page S6226
Subcommittees
112th Congress [ ]
Majority
Minority
Carl Levin , Michigan, Chair
Joseph Lieberman , Connecticut[9]
Jack Reed , Rhode Island
Daniel Akaka , Hawaii
Ben Nelson , Nebraska
Jim Webb , Virginia
Claire McCaskill , Missouri
Mark Udall , Colorado
Kay Hagan , North Carolina
Mark Begich , Alaska
Joe Manchin , West Virginia
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
John McCain , Arizona, Ranking Member
James Inhofe , Oklahoma
Jeff Sessions , Alabama
Saxby Chambliss , Georgia
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Scott Brown , Massachusetts
Rob Portman , Ohio
Kelly Ayotte , New Hampshire
Susan Collins , Maine
Lindsey Graham , South Carolina
John Cornyn , Texas
David Vitter , Louisiana
Source: 2011 Congressional Record , Vol. 157, Page S557
Subcommittees
113th Congress [ ]
Majority
Minority
Carl Levin , Michigan, Chair
Jack Reed , Rhode Island
Bill Nelson , Florida
Claire McCaskill , Missouri
Mark Udall , Colorado
Kay Hagan , North Carolina
Joe Manchin , West Virginia
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
Joe Donnelly , Indiana
Mazie Hirono , Hawaii
Tim Kaine , Virginia
Angus King , Maine[9]
James Inhofe , Oklahoma, Ranking Member
John McCain , Arizona
Jeff Sessions , Alabama
Saxby Chambliss , Georgia
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Kelly Ayotte , New Hampshire
Deb Fischer , Nebraska
Lindsey Graham , South Carolina
David Vitter , Louisiana
Roy Blunt , Missouri
Mike Lee , Utah
Ted Cruz , Texas
Source: 2013 Congressional Record , Vol. 159, Page S296
Subcommittees
114th Congress [ ]
Majority
Minority
John McCain , Arizona, Chairman
Jim Inhofe , Oklahoma
Jeff Sessions , Alabama
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Kelly Ayotte , New Hampshire
Deb Fischer , Nebraska
Tom Cotton , Arkansas
Mike Rounds , South Dakota
Joni Ernst , Iowa
Thom Tillis , North Carolina
Dan Sullivan , Alaska
Mike Lee , Utah
Lindsey Graham , South Carolina
Ted Cruz , Texas
Jack Reed , Rhode Island, Ranking Member
Bill Nelson , Florida
Claire McCaskill , Missouri
Joe Manchin , West Virginia
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
Joe Donnelly , Indiana
Mazie Hirono , Hawaii
Tim Kaine , Virginia
Angus King , Maine[4]
Martin Heinrich , New Mexico
115th Congress [ ]
Majority
Minority
Jim Inhofe , Oklahoma, Chairman (from September 6, 2018)
John McCain , Arizona, Chairman (until August 25, 2018)
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Deb Fischer , Nebraska
Tom Cotton , Arkansas
Mike Rounds , South Dakota
Joni Ernst , Iowa
Thom Tillis , North Carolina
Dan Sullivan , Alaska
David Perdue , Georgia
Ted Cruz , Texas
Lindsey Graham , South Carolina
Ben Sasse , Nebraska
Tim Scott , South Carolina
Jon Kyl , Arizona (from September 6, 2018)
Jack Reed , Rhode Island, Ranking Member
Bill Nelson , Florida
Claire McCaskill , Missouri
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
Joe Donnelly , Indiana
Mazie Hirono , Hawaii
Tim Kaine , Virginia
Angus King , Maine[4]
Martin Heinrich , New Mexico
Elizabeth Warren , Massachusetts
Gary Peters , Michigan
116th Congress [ ]
Main article: 116th United States Congress
Majority
Minority
Jim Inhofe , Oklahoma, Chairman
Roger Wicker , Mississippi
Deb Fischer , Nebraska
Tom Cotton , Arkansas
Mike Rounds , South Dakota
Joni Ernst , Iowa
Thom Tillis , North Carolina
Dan Sullivan , Alaska
David Perdue , Georgia
Kevin Cramer , North Dakota
Martha McSally , Arizona (until December 2, 2020)
Rick Scott , Florida
Marsha Blackburn , Tennessee
Josh Hawley , Missouri
Jack Reed , Rhode Island, Ranking Member
Jeanne Shaheen , New Hampshire
Kirsten Gillibrand , New York
Richard Blumenthal , Connecticut
Mazie Hirono , Hawaii
Tim Kaine , Virginia
Angus King , Maine[4]
Martin Heinrich , New Mexico
Elizabeth Warren , Massachusetts
Gary Peters , Michigan
Joe Manchin , West Virginia
Tammy Duckworth , Illinois
Doug Jones , Alabama
Source:[10]
See also [ ]
United States House Committee on Armed Services
List of current United States Senate committees
[ ]
^ Steinhauer, Jennifer. "With Chairmanship, McCain Seizes Chance to Reshape Pentagon Agenda" , The New York Times (June 9, 2015). Retrieved June 10, 2015.
^ "History of the NDAA" . February 3, 2017.
^ Rule XXV: Committees, Standing Rules of the United States Senate.
^ a b c d Angus King is an independent, but caucuses with the Democrats.
^ Died August 8, 1913.
^ At the beginning of the 107th Congress in January 2001 the Senate was evenly divided. With a Democratic
president and vice president still serving until January 20, the Democratic vice president was available to break a tie,
and the Democrats thus controlled the Senate for 17 days, from January 3 to January 20. On January 3 the Senate
adopted S. Res. 7 designating Democratic senators as committee chairmen to serve during this period and
Republican chairmen to serve effective at noon on January 20, 2001.
^ On June 6, 2001, the Democrats took control of the Senate after Senator James Jeffords (VT) changed from the
Republican Party to Independent and announced that he would caucus with the Democrats.
^ Died August 25, 2018.
^ a b c Sens. Lieberman and King were elected as Independents, but caucused with Democrats on the committee.
^ "U.S. Senate: Committee on Armed Services" . Senate.gov . Retrieved January 7, 2017 .
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