What party controlled the House and Senate in 2012?
What party controlled the House and Senate in 2012?
112th United States Congress
Senate Majority
Democratic
Senate President
Joe Biden (D)
House Majority
Republican
House Speaker
John Boehner (R)
What was the House majority in 2012?
2012 United States House of Representatives elections
Party
Republican
Democratic
Leader since
January 3, 2007
January 3, 2003
Leader’s seat
Ohio 8th
California 12th
Last election
242 seats, 51.7%
193 seats, 44.9%
Seats won
234
201
Who controlled the House in 2011?
Democrats controlled the 111th Congress (2009–2011) with majorities in both houses of Congress alongside the country’s first African-American president, Democrat Barack Obama.
Who controlled House in 2016?
2016 United States House of Representatives elections
Leader
Paul Ryan
Nancy Pelosi
Party
Republican
Democratic
Leader since
October 29, 2015
January 3, 2003
Leader’s seat
Wisconsin 1st
California 12th
Last election
247 seats, 51.2%
188 seats, 45.5%
Who controlled Congress in 2009?
How many House members have voted for President?
Forty-one former Members of the House have received at least one Electoral College vote for President. Nineteen Representatives have served as President. Ten former House Members have received Electoral College votes for both President and Vice President in separate elections.
Who was the majority Leader of the House in 2006?
11 Elected Majority Leader on February 2, 2006. 12 Resigned as Majority Leader on July 31, 2014. 13 Elected Majority Leader on June 19, 2014, and assumed office on July 31, 2014, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Majority Leader Eric Cantor.
Who was re-elected to the Senate in 2012?
Red denotes counties/districts won by Flake. Blue denotes those won by Carmona. Three-term incumbent and Senate Minority Whip Republican Jon Kyl, who was re-elected in 2006 with 53% of the vote, announced he would not seek a fourth term in 2012.
Who was the only House member to win the presidency?
Both Henry Clay of Kentucky (1824) and James A. Garfield of Ohio (1880) received Electoral College votes for the presidency as sitting House Members. Garfield was the only successful sitting Representative to become President.