Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-states

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

United States House Committee on House Administration

Standing committee of the United States House of Representatives

United States House Committee on House Administration

Standing committee of the United States House of Representatives

FieldValue
nameHouse Administration Committee
typestanding
chamberhouse
congress119th
statusactive
formedJanuary 2, 1947
chairBryan Steil
chair_partyR
chair_sinceJanuary 13, 2023
ranking_memberJoseph Morelle
rm_partyD
rm_sinceJanuary 13, 2023
seats12
majority1R
majority1_seats8
minority1D
minority1_seats4
counterpartCommittee on Rules and Administration
website(Republican)
(Democratic)

(Democratic)

Committee Chair Bryan Steil

The United States House Committee on House Administration deals with the general administration matters of the United States House of Representatives, the security of the United States Capitol, and federal elections.

History

The Committee on House Administration was created by the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, which merged the Committees on Enrolled Bills (created in 1789 as Joint Committee), Elections (created in 1794), Accounts (created in 1803), Printing (created in 1846), Disposition of Executive Papers (created in 1889), Memorials (created in 1929), and some functions of the Joint Committee on the Library (created in 1806 as a Joint Committee) into one new standing committee, the Committee on House Administration. (See National Archives's Records of the House Administration Committee and Its Predecessors)

In 1975 its responsibilities expanded to include oversight of parking facilities and campaign contributions to House candidates. In 1979, as part of the annual appropriations bill for the legislative branch, this committee absorbed the responsibilities of the former Select Committee on the Beauty Shop, which had been chaired by Rep. Yvonne Brathwaite Burke and was responsible for overseeing the operations of a beauty shop for House members, employees, and their families.

In 1995 its responsibilities expanded to include oversight of the Commission on Congressional Mailing Standards.

Jurisdiction

The Committee on House Administration is a standing committee of the United States House of Representatives. The powers and duties of the Committee include the statutory responsibilities of the Committee on House Administration, as determined primarily by the Legislative Reorganization Acts of 1946 and 1970; the House of Representatives Administrative Reform Technical Corrections Act of 1996; and the Rules of the House of Representatives adopted on January 6, 1999.

The Committee on House Administration, which consists of 12 members, has jurisdiction over all legislation and other matters relating to the House of Representatives, such as:

  • Appropriations from accounts (and the expenditure, auditing and settling thereof) for committee salaries and expenses, except for the Committee on Appropriations; House Information Resources; and allowances and expenses of Members, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, Officers, and administrative offices of the House.
  • Employment of persons by the House, including staff for Members, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, and Committees; and reporters of debates.
  • The Library of Congress, including management thereof.
  • The House Library.
  • Statuary and pictures.
  • Acceptance or purchase of works of art for the Capitol.
  • United States Botanic Garden.
  • Purchase of books and manuscripts.
  • The Smithsonian Institution and the incorporation of similar institutions .
  • The Commission on Congressional Mailing Standards (Franking Commission).
  • Printing and correction of the Congressional Record.
  • Accounts of the House generally.
  • Assignment of office space for Members, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, and Committees.
  • Disposition of useless executive papers.
  • Election of the President, Vice President, Members, Senators, Delegates, or the Resident Commissioner; corrupt practices; contested elections; credentials and qualifications; and Federal elections generally.
  • Services to the House, including House food services, parking facilities, and administration of the House Office Buildings and of the House wing of the Capitol.
  • Travel of Members, Delegates, and the Resident Commissioner.
  • Raising, reporting, and use of campaign contributions for candidates for office of Representative, of Delegate, and of Resident Commissioner.
  • Compensation, retirement, and other benefits of the Members, Delegates, the Resident Commissioner, Officers, and employees of Congress.

Additionally, the Committee:

  • Provides policy direction for the Inspector General and oversight of the Clerk, Sergeant at Arms, Chief Administrative Officer, and Inspector General.
  • Has the function of accepting on behalf of the House of Representatives a gift, except as otherwise provided by law, if the gift does not involve a duty, burden, or condition, or is not made dependent on some future performance by the House; and promulgating regulations under which to do so.
  • Is responsible for considering amounts of payments of funds resulting from settlements of complaints under the Congressional Accountability Act of 1995.
  • Membership on the Joint Committee on Printing and the Joint Committee on the Library are drawn from House Administration along with Members from the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. The Chair of the Appropriation Committee's Legislative Branch Subcommittee is also a member of the Joint Committee on the Library.

Members, 119th Congress

MajorityMinority

Resolutions electing members: (R), (D)

Subcommittees

Due to its relatively small size, the House Administration Committee has not had subcommittees for most of its existence. For the 110th Congress, Chair Millinder-McDonald recommended the creation of two new subcommittees, on Elections and Oversight, which were approved by the full committee on February 16, 2007. However, in the 113th Congress, the committee abolished both subcommittees. The Elections Subcommittee was reconstituted for the 116th Congress.

For the 118th Congress:

SubcommitteeChairRanking Member
ElectionsLaurel Lee (R-FL)Terri Sewell (D-AL)
OversightBarry Loudermilk (R-GA)Norma Torres (D-CA)
ModernizationStephanie Bice (R-OK)Derek Kilmer (D-WA)

Committee leadership

NamePartyStateStartEnd
RepublicanIowa19471949
DemocraticNew Jersey19491951
DemocraticVirginia19511953
RepublicanIowa19531955
DemocraticTexas19551968
DemocraticMaryland19681971
DemocraticOhio19711976
DemocraticNew Jersey19761980
DemocraticMichigan19801981
DemocraticCalifornia19811984
DemocraticIllinois19841991
DemocraticNorth Carolina19911995
RepublicanCalifornia19952001
RepublicanOhio20012006
RepublicanMichigan20062007
DemocraticCalifornia2007
DemocraticPennsylvania20072011
RepublicanCalifornia20112013
RepublicanMichigan20132016
RepublicanMississippi20172019
DemocraticCalifornia20192023
RepublicanWisconsin2023present
NamePartyStateStartEnd
DemocraticNew Jersey19471949
RepublicanIowa19491953
DemocraticVirginia1953
DemocraticTexas19531955
RepublicanIowa19551959
RepublicanOhio19591965
RepublicanCalifornia19651971
RepublicanOhio19711975
RepublicanAlabama19751981
RepublicanMinnesota19811991
RepublicanCalifornia19911995
DemocraticCalifornia19951997
DemocraticConnecticut19971999
DemocraticMaryland19992003
DemocraticConnecticut20032005
DemocraticCalifornia20052007
RepublicanMichigan20072009
RepublicanCalifornia20092011
DemocraticPennsylvania20112019
RepublicanIllinois20192023
DemocraticNew York2023present

Historical membership rosters

118th Congress

MajorityMinority

Resolutions electing members: (R), (D)

;Subcommittees

SubcommitteeChairRanking Member
ElectionsLaurel Lee (R-FL)Terri Sewell (D-AL)
OversightBarry Loudermilk (R-GA)Norma Torres (D-CA)
ModernizationStephanie Bice (R-OK)Derek Kilmer (D-WA)

117th Congress

MajorityMinority

Resolutions electing members: (Chair), (Ranking Member), (D), (R)

;Subcommittees

SubcommitteeChairRanking Member
ElectionsG. K. Butterfield (D-NC)Bryan Steil (R-WI)

116th Congress

MajorityMinority

Sources: (Chair), (Ranking Member), (D), (R)

;Subcommittees

SubcommitteeChairRanking Member
ElectionsMarcia Fudge (D-OH)Rodney Davis (R-IL)

;Commission on Congressional Mailing Standards (Franking Commission)

MajorityMinority

115th Congress

MajorityMinority

References

References

  1. (2016-10-24). "Wash, Rinse, and Equal Treatment".
  2. (23 January 2025). "Committee on House Administration Chairman Steil Announces Vice Chair, Subcommittee Appointments".
  3. [http://cha.house.gov/mediapages/PRArticle.aspx?NewsID=1407 Committee on House Administration Opens Historic Meeting with Ambitious Agenda]
  4. [http://electionlawblog.org/?p=46958 “House Administration Committee Votes To Eliminate Subcommittee on Elections”]
  5. "Elections (118th Congress)".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about United States House Committee on House Administration — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report