Congressional Progressive Caucus
The Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) is the single largest partisan caucus in the United States House of Representatives, and works together to advance progressive issues and causes.
The CPC was founded in 1991 by the independent then Congressman Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who remains a member as Senator. It represents about a third of the House Democratic Caucus (with 72 members as of March 2007). Of the twenty standing committees of the House, eleven are chaired by members of the CPC.
Ideology
According to their website, the CPC advocates "universal access to affordable, high quality healthcare," fair trade agreements, living wage laws, the right of all workers to
organize into
Supporting organizations
An array of national progressive organizations will work to support the efforts of the caucus, including the Institute for Policy Studies,
Officers
- Barbara Lee (California), Co-Chair
- Lynn Woolsey (California), Co-Chair
Directors
- Bill Goold, Executive Director
Current members
- Neil Abercrombie (Hawaii)
- Tammy Baldwin (Wisconsin)
- Xavier Becerra (California)
- Madeleine Bordallo (Guam)
- Bob Brady (Pennsylvania)
- Corrine Brown (Florida)
- Mike Capuano (Massachusetts)
- Julia Carson (Indiana)
- Donna Christian-Christensen (Virgin Islands)
- Yvette Clarke (New York)
- William Lacy Clay, Jr. (Missouri)
- Emanuel Cleaver (Missouri)
- Steve Cohen (Tennessee)
- John Conyers (Michigan) - chairman, House Judiciary Committee
- Elijah Cummings (Maryland)
- Danny Davis (Illinois)
- Peter DeFazio (Oregon)
- Rosa DeLauro (
Connecticut ) - Keith Ellison (Minnesota)
- Eni Faleomavaega (American Samoa)
- Sam Farr (California)
- Chaka Fattah (Pennsylvania)
- Bob Filner (California) - chairman, House Veterans Affairs Committee
- Barney Frank (Massachusetts) - chairman, House Financial Services Committee
- Raul Grijalva (Arizona)
- Luis Gutierrez (Illinois)
- John Hall (New York)
- Phil Hare (Illinois)
- Maurice Hinchey (New York)
- Mazie Hirono (Hawaii)
- Jesse Jackson, Jr. (Illinois)
- Sheila Jackson-Lee (Texas)
- Eddie Bernice Johnson (Texas)
- Hank Johnson (Georgia)
- Stephanie Tubbs Jones (Ohio) - chairwoman, House Ethics Committee
- Marcy Kaptur (Ohio)
- Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Michigan)
- Dennis Kucinich (Ohio) - candidate for President of the United States
- Tom Lantos (California) - chairman, House Foreign Affairs Committee
- Barbara Lee (California) - Co-Chair
- John Lewis (Georgia)
- Dave Loebsack (Iowa)
- Carolyn Maloney (New York)
- Ed Markey (Massachusetts)
- Jim McDermott (Washington)
- Jim McGovern (Massachusetts)
- George Miller (California) - chairman, House Education and Labor Committee
- Gwen Moore (Wisconsin)
- Jerry Nadler (New York)
- Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)
- John Olver (Massachusetts)
- Ed Pastor (Arizona)
- Donald M. Payne (New Jersey)
- Charles Rangel (New York) - chairman, House Ways and Means Committee
- Bobby Rush (Illinois)
- Jan Schakowsky (Illinois)
- Jose Serrano (New York)
- Louise Slaughter (New York)
- Hilda Solis (California)
- Pete Stark (California)
- Bennie Thompson (Mississippi) - chairman, House Homeland Security Committee
- John Tierney (Massachusetts)
- Tom Udall (New Mexico)
- Nydia Velazquez (New York) - chairwoman, House Small Business Committee
- Maxine Waters (California)
- Diane Watson (California)
- Mel Watt (North Carolina)
- Henry Waxman (California) - chairman, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
- Peter Welch (Vermont)
- Lynn Woolsey (California) - Co-Chair
Senate member
Former members
- Sherrod Brown (Ohio) - elected to Senate
- Lane Evans (Illinois) - retired from Congress
- Cynthia McKinney (Georgia) - lost Congressional seat
- Major Owens (New York) - retired from Congress
- Nancy Pelosi (California) - left caucus when elected House Minority Leader
See also
References
External links
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)





