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List of LGBTQ members of the United States Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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As of January 2025, 37 members of the LGBTQ community are known to have held office in the United States Congress. In the House, 33 LGBTQ people held office; in the Senate, 4 held office. Two people, Tammy Baldwin and Kyrsten Sinema, served in the House and were later elected into the Senate. The earliest known LGBTQ congressperson was Ed Koch, who began his term in the House in 1969. The earliest known LGBTQ senator is Harris Wofford, who began his term in 1991. Both men were not out during their tenure: Koch's sexuality was confirmed after his death and Wofford announced his plans to marry a man over 20 years after serving in the Senate. In 2024, Sarah McBride was elected as the nation's first openly transgender member of Congress.

There are 13 openly LGBTQ members of the current (119th) Congress, all of whom are Democrats. One is a senator and the rest are House representatives. This equals the record highest number of LGBTQ congresspeople serving at the same time in U.S. history,[a][1][2] and the 12 openly LGBTQ representatives form the highest number of simultaneously-serving openly LGBTQ members in the history of the House of Representatives.

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Senate

 Came out after serving

More information Senator, Party ...
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House of Representatives

 Came out after serving  Posthumously identified as LGBTQ

More information Representative, Party ...

Shadow representatives

More information Representative, Party ...
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Histograph of openly-serving LGBTQ members of Congress

More information Starting, Total ...
  Democratic Party
  Republican Party
  Independent
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See also

Notes

  1. The immediately-preceding Congress had also seen two periods of time when 13 openly LGBTQ members served simultaneously: from the start of the 118th Congress until the resignation of Rep. David Cicilline (D–CT) on Jun. 1, 2023 (comprising two senators and eleven representatives), and again from the appointment of Sen. Laphonza Butler (D–CA) on Oct. 4, 2023, until the expulsion of Rep. George Santos (R–NY) on Dec. 1, 2023 (comprising three senators and ten representatives).
  2. Incidentally, this also marked the first election in which both major party candidates (Santos and Democrat Rob Zimmerman) were openly LGBTQ.[47]
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References

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