History of the Committee

The House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs (known as the Committee on International Relations from 1995 until 2007) traces its origins to November 29, 1775, when the Continental Congress created a committee, by resolution "for the sole purposes of corresponding with our friends of Great Britain, Ireland, and other parts of the world." Chosen for this Committee were Benjamin Franklin—who served as chairman and guiding spirit—Benjamin Harrison, Thomas Johnson, Jr., John Dickinson, and John Jay. Originally known as the Committee of Correspondence, then as the Committee of Secret Correspondence, it was the first institution created to represent the United States in the foreign affairs field. The House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs (as well as the Senate Foreign Relations Committee) is a lineal descendant of the Committee of Correspondence. Under Benjamin Franklin's leadership, the Committee quickly entered into communication with various persons in Europe for the purpose of ascertaining sentiment there toward the Colonies and obtaining any other information which might be useful in the struggle with England, even designating its own secret agents abroad.

After the Congress of the United States was organized under the Constitution in 1789, select committees to oversee foreign affairs were appointed. In the years before the second World War, congressional foreign affairs was dominated by the Senate by design of the Constitutional Convention. Although the division of powers stipulated Congress should "advise and consent," treaty-making power went to the smaller body in an effort to maintain "secrecy and dispatch." In 1807, during the Jefferson Presidency, a House committee was established in response to predatory actions by both the French and British against American commercial shipping. Following the British search and seizure of the U.S. frigate Chesapeake miles off the Virginia coast, the House appointed a special Foreign Relations Committee, known as the Aggression Committee. Its findings led President Madison to send a war message to Congress on June 1, 1812, and three days later, the House of Representatives passed the first declaration of war by a vote of 79 to 49. Ten years after the War of 1812, seven inaugural Members of Congress co-founded the Committee on Foreign Affairs, newly designated a standing committee of the House of Representatives.

Though the Executive Branch does take the lead on nearly every aspect of foreign policy, the congressional committees have used their "power of the purse" to exert influence upon the President's agenda. In 1947, after lengthy hearings in the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the Marshall Plan—the Economic Cooperation Act of 1948—was agreed to by a vote of 329 to 74. This support of the Administration's proposal draws a stark comparison to the use of the purse in 1970, to curb the expansion of the geographic region that the U.S. would deploy forces. To end U.S. participation decisively in Vietnam, on August 15, 1973, Congress prohibited the use of funds that would directly, or indirectly, support combat activities in North and South Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia. The Vietnam War encouraged the Committee to scrutinize the actions of the Executive Branch more closely, and the role of the House Foreign Affairs Committee has, as a result, gained more prestige and earned more respect.

In 1985, the Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Dante B. Fascell, coordinated efforts with the Chairman of the House Budget Committee to introduced H.R. 1460, the " Anti-Apartheid Act of 1985," which was later limited by the Executive Order of President Reagan. Legislation now heralded as having been pivotal to ending the Apartheid government in South Africa can be credited to the Africa Subcommittee, which approved H.R. 4868 to increase economic sanctions, which was enacted over President Reagan's veto, with a vote of 313 to 83 in the House and 78 to 21 in the Senate. Legislation passed through the Committee on Foreign Affairs has affected citizens of the U.S. and the rest of the world.

Throughout history, the Committee has been composed of some of America's most able legislators and statesmen. Two American Presidents have served on it: James K. Polk, from 1827 to 1931, and John Quincy Adams, who became Chairman in 1842 after he returned to the House following his term as the Chief Executive. In more recent times, J. Danforth Quayle, former Vice President, served on the Committee in the 96th Congress.

Many former Chairmen of the Committee have their names written in history books, such as Francis W. Pickens, who chaired the Committee from 1839 to 1841, who later became Governor of South Carolina and authorized the firing of Fort Sumter, which preceded the Civil War. Serving as Chairman in the aftermath of World War I, Stephen G. Porter of Pennsylvania came to be one of the most influential figures in the determination of American foreign policy in the early 1920s. Former Chairmen Sol Bloom of New York and James P. Richards of South Carolina have been recognized for their contributions to America's leadership in the immediate post-World War II period. The longest tenure as Chairman in the history of the Committee was that of Thomas E. Morgan of Pennsylvania who served in that position from 1959 until the end of the 94th Congress in 1976.

Moreover, Committee experience has provided a beginning for numerous individuals who have gone on to distinguish themselves in the diplomatic service of the country. Chairman of the 20th Congress, Edward Everett of Massachusetts, also served as Secretary of State, was a Whig Vice Presidential candidate in 1860, and is remembered as one of America's greatest orators. Also among the noteworthy diplomats is Perry Belmont, Chairman in the 49th and 50th Congresses who was U.S. Minister of Spain, in 1888-89 and was a noted author of work on international policies. His successor as Chairman in the 51st Congress was Robert R. Hitt of Ohio, Chief of the U.S. Delegation in Paris from 1874 to 1881 and subsequently was appointed Assistant Secretary of State. Christian A. Herter, who served as Secretary of State during the Eisenhower Administration, was a Committee member in the 82nd Congress. More recent examples are: Charles Bowles, former Under Secretary of State and James W. Wadsworth, former U.S. Representative of the United Nations, F. Bradford Morse, United Nations Development Programs, E. Ross Adair, former Ambassador to Ethiopia and William S. Mailliard, former Ambassador to the Organization of America States.

Past Chairs of the Committee

Congress Chairman (Session)
110 Tom Lantos
(died in office 2/11/08)
Howard Berman (2nd)
107-109 Henry John Hyde
104-106 Benjamin Arthur Gilman
103 Lee Herbert Hamilton
99-102 Dante Bruno Fascell
98 Clement John Zablocki (1st)
Dante Bruno Fascell (2nd)
95-97 Clement John Zablocki
86-94 Thomas Ellsworth Morgan
85 Thomas Sylvy Gordon
84 James Prioleau Richards
83 Robert Bruce Chiperfield
82 John Kee (1st)
(died in office 5/8/51)
James Prioleau Richards (2nd)
81 Sol Bloom (1st)
John Kee (2nd)
80 Charles Aubrey Eaton
77-79 Sol Bloom
76 Sam Davis McReynolds (1st)
Sam Davis McReynolds (2nd)
Sol Bloom (3rd)
73rd-75 Sam Davis McReynolds
72 John Charles Linthicum (1st)
Sam Davis McReynolds (2nd)
71 Stephen Geyer Porter (1st & 2nd)
Henry Wilson Temple (3rd)
66-70 Stephen Geyer Porter
63rd-65 Henry De La Warr Flood
62 William Sulzer
61 James Breck Perkins (1st & 2nd)
David Johnson Foster (3rd)
60 Robert Gordon Cousins
54-59 Robert Roberts Hitt
53 James Bennett McCreary
52 James Henderson Blount
51 Robert Roberts Hitt
50 Perry Belmont (1st)
James Bennett McCreary (2nd)
49 Perry Belmont
48 Andrew Gregg Curtin
47 Charles Grandison Williams
46 Samuel Sullivan Cox
44-45 Thomas Swann
43 Godlove Stein Or
39-42 Nathaniel Prentice Banks
38 Henry Winter Davis
37 John Jordan Crittenden
36 Thomas Corwin
35 Thomas Lanier Clingman (1st)
George Washington Hopkins (2nd)
34 Alexander C.M. Pennington
32-33 Thomas Henry Bayly
31 John Alexander McClernand
30 Truman Smith
28-29 Charles Jared Ingersoll
27 Caleb Cushing (1st)
John Quincy Adams (2nd)
26 Francis Wilkinson Pickens
25 Benjamin Chew Howard
24 John Young Mason (1st)
Benjamin Chew Howard (2nd)
23 William Segar Archer (1st)
James Moore Wayne (2nd)
22 William Segar Archer
20-21 Edward Everett
18-19 John Forsyth
17 Jonathan Russell