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List of members of the Council of the District of Columbia

These lists include all members of the Council of the District of Columbia since its creation in 1975. All members are elected to 4-year terms (except for the initial 2-year terms for half the members elected to the first council, in 1974).

The eight wards of Washington D.C. (2012–2022)
The eight wards of Washington D.C. (2003–2013)

Commissioner-council system edit

On June 1, 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered that the 3-member commissioner system that had governed the District for nearly 100 years be replaced by a single commissioner and a 9-member city council all appointed by the President. The commissioner, sometimes referred to as the mayor-commissioner, would be able to veto the actions of the council, and council could overrule the veto with a 3/4ths majority.[1] Congress had 60 days for either house to reject the rule. Only the House introduced a disapproval resolution, supported by Republicans and Southern Democrats, but it failed 244–160.[2] Each member of the council served a 3-year term starting February 1, with seats staggered by three years; except for those appointed initially in 1967. In the event that a member's term expired, they would remain a member until a replacement was confirmed and sworn in. By law, a maximum of six members could be from any one party.

Because of a low salary and the fact that terms lasted until a replacement was available, membership was quite fluid. (Changes in italics)

  • Nov 3, 1967 – Sept 13, 1968John W. Heckiner (Chair), Walter E. Fauntroy (vice-chair), Stanley J. Anderson, Margaret A. Haywood, John A. Nevius, Polly Shackleton, William S. Thompson, J. C. Turner, Joseph P. Yeldell. (Haywood, Turner and Yelldell had terms that ended on Feb 1, 1968, but all three were reappointed.)[3][4]
  • Sept 13, 1968 – Oct 18, 1968 – Heckiner (Chair), Fauntroy (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Nevius, Shackleton, Thompson, Yeldell. (Turner resigned.)
  • Oct 18, 1968 – March 13, 1969 – Heckiner (Chair), Fauntroy (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Nevius, Shackleton, Thompson, Phillip J. Daugherty and Yeldell. (Daugherty was appointed to fill Turner's seat.)[5]
  • March 13, 1969 – July 11, 1969Gilbert Hahn, Jr (Chair), Sterling Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Rev. Jerry A Moore, Jr., Shackleton, Thompson, Daugherty and Yeldell. (Hahn, Tucker and Moore replaced Hechinger, Fauntroy and Nevius respectively; Nixon's first appointments as he shifted the council from majority Democrat to majority Republican.)[6]
  • July 11, 1969 – Oct 16, 1969 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Shackleton, Moore, Daugherty and Yeldell. (Thompson resigned to be a judge.)
  • Oct 16, 1969 – April 3, 1970 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Shackleton, Moore, Dr. Henry S. Robinson, Daugherty and Yeldell. (Robinson appointed to fill Thompson's seat.)[7]
  • April 3, 1970 – Nov 30, 1970 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Rev. Carlton W. Veazey, Moore, Robinson, Daugherty and Yeldell. (Anderson and Robinson were reappointed and Veazey replaced Shackleton.)[8]
  • Nov 30, 1970 – June 22, 1971 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Moore, Robinson and Daugherty. (Yeldell resigned to run for delegate.)[9]
  • June 22, 1971 – Nov 30, 1971 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Moore, Robinson, Henry K. Willard II and Yeldell. (Haywood was reappointed, Yeldell was appointed to his own vacancy and Willard replaced Daugherty.) [10]
  • Nov 30, 1971 – Jan 17, 1972 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Moore, Robinson, Willard. (Yeldell resigned to become the city's human resources director.)[11]
  • Jan 17, 1972 – March 18, 1972 – Hahn (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Moore, Robinson, Willard and Tedson J. Meyers (Meyers appointed to fill Yeldell's seat.)
  • March 18, 1972 – May 3, 1972 – Hahn (Chair),[12] Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Robinson, Willard and Meyers. (Moore resigned to run for delegate.)[13]
  • May 3, 1972 – June 20, 1972Nevius (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Robinson, Willard and Meyers. (Nevius appointed to replace Hahn as chair.)
  • June 20, 1972 – July 11, 1972 – Nevius (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Haywood, Veazey, Robinson and Meyers. (Willard retired to focus on business.)[14]
  • July 11, 1972 – Oct 2, 1972 – Nevius (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Veazey, Robinson and Meyers. (Haywood resigned to become a judge.)
  • Oct 2, 1972 – Aug 8, 1973 – Nevius (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Anderson, Marjorie Parker, Veazey, Moore, Robinson, Rockwood H. Foster and Meyers. (Foster replaced Willard, Parker replaced Haywood and Moore reappointed to the seat he vacated.)
  • Aug 8, 1973 – Jan 2, 1975 – Nevius (Chair), Tucker (vice-chair), Marguerite C. Selden, Parker, Antoinette Ford, Moore, Robinson, Foster and Meyers. (Selden replaced Anderson, Ford replaced Veazey and Robinson was reappointed.)

On October 30, 1973, members voted to represent areas of town. They did not use the ward system, which had been created for the school board, but instead used the service area system created by the mayor in 1970. There were 8 wards, 9 service areas and 9 members of the council.[15] They were assigned:

  • Service area 1 (upper Ga Ave Corridor) – Moore
  • Service area 2 (upper NE) – Robinson
  • Service area 3 (NE, east of Anacostia) – Parker
  • Service area 4 (SE east of Anacostia) – Ford
  • Service area 5 (Capitol Hill and just east of Anacostia River) – Selden
  • Service area 6 (Model citys, Ivy City, Stanton Park and Trinidad) – Tucker
  • Service area 7 (Adams Morgan) – Tucker
  • Service area 8 (west of Rock Creek park) – Foster
  • Service area 9 (downtown and SW) – Meyers and Parker

Appointed members and tenure edit

  • John W. Heckiner (1967–1969, chair)
  • Walter E. Fauntroy (1967–1969, vice-chair)
  • Stanley J. Anderson (1967–1973)
  • Margaret A. Haywood (1967–1972)
  • John A. Nevius (1967–1969, 1972–1975 as chair)
  • Polly Shackleton (1967–1970)
  • William S. Thompson (1967–1969)
  • J.C. Turner (1967–1968)
  • Joseph P. Yeldell (1967–1970) (1971)
  • Phillip J. Daugherty (1968–1971)
  • Gilbert Hahn, Jr (1969–1972, chair)
  • Sterling Tucker (1969–1975, vice-chair, longest serving member)
  • Rev. Jerry A Moore, Jr. (1969–1972, 1972–1975)
  • Dr. Henry S. Robinson (1969–1975)
  • Rev. Carlton W. Veazey (1970–1973)
  • Henry K. Willard II (1971–1972)
  • Tedson J. Meyers (1972–1975)
  • Marjorie Parker (1972–1975)
  • Rockwood H. Foster (1972–1975)
  • Marguerite C. Selden (1973–1975)
  • Antoinette Ford (1973–1975)

Tenure records edit

The chairman who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Linda A. Cropp, who served 9 years, 146 days, from August 8, 1997, to January 1, 2007.[16] David A. Clarke served the longest as chairman, counting all terms (with interruptions), serving 10 years, 185 days (from January 3, 1983, to January 3, 1991, and again from September 27, 1993, to his death on March 28, 1997).[17] The chairman who served the shortest period of time is Kwame R. Brown, who served 521 days from January 2, 2011, to June 6, 2012.[18]

The council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Jack Evans, who served 28 years from May 13, 1991, to January 17, 2020. Evans also holds the record for serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service. The council member who served the shortest period of time is Arrington Dixon, who served 121 days between his special appointment to an at-large seat on August 15, 1997, and December 14, 1997 (when David Catania was sworn in after winning a special election on December 3, 1997).

The at-large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Hilda Mason, who served 21 years, 273 days from April 2, 1977, to January 1, 1999. Mason also holds the record for serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service. The Group 1 at-large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is John L. Ray, who served 17 years, 359 days from January 8, 1979, to January 1, 1997. Ray also holds the record for the Group 1 at-large council member serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service. The Group 1 at-large council member who served the shortest period of time is Arrington Dixon. The Group 2 at-large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Hilda Mason. Mason also holds the record for the Group 2 at-large council member serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service. The Group 1 at-large council member who served the shortest period of time is Sekou Biddle, who served 123 days from his appointment on January 7, 2011, until May 9, 2011 (his successor, Vincent Orange, was sworn in on May 10 after a special election held April 26, 2011).

Chairman edit

  1. Sterling Tucker (D), 1975–1979
  2. Arrington Dixon (D), 1979–1983
  3. David A. Clarke (D), 1983–1991
  4. John A. Wilson (D), 1991–1993
  5. David A. Clarke (D), 1993–1997 (won special election after death of Wilson)
  6. Linda W. Cropp (D), 1997–2007 (won special election after death of Clarke)
  7. Vincent C. Gray (D), 2007–2011
  8. Kwame R. Brown (D), 2011–2012
  9. Phil Mendelson (D), 2012–present (won special election after Brown resigned)

At-large member edit

There are four at-large members at any time, elected in groups of two. Group 1 was elected in 1974 to 2-year terms and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter: 1976, 1980, ..., 2008, 2012, etc. Group 2 is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4: 1974, 1978, ..., 2010, 2014, etc. In 1974, Group 1 consisted of Marion Barry and Jerry A. Moore, Jr.[19]

  1. Douglas E. Moore (D), 1975–1979
  2. Julius Hobson (Statehood), 1975–1977
  3. Marion Barry (D), 1975–1979
  4. Jerry A. Moore Jr. (R), 1975–1985
  5. Hilda Mason (Statehood), 1977–1999 (appointed by party and then won special election after death of Hobson)
  6. Betty Ann Kane (D), 1979–1991
  7. John L. Ray (D), 1979–1997 (appointed by party and then won special election after Barry became mayor)
  8. Carol Schwartz (R), 1985–1989
  9. William Lightfoot (I), 1989–1997
  10. Linda W. Cropp (D), 1991–1997
  11. Harold Brazil (D), 1997–2005
  12. Carol Schwartz (R), 1997–2009
  13. Arrington Dixon (D), 1997 (appointed by party after Cropp became chairman)
  14. David Catania (R; became I in 2004), 1997–2015 (won special election at end of Dixon's temporary appointment)
  15. Phil Mendelson (D), 1999–2012
  16. Kwame R. Brown (D), 2005–2011
  17. Michael A. Brown (I), 2009–2013
  18. Sekou Biddle (D), 2011 (appointed by party after Kwame Brown became chairman)
  19. Vincent Orange (D), 2011–2016 (won special election at end of Biddle's temporary appointment)
  20. Anita Bonds (D), 2012–present (appointed by party after Mendelson became chairman and later won a special election)
  21. David Grosso (I), 2013–2021
  22. Elissa Silverman (I), 2015–2023
  23. Robert White (D), 2016–present (appointed by party following the resignation of Vincent Orange)
  24. Christina Henderson (I), 2021–present
  25. Kenyan McDuffie (I), 2023–present

Ward 1 member edit

The Ward 1 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4: 1974, 1978, ..., 2010, 2014, etc.

  1. David A. Clarke (D), 1975–1983
  2. Frank Smith (D), 1983–1999
  3. Jim Graham (D), 1999–2015
  4. Brianne Nadeau (D), 2015–present

Ward 2 member edit

The Ward 2 member was elected in 1974 to a 2-year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter: 1976, 1980, ..., 2008, 2012, etc.

  1. John A. Wilson (D), 1975–1991
  2. Jack Evans (D), 1991–2020 (won special election after Wilson became chairman, resigned in January 2020, due to ethics violations)
  3. Brooke Pinto (D), 2020–present (won special election after Evans resigned)

Ward 3 member edit

The Ward 3 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4: 1974, 1978, ..., 2010, 2014, etc.

  1. Polly Shackleton (D), 1975–1987
  2. James E. Nathanson (D), 1987–1995
  3. Kathleen Patterson (D), 1995–2007
  4. Mary Cheh (D), 2007–2023
  5. Matthew Frumin (D), 2023–present

Ward 4 member edit

The Ward 4 member was elected in 1974 to a 2-year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter: 1976, 1980, ..., 2008, 2012, etc.

  1. Arrington Dixon (D), 1975–1979
  2. Charlene Drew Jarvis (D), 1979–2001 (won special election after Dixon became chairman)
  3. Adrian Fenty (D), 2001–2007
  4. Muriel Bowser (D), 2007–2015 (won special election after Fenty became mayor)
  5. Brandon Todd (D), 2015–2021 (won special election after Bowser became mayor)
  6. Janeese Lewis George (D), 2021–present

Ward 5 member edit

The Ward 5 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4: 1974, 1978, ..., 2010, 2014, etc.

  1. William Spaulding (D), 1975–1987
  2. Harry Thomas, Sr. (D), 1987–1999
  3. Vincent Orange (D), 1999–2007
  4. Harry Thomas, Jr. (D), 2007–2012 (resigned)
  5. Kenyan McDuffie (D), 2012–2023 (won special election after Thomas' resignation)
  6. Zachary Parker (D), 2023–present

Ward 6 member edit

The Ward 6 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4: 1974, 1978, ..., 2010, 2014, etc.

  1. Nadine Winter (D), 1975–1991
  2. Harold Brazil (D), 1991–1997
  3. Sharon Ambrose (D), 1997–2007 (won special election after Brazil became at-large)
  4. Tommy Wells (D), 2007–2015
  5. Charles Allen (D), 2015–present

Ward 7 member edit

The Ward 7 member was elected in 1974 to a 2-year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter: 1976, 1980, ..., 2008, 2012, etc.

  1. Willie Hardy (D), 1975–1981
  2. H. R. Crawford (D), 1981–1993
  3. Kevin P. Chavous (D), 1993–2005
  4. Vincent C. Gray (D), 2005–2007
  5. Yvette Alexander (D), 2007–2017 (won special election after Gray became chairman)
  6. Vincent C. Gray (D), 2017–present

Ward 8 member edit

The Ward 8 member was elected in 1974 to a 2-year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter: 1976, 1980, ..., 2008, 2012, etc.

  1. James Coates (D), 1975–1977
  2. Wilhelmina Rolark (D), 1977–1993
  3. Marion Barry (D), 1993–1995
  4. Eydie Whittington (D), 1995–1997 (won special election after Barry became mayor)
  5. Sandy Allen (D), 1997–2005
  6. Marion Barry (D), 2005–2014
  7. LaRuby May (D), 2015–2017 (won special election after Barry died)
  8. Trayon White (D), 2017–present

Table edit

Background colors indicate party:

Year Chair At-large councillors Ward-level councillors Makeup
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1975 Tucker D. Moore Hobson Barry J. Moore Clarke Wilson Shackleton Dixon Spaulding Winter Hardy Coates  
1976
1977 Mason Rolark
1978
1979 Dixon Kane Ray Jarvis
1980
1981 Crawford
1982
1983 Clarke Smith
1984
1985 Schwartz
1986
1987 Nathanson Thomas Sr.
1988
1989 Lightfoot  
1990
1991 Wilson Cropp Evans Brazil
1992
1993 Clarke Chavous Barry
1994
1995 Patterson Whittington
1996
1997 Cropp Dixon Brazil Schwartz Ambrose S. Allen  
1998 Catania  
1999 Mendelson Graham Orange  
2000
2001 Fenty
2002
2003
2004 Catania
2005 K. Brown Gray Barry  
2006
2007 Gray Cheh Bowser Thomas Jr. Wells Alexander
2008
2009 M. Brown  
2010
2011 K. Brown Biddle
Orange
2012 Mendelson Bonds McDuffie
2013 Grosso
2014
2015 Silverman Nadeau Todd C. Allen May
2016
2017 R. White Gray T. White
2018
2019
2020 Pinto
2021 Henderson George
2022

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Carper, Elsie (2 June 1967). "Johnson Orders New D.C. Rule". The Washington Post.
  2. ^ Carper, Elsie (10 August 1967). "House Accepts new D.C. Rule". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Kaiser, Robert G. (4 November 1967). "City's New Council Takes Oath". The Washington Post.
  4. ^ "City Life: Judges, D.C. Aides Confirmed". The Washington Post. 12 March 1968.
  5. ^ "Helping Hand for a New Councilman". The Washington Post. 19 October 1968.
  6. ^ Asher, Robert L. (14 March 1969). "Hahn Takes Office. GOP Seeks a New Leader". The Washington Post.
  7. ^ "Sworn In". The Washington Post. 17 Oct 1969.
  8. ^ "Senate Confirms Council Nominees". The Washington Post. April 3, 1970.
  9. ^ Green, Stephen; Levy, Claudia (21 June 1972). "Arena Pushed By Nixon". The Washington Post.
  10. ^ "D.C. Council Swears in 3 Members". The Washington Post. 23 June 1971.
  11. ^ Prince, Richard (14 Jan 1972). "Nixon Selects D.C. Lawyer To Fill Seat on City Council". The Washington Post.
  12. ^ "Council Action Limits Fat Content Of Hamburger, Sausage on Sale". The Washington Post. 3 May 1972.
  13. ^ Prince, Richard (16 Mar 1972). "Moore Expected to Announce Delegate Candidacy Friday". The Washington Post.
  14. ^ Anders, Michael (12 August 1972). "Rockwood Foster Picked for Council". The Evening Star.
  15. ^ Scharfenberg, Kirk (30 Oct 1973). "D.C. Split Into Areas By Council". The Washington Post.
  16. ^ Williams, Vanessa (July 23, 1997). "Cropp Coasts to Victory In Election for Chairman: Only 2.6 Percent Turn Out to Select D.C. Council". The Washington Post. p. B3; "Cropp Takes Oath, Criticizes Rescue Package". The Washington Post. August 9, 1997. p. D5; Nakamura, David (January 2, 2007). "Fenty, Champing at the Bit, Set to Take Up City's Reins". The Washington Post. p. A1.
  17. ^ Williams, Juan (November 3, 1982). "Barry Leads Democrats To Victory". The Washington Post. p. A1; Pianin, Eric; Sherwood, Tom (January 3, 1983). "Barry, Council Members Sworn In". The Washington Post. p. A1; Sanchez, Rene (January 3, 1991). "A New Council Voices Promises of Progress". The Washington Post. p. A8; Sanchez, Rene (September 16, 1993). "How Clarke Pulled Off a Rout: Voters, Political Observers Point to His Energy, 'Regular Guy' Image". The Washington Post. p. B1; Powell, Michael; Williams, Vanessa (March 29, 1997). "D.C. Council Chairman David A. Clarke Dies: Political Career Began in Civil Rights Era". The Washington Post. p. A1.
  18. ^ Craig, Tim (November 3, 2010). "Thomas Is Ordered to Turn Over Papers". The Washington Post. p. B5; Stewart, Nikita; Craig, Tim; DeBonis, Mike (January 3, 2011). "Tax Hike Possible, Gray Says". The Washington Post. p. A1; Wilber, Del Quentin; Craig, Tim (June 7, 2012). "D.C. Council Chair Quits After Fraud Charges". The Washington Post. p. A1.
  19. ^ Robinson, Timothy S. (November 3, 1976). "Carter Takes D.C. Handily; Fauntroy, Barry, Moore Win: Fauntroy, Barry, Moore Re-Elected". The Washington Post. p. A1.

External links edit

  • District of Columbia Home Rule Act.
  • . District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. Archived from the original on 2008-07-09. Retrieved 2008-07-13.

list, members, council, district, columbia, these, lists, include, members, council, district, columbia, since, creation, 1975, members, elected, year, terms, except, initial, year, terms, half, members, elected, first, council, 1974, eight, wards, washington,. These lists include all members of the Council of the District of Columbia since its creation in 1975 All members are elected to 4 year terms except for the initial 2 year terms for half the members elected to the first council in 1974 The eight wards of Washington D C 2012 2022 The eight wards of Washington D C 2003 2013 Contents 1 Commissioner council system 1 1 Appointed members and tenure 2 Tenure records 3 Chairman 4 At large member 5 Ward 1 member 6 Ward 2 member 7 Ward 3 member 8 Ward 4 member 9 Ward 5 member 10 Ward 6 member 11 Ward 7 member 12 Ward 8 member 13 Table 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksCommissioner council system editOn June 1 1967 President Lyndon B Johnson ordered that the 3 member commissioner system that had governed the District for nearly 100 years be replaced by a single commissioner and a 9 member city council all appointed by the President The commissioner sometimes referred to as the mayor commissioner would be able to veto the actions of the council and council could overrule the veto with a 3 4ths majority 1 Congress had 60 days for either house to reject the rule Only the House introduced a disapproval resolution supported by Republicans and Southern Democrats but it failed 244 160 2 Each member of the council served a 3 year term starting February 1 with seats staggered by three years except for those appointed initially in 1967 In the event that a member s term expired they would remain a member until a replacement was confirmed and sworn in By law a maximum of six members could be from any one party Because of a low salary and the fact that terms lasted until a replacement was available membership was quite fluid Changes in italics Nov 3 1967 Sept 13 1968 John W Heckiner Chair Walter E Fauntroy vice chair Stanley J Anderson Margaret A Haywood John A Nevius Polly Shackleton William S Thompson J C Turner Joseph P Yeldell Haywood Turner and Yelldell had terms that ended on Feb 1 1968 but all three were reappointed 3 4 Sept 13 1968 Oct 18 1968 Heckiner Chair Fauntroy vice chair Anderson Haywood Nevius Shackleton Thompson Yeldell Turner resigned Oct 18 1968 March 13 1969 Heckiner Chair Fauntroy vice chair Anderson Haywood Nevius Shackleton Thompson Phillip J Daugherty and Yeldell Daugherty was appointed to fill Turner s seat 5 March 13 1969 July 11 1969 Gilbert Hahn Jr Chair Sterling Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Rev Jerry A Moore Jr Shackleton Thompson Daugherty and Yeldell Hahn Tucker and Moore replaced Hechinger Fauntroy and Nevius respectively Nixon s first appointments as he shifted the council from majority Democrat to majority Republican 6 July 11 1969 Oct 16 1969 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Shackleton Moore Daugherty and Yeldell Thompson resigned to be a judge Oct 16 1969 April 3 1970 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Shackleton Moore Dr Henry S Robinson Daugherty and Yeldell Robinson appointed to fill Thompson s seat 7 April 3 1970 Nov 30 1970 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Rev Carlton W Veazey Moore Robinson Daugherty and Yeldell Anderson and Robinson were reappointed and Veazey replaced Shackleton 8 Nov 30 1970 June 22 1971 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Moore Robinson and Daugherty Yeldell resigned to run for delegate 9 June 22 1971 Nov 30 1971 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Moore Robinson Henry K Willard II and Yeldell Haywood was reappointed Yeldell was appointed to his own vacancy and Willard replaced Daugherty 10 Nov 30 1971 Jan 17 1972 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Moore Robinson Willard Yeldell resigned to become the city s human resources director 11 Jan 17 1972 March 18 1972 Hahn Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Moore Robinson Willard and Tedson J Meyers Meyers appointed to fill Yeldell s seat March 18 1972 May 3 1972 Hahn Chair 12 Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Robinson Willard and Meyers Moore resigned to run for delegate 13 May 3 1972 June 20 1972 Nevius Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Robinson Willard and Meyers Nevius appointed to replace Hahn as chair June 20 1972 July 11 1972 Nevius Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Haywood Veazey Robinson and Meyers Willard retired to focus on business 14 July 11 1972 Oct 2 1972 Nevius Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Veazey Robinson and Meyers Haywood resigned to become a judge Oct 2 1972 Aug 8 1973 Nevius Chair Tucker vice chair Anderson Marjorie Parker Veazey Moore Robinson Rockwood H Foster and Meyers Foster replaced Willard Parker replaced Haywood and Moore reappointed to the seat he vacated Aug 8 1973 Jan 2 1975 Nevius Chair Tucker vice chair Marguerite C Selden Parker Antoinette Ford Moore Robinson Foster and Meyers Selden replaced Anderson Ford replaced Veazey and Robinson was reappointed On October 30 1973 members voted to represent areas of town They did not use the ward system which had been created for the school board but instead used the service area system created by the mayor in 1970 There were 8 wards 9 service areas and 9 members of the council 15 They were assigned Service area 1 upper Ga Ave Corridor Moore Service area 2 upper NE Robinson Service area 3 NE east of Anacostia Parker Service area 4 SE east of Anacostia Ford Service area 5 Capitol Hill and just east of Anacostia River Selden Service area 6 Model citys Ivy City Stanton Park and Trinidad Tucker Service area 7 Adams Morgan Tucker Service area 8 west of Rock Creek park Foster Service area 9 downtown and SW Meyers and ParkerAppointed members and tenure edit John W Heckiner 1967 1969 chair Walter E Fauntroy 1967 1969 vice chair Stanley J Anderson 1967 1973 Margaret A Haywood 1967 1972 John A Nevius 1967 1969 1972 1975 as chair Polly Shackleton 1967 1970 William S Thompson 1967 1969 J C Turner 1967 1968 Joseph P Yeldell 1967 1970 1971 Phillip J Daugherty 1968 1971 Gilbert Hahn Jr 1969 1972 chair Sterling Tucker 1969 1975 vice chair longest serving member Rev Jerry A Moore Jr 1969 1972 1972 1975 Dr Henry S Robinson 1969 1975 Rev Carlton W Veazey 1970 1973 Henry K Willard II 1971 1972 Tedson J Meyers 1972 1975 Marjorie Parker 1972 1975 Rockwood H Foster 1972 1975 Marguerite C Selden 1973 1975 Antoinette Ford 1973 1975 Tenure records editThe chairman who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Linda A Cropp who served 9 years 146 days from August 8 1997 to January 1 2007 16 David A Clarke served the longest as chairman counting all terms with interruptions serving 10 years 185 days from January 3 1983 to January 3 1991 and again from September 27 1993 to his death on March 28 1997 17 The chairman who served the shortest period of time is Kwame R Brown who served 521 days from January 2 2011 to June 6 2012 18 The council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Jack Evans who served 28 years from May 13 1991 to January 17 2020 Evans also holds the record for serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service The council member who served the shortest period of time is Arrington Dixon who served 121 days between his special appointment to an at large seat on August 15 1997 and December 14 1997 when David Catania was sworn in after winning a special election on December 3 1997 The at large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Hilda Mason who served 21 years 273 days from April 2 1977 to January 1 1999 Mason also holds the record for serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service The Group 1 at large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is John L Ray who served 17 years 359 days from January 8 1979 to January 1 1997 Ray also holds the record for the Group 1 at large council member serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service The Group 1 at large council member who served the shortest period of time is Arrington Dixon The Group 2 at large council member who served the longest uninterrupted period of time is Hilda Mason Mason also holds the record for the Group 2 at large council member serving the longest period of time counting interrupted service The Group 1 at large council member who served the shortest period of time is Sekou Biddle who served 123 days from his appointment on January 7 2011 until May 9 2011 his successor Vincent Orange was sworn in on May 10 after a special election held April 26 2011 Chairman editSterling Tucker D 1975 1979 Arrington Dixon D 1979 1983 David A Clarke D 1983 1991 John A Wilson D 1991 1993 David A Clarke D 1993 1997 won special election after death of Wilson Linda W Cropp D 1997 2007 won special election after death of Clarke Vincent C Gray D 2007 2011 Kwame R Brown D 2011 2012 Phil Mendelson D 2012 present won special election after Brown resigned At large member editThere are four at large members at any time elected in groups of two Group 1 was elected in 1974 to 2 year terms and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter 1976 1980 2008 2012 etc Group 2 is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4 1974 1978 2010 2014 etc In 1974 Group 1 consisted of Marion Barry and Jerry A Moore Jr 19 Douglas E Moore D 1975 1979 Julius Hobson Statehood 1975 1977 Marion Barry D 1975 1979 Jerry A Moore Jr R 1975 1985 Hilda Mason Statehood 1977 1999 appointed by party and then won special election after death of Hobson Betty Ann Kane D 1979 1991 John L Ray D 1979 1997 appointed by party and then won special election after Barry became mayor Carol Schwartz R 1985 1989 William Lightfoot I 1989 1997 Linda W Cropp D 1991 1997 Harold Brazil D 1997 2005 Carol Schwartz R 1997 2009 Arrington Dixon D 1997 appointed by party after Cropp became chairman David Catania R became I in 2004 1997 2015 won special election at end of Dixon s temporary appointment Phil Mendelson D 1999 2012 Kwame R Brown D 2005 2011 Michael A Brown I 2009 2013 Sekou Biddle D 2011 appointed by party after Kwame Brown became chairman Vincent Orange D 2011 2016 won special election at end of Biddle s temporary appointment Anita Bonds D 2012 present appointed by party after Mendelson became chairman and later won a special election David Grosso I 2013 2021 Elissa Silverman I 2015 2023 Robert White D 2016 present appointed by party following the resignation of Vincent Orange Christina Henderson I 2021 present Kenyan McDuffie I 2023 presentWard 1 member editThe Ward 1 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4 1974 1978 2010 2014 etc David A Clarke D 1975 1983 Frank Smith D 1983 1999 Jim Graham D 1999 2015 Brianne Nadeau D 2015 presentWard 2 member editThe Ward 2 member was elected in 1974 to a 2 year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter 1976 1980 2008 2012 etc John A Wilson D 1975 1991 Jack Evans D 1991 2020 won special election after Wilson became chairman resigned in January 2020 due to ethics violations Brooke Pinto D 2020 present won special election after Evans resigned Ward 3 member editThe Ward 3 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4 1974 1978 2010 2014 etc Polly Shackleton D 1975 1987 James E Nathanson D 1987 1995 Kathleen Patterson D 1995 2007 Mary Cheh D 2007 2023 Matthew Frumin D 2023 presentWard 4 member editThe Ward 4 member was elected in 1974 to a 2 year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter 1976 1980 2008 2012 etc Arrington Dixon D 1975 1979 Charlene Drew Jarvis D 1979 2001 won special election after Dixon became chairman Adrian Fenty D 2001 2007 Muriel Bowser D 2007 2015 won special election after Fenty became mayor Brandon Todd D 2015 2021 won special election after Bowser became mayor Janeese Lewis George D 2021 presentWard 5 member editThe Ward 5 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4 1974 1978 2010 2014 etc William Spaulding D 1975 1987 Harry Thomas Sr D 1987 1999 Vincent Orange D 1999 2007 Harry Thomas Jr D 2007 2012 resigned Kenyan McDuffie D 2012 2023 won special election after Thomas resignation Zachary Parker D 2023 presentWard 6 member editThe Ward 6 member is elected in years divisible by 2 but not by 4 1974 1978 2010 2014 etc Nadine Winter D 1975 1991 Harold Brazil D 1991 1997 Sharon Ambrose D 1997 2007 won special election after Brazil became at large Tommy Wells D 2007 2015 Charles Allen D 2015 presentWard 7 member editThe Ward 7 member was elected in 1974 to a 2 year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter 1976 1980 2008 2012 etc Willie Hardy D 1975 1981 H R Crawford D 1981 1993 Kevin P Chavous D 1993 2005 Vincent C Gray D 2005 2007 Yvette Alexander D 2007 2017 won special election after Gray became chairman Vincent C Gray D 2017 presentWard 8 member editThe Ward 8 member was elected in 1974 to a 2 year term and elected in years divisible by 4 thereafter 1976 1980 2008 2012 etc James Coates D 1975 1977 Wilhelmina Rolark D 1977 1993 Marion Barry D 1993 1995 Eydie Whittington D 1995 1997 won special election after Barry became mayor Sandy Allen D 1997 2005 Marion Barry D 2005 2014 LaRuby May D 2015 2017 won special election after Barry died Trayon White D 2017 presentTable editBackground colors indicate party Democratic Republican Statehood independentYear Chair At large councillors Ward level councillors Makeup1 2 3 4 5 6 7 81975 Tucker D Moore Hobson Barry J Moore Clarke Wilson Shackleton Dixon Spaulding Winter Hardy Coates nbsp 19761977 Mason Rolark19781979 Dixon Kane Ray Jarvis19801981 Crawford19821983 Clarke Smith19841985 Schwartz19861987 Nathanson Thomas Sr 19881989 Lightfoot nbsp 19901991 Wilson Cropp Evans Brazil19921993 Clarke Chavous Barry19941995 Patterson Whittington19961997 Cropp Dixon Brazil Schwartz Ambrose S Allen nbsp 1998 Catania nbsp 1999 Mendelson Graham Orange nbsp 20002001 Fenty200220032004 Catania2005 K Brown Gray Barry nbsp 20062007 Gray Cheh Bowser Thomas Jr Wells Alexander20082009 M Brown nbsp 20102011 K Brown BiddleOrange2012 Mendelson Bonds McDuffie2013 Grosso20142015 Silverman Nadeau Todd C Allen May20162017 R White Gray T White201820192020 Pinto2021 Henderson George2022See also editCouncil of the District of Columbia List of mayors of Washington D C Political party strength in Washington D C United States congressional delegations from the District of ColumbiaReferences edit Carper Elsie 2 June 1967 Johnson Orders New D C Rule The Washington Post Carper Elsie 10 August 1967 House Accepts new D C Rule The Washington Post Kaiser Robert G 4 November 1967 City s New Council Takes Oath The Washington Post City Life Judges D C Aides Confirmed The Washington Post 12 March 1968 Helping Hand for a New Councilman The Washington Post 19 October 1968 Asher Robert L 14 March 1969 Hahn Takes Office GOP Seeks a New Leader The Washington Post Sworn In The Washington Post 17 Oct 1969 Senate Confirms Council Nominees The Washington Post April 3 1970 Green Stephen Levy Claudia 21 June 1972 Arena Pushed By Nixon The Washington Post D C Council Swears in 3 Members The Washington Post 23 June 1971 Prince Richard 14 Jan 1972 Nixon Selects D C Lawyer To Fill Seat on City Council The Washington Post Council Action Limits Fat Content Of Hamburger Sausage on Sale The Washington Post 3 May 1972 Prince Richard 16 Mar 1972 Moore Expected to Announce Delegate Candidacy Friday The Washington Post Anders Michael 12 August 1972 Rockwood Foster Picked for Council The Evening Star Scharfenberg Kirk 30 Oct 1973 D C Split Into Areas By Council The Washington Post Williams Vanessa July 23 1997 Cropp Coasts to Victory In Election for Chairman Only 2 6 Percent Turn Out to Select D C Council The Washington Post p B3 Cropp Takes Oath Criticizes Rescue Package The Washington Post August 9 1997 p D5 Nakamura David January 2 2007 Fenty Champing at the Bit Set to Take Up City s Reins The Washington Post p A1 Williams Juan November 3 1982 Barry Leads Democrats To Victory The Washington Post p A1 Pianin Eric Sherwood Tom January 3 1983 Barry Council Members Sworn In The Washington Post p A1 Sanchez Rene January 3 1991 A New Council Voices Promises of Progress The Washington Post p A8 Sanchez Rene September 16 1993 How Clarke Pulled Off a Rout Voters Political Observers Point to His Energy Regular Guy Image The Washington Post p B1 Powell Michael Williams Vanessa March 29 1997 D C Council Chairman David A Clarke Dies Political Career Began in Civil Rights Era The Washington Post p A1 Craig Tim November 3 2010 Thomas Is Ordered to Turn Over Papers The Washington Post p B5 Stewart Nikita Craig Tim DeBonis Mike January 3 2011 Tax Hike Possible Gray Says The Washington Post p A1 Wilber Del Quentin Craig Tim June 7 2012 D C Council Chair Quits After Fraud Charges The Washington Post p A1 Robinson Timothy S November 3 1976 Carter Takes D C Handily Fauntroy Barry Moore Win Fauntroy Barry Moore Re Elected The Washington Post p A1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Washington D C City Council members District of Columbia Home Rule Act Historical Elected Officials District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics Archived from the original on 2008 07 09 Retrieved 2008 07 13 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of members of the Council of the District of Columbia amp oldid 1182560065, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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