Resignation from the United States Senate

A member of the United States Senate can resign by writing a letter of resignation to the governor of the state that the senator represents. Under Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution of the United States, and under the Seventeenth Amendment, in case of a vacancy in the Senate resulting from resignation, the executive authority of the state (today known in every state as the governor) can fill the vacancy by appointment unless the state legislature has provided for a special election to fill the vacancy. Whenever a senator needs to be appointed or elected, the Secretary of the Senate mails one of three forms to the state's governor to inform them of the proper wording to certify the appointment of a new Senator.[1]

The first resignation from the Senate was that of William Paterson of New Jersey on November 13, 1790, who resigned in order to accept the office of Governor of New Jersey. His resignation was only the third time a person ceased to hold a seat in the Senate, which had first convened during the preceding year, 1789. The earlier ones resulted from the death of Senator William Grayson of Virginia, and the expiration of the term of the temporary senator John Walker of Virginia, who was appointed by the Governor of Virginia to hold that office until a successor could be elected in November.

Before 1796, eight senators resigned. Nine senators resigned during that year – a record high number that stands to this day. Most resignations have been motivated either by declining health or a decision to accept another office. Sixteen persons have resigned from the Senate twice and two have resigned three times.

List of resignations by date

Name State Date of resignation Notes
William PatersonNew JerseyNovember 13, 1790 Resigned to become Governor of New Jersey
Samuel JohnsonConnecticutMarch 3, 1791
Richard LeeVirginiaOctober 8, 1792
Charles CarrollMarylandNovember 30, 1792
George ReadDelawareSeptember 18, 1793
James MonroeVirginiaMarch 27, 1794
John Taylor of CarolineVirginiaMay 11, 1794
James JacksonGeorgiaNovember 16, 1795
Oliver EllsworthConnecticutMarch 8, 1796
Rufus KingNew YorkMay 23, 1796
Caleb StrongMassachusettsJune 1, 1796
George CabotMassachusettsJune 9, 1796
Jonathan Trumbull, Jr.ConnecticutJune 10, 1796
Moses RobinsonVermontOctober 15, 1796
Richard PottsMarylandOctober 24, 1796
Pierce ButlerSouth CarolinaOctober 25, 1796
Frederick FrelinghuysenNew JerseyNovember 12, 1796
William CockeTennesseeSeptember 26, 1797
William BradfordRhode IslandOctober ??, 1797
Isaac TichenorVermontOctober 17, 1797 Resigned to become Governor of Vermont[2]
John HenryMarylandDecember 10, 1797
Philip SchuylerNew YorkJanuary 3, 1798
John ViningDelawareJanuary 19, 1798
Andrew JacksonTennesseeApril 1, 1798
John Sloss HobartNew YorkApril 16, 1798
John HunterSouth CarolinaNovember 26, 1798
John RutherfurdNew JerseyDecember 5, 1798
Joseph AndersonTennesseeMarch 3, 1799
Samuel DexterMassachusettsMay 30, 1800 Resigned to take office as United States Secretary of War[3]
John LauranceNew YorkAugust 1, 1800
Benjamin GoodhueMassachusettsNovember 8, 1800
James LloydMarylandDecember 1, 1800
James SchuremanNew JerseyFebruary 16, 1801
Henry LatimerDelawareFebruary 28, 1801
Ray GreeneRhode IslandMarch 5, 1801
Charles PinckneySouth CarolinaJune 6, 1801
Samuel LivermoreNew HampshireJune 12, 1801
Elijah PaineVermontSeptember 1, 1801
John Armstrong, Jr.New YorkFebruary 5, 1802
James SheafeNew HampshireJune 14, 1802
Dwight FosterMassachusettsMarch 2, 1803
DeWitt ClintonNew YorkNovember 4, 1803
Theodorus BaileyNew YorkJanuary 16, 1804
John Armstrong, Jr.New YorkFebruary 23, 1804
Abraham VenableVirginiaJune 7, 1804
John Armstrong, Jr.New YorkJune 30, 1804
William WellsDelawareNovember 6, 1804
William GilesVirginiaDecember 3, 1804
Andrew MooreVirginiaDecember 3, 1804
John BreckinridgeKentuckyAugust 7, 1805
Robert WrightMarylandNovember 12, 1806
John AdairKentuckyNovember 18, 1806
David StoneNorth CarolinaFebruary 17, 1807
James FennerRhode IslandSeptember ??, 1807
Israel SmithVermontOctober 1, 1807
John SmithOhioApril 25, 1808 Resigned after being indicted but not expelled in a 19–10 vote[4]
Quincy AdamsMassachusettsJune 8, 1808
Samuel MaclayPennsylvaniaJanuary 4, 1809
Aaron KitchellNew JerseyMarch 3, 1809
Daniel SmithTennesseeMarch 31, 1809
John MilledgeGeorgiaNovember 14, 1809
Buckner ThrustonKentuckyDecember 18, 1809
Nahum ParkerNew HampshireJune 1, 1810
James HillhouseConnecticutJune 10, 1810
Return Meigs, Jr.OhioDecember 8, 1810
Thomas SumterSouth CarolinaDecember 16, 1810
Jenkin WhitesideTennesseeOctober 8, 1811
Christopher ChamplinRhode IslandOctober 12, 1811
Jean Noel DestréanLouisianaOctober 1, 1812
James BayardDelawareMarch 3, 1813
Dudley ChaseVermontMarch 3, 1813
William CrawfordGeorgiaMarch 23, 1813
James LloydMassachusettsMay 1, 1813
Chauncey GoodrichConnecticutMay 13, 1813
George CampbellTennesseeFebruary 11, 1814
Michael LeibPennsylvaniaFebruary 14, 1814
George BibbKentuckyAugust 23, 1814
Thomas WorthingtonOhioDecember 1, 1814
Jesse BledsoeKentuckyDecember 24, 1814
David StoneNorth CarolinaDecember 24, 1814
William GilesVirginiaMarch 3, 1815
Francis LockeNorth CarolinaDecember 5, 1815
William BarryKentuckyMay 1, 1816
Christopher GoreMassachusettsMay 30, 1816
John TaylorSouth CarolinaNovember ??, 1816
Wyatt BibbGeorgiaNovember 9, 1816
James TurnerNorth CarolinaNovember 21, 1816
Goodloe HarperMarylandDecember 6, 1816
Jeremiah MasonNew HampshireJune 16, 1817
James FiskVermontJanuary 8, 1818
George CampbellTennesseeApril 20, 1818
Eli AshmunMassachusettsMay 10, 1818
George TroupGeorgiaSeptember 23, 1818
John ForsythGeorgiaFebruary 17, 1819
John CrittendenKentuckyMarch 3, 1819
John EppesVirginiaDecember 4, 1819
Prentis MellenMassachusettsMay 15, 1820
Walter LeakeMississippiMay 15, 1820
William LoganKentuckyMay 28, 1820
James WilsonNew JerseyJanuary 8, 1821
Freeman WalkerGeorgiaAugust 6, 1821
Gray OtisMassachusettsMay 30, 1822
Williams WalkerAlabamaDecember 12, 1822
James PleasantsVirginiaDecember 15, 1822
Caesar RodneyDelawareJanuary 29, 1823
Samuel SouthardNew JerseyMarch 3, 1823
James BrownLouisianaDecember 10, 1823
Ninian EdwardsIllinoisMarch 3, 1824
Henry JohnsonLouisianaMay 27, 1824
James BarbourVirginiaMarch 7, 1825
David HolmesMississippiSeptember 25, 1825
Andrew JacksonTennesseeOctober 14, 1825
James DeWolfRhode IslandOctober 31, 1825
Edward LloydMarylandJanuary 14, 1826
James LloydMassachusettsMay 23, 1826
Henry HarrisonOhioMay 20, 1828
Albion ParrisMaineAugust 26, 1828
Thomas CobbGeorgiaNovember 7, 1828
Nathaniel MaconNorth CarolinaDecember 14, 1828
Ephraim BatemanNew JerseyJanuary 12, 1829
Mahlon DickersonNew JerseyJanuary 30, 1829
John BerrienGeorgiaMarch 9, 1829
John BranchNorth CarolinaMarch 9, 1829
John EatonTennesseeMarch 9, 1829
Louis McLaneDelawareApril 16, 1829
Edward LivingstonLouisianaMay 24, 1831
Issac BarnardPennsylvaniaDecember 6, 1831
Powhatan EllisMississippiJuly 16, 1832
Littleton TazewellVirginiaJuly 16, 1832
Robert HayneSouth CarolinaDecember 13, 1832
William MarcyNew YorkJanuary 1, 1833
George TroupGeorgiaNovember 8, 1833
William RivesVirginiaFebruary 22, 1834
John ForsythGeorgiaJune 27, 1834
Ezekiel ChambersMarylandDecember 20, 1834
Peleg SpragueMaineJanuary 1, 1835
Charles GayarréLouisianaJanuary ??, 1836
John TylerVirginiaFebruary 29, 1836
Ether ShepleyMaineMarch 3, 1836
Willie MangumNorth CarolinaMarch 19, 1836
Isaac HillNew HampshireMay 30, 1836
Arnold NaudainDelawareJune 16, 1836
Benjamin LeighVirginiaJuly 4, 1836
John ClaytonDelawareDecember 29, 1836
Alexander PorterLouisianaJanuary 5, 1837
Richard ParkerVirginiaMarch 13, 1837
John McKinleyAlabamaApril 22, 1837
Pendleton KingGeorgiaNovember 1, 1837
John BlackMississippiJanuary 22, 1838
Felix GrundyTennesseeJuly 4, 1838
James F. TrotterMississippiJuly 10, 1838
Ephraim FosterTennesseeMarch 3, 1839
Richard BayardDelawareSeptember 19, 1839
Lawson WhiteTennesseeJanuary 13, 1840
Robert StrangeNorth CarolinaNovember 16, 1840
Bedford BrownNorth CarolinaNovember 16, 1840
John DavisMassachusettsJanuary 5, 1841
Daniel WebsterMassachusettsFebruary 22, 1841 Resigned to become United States Secretary of State[5]
Comer ClayAlabamaNovember 15, 1841
Franklin PierceNew HampshireFebruary 28, 1842
Alexander MoutonLouisianaMarch 1, 1842
Henry ClayKentuckyMarch 31, 1842
Samuel PrentissVermontApril 11, 1842
Samuel SouthardNew JerseyJune 26, 1842
Reuel WilliamsMaineFebruary 15, 1843
John CalhounSouth CarolinaMarch 3, 1843
William SpragueRhode IslandJanuary 17, 1844
William KingAlabamaApril 15, 1844
Nathaniel TallmadgeNew YorkJune 17, 1844
Silas Wright, Jr.New YorkNovember 26, 1844
John BerrienGeorgiaMarch 1, 1845
Elliot HugerSouth CarolinaMarch 3, 1845
Levi WoodburyNew HampshireSeptember 20, 1845
William Haywood, Jr.North CarolinaJuly 25, 1846
Walter ColquittGeorgiaFebruary 4, 1848
Ambrose SevierArkansasMarch 15, 1848
Lewis CassMichiganMay 29, 1848
John CrittendenKentuckyJune 12, 1848
Arthur BagbyAlabamaJune 16, 1848
John ClaytonDelawareFebruary 2, 1849
Reverdy JohnsonMarylandMarch 7, 1849
Daniel WebsterMassachusettsJuly 22, 1850 Resigned again to again take office as United States Secretary of State[6]
Jefferson DavisMississippiSeptember 23, 1851 Resigned to run for Governor of Mississippi
Robert RhettSouth CarolinaMay 7, 1852
John BerrienGeorgiaMay 28, 1852
William KingAlabamaDecember 20, 1852
Robert StocktonNew JerseyJanuary 10, 1853
Solon BorlandArkansasApril 11, 1853
Pierre SouléLouisianaApril 11, 1853
Edward EverettMassachusettsJune 1, 1854
Augustus DodgeIowaFebruary 22, 1855
Hannibal HamlinMaineJanuary 7, 1857 Resigned to become Governor of Maine
Asa BiggsNorth CarolinaMay 5, 1858
Hannibal HamlinMaineJanuary 17, 1861 Resigned to become Vice President of the United States
Jefferson DavisMississippiJanuary 21, 1861 Became president of the Confederacy
John SlidellLouisianaFebruary 4, 1861
Thomas BraggNorth CarolinaMarch 6, 1861
Salmon ChaseOhioMarch 6, 1861
Thomas ClingmanNorth CarolinaMarch 11, 1861
Andrew JohnsonTennesseeMarch 4, 1862
James SimmonsRhode IslandAugust 15, 1862 Resigned after a case for explusion was declined[7]
Waitman WilleyVirginiaMarch 3, 1863
James Bayard, Jr.DelawareJanuary 29, 1864 Resigned in protest of new Senate Loyalty Oath[8]
William FessendenMaineJuly 1, 1864
James HarlanIowaMay 15, 1865
Daniel ClarkNew HampshireJuly 27, 1866
James GuthrieKentuckyFebruary 7, 1868
Reverdy JohnsonMarylandJuly 10, 1868
James GrimesIowaDecember 6, 1869
Charles DrakeMissouriDecember 19, 1870
William KelloggLouisianaNovember 1, 1872
Henry WilsonMassachusettsMarch 3, 1873
Alexander CaldwellKansasMarch 24, 1873
Eugene CasserlyCaliforniaNovember 29, 1873
Adelbert AmesMississippiJanuary 4, 1874
Lot MorrillMaineJuly 7, 1876
John ShermanOhioMarch 8, 1877 Resigned to take office as United States Secretary of the Treasury[3]
Isaac ChristiancyMichiganFebruary 10, 1879
Brown GordonGeorgiaMay 26, 1880
James G. BlaineMaineMarch 5, 1881
Samuel KirkwoodIowaMarch 7, 1881
William WindomMinnesotaMarch 7, 1881
Thomas PlattNew YorkMay 16, 1881 Resigned in support of fellow Senator Conkling's protest[9]
Roscoe ConklingNew YorkMay 16, 1881 Resigned in protest of the appointment of a New York City customs collector by President James A. Garfield[9]
Henry TellerColoradoApril 17, 1882
Augustus GarlandArkansasMarch 6, 1885
Thomas BayardDelawareMarch 6, 1885
Howell JacksonTennesseeApril 14, 1886
Jonathan ChaceRhode IslandApril 9, 1889
John Henninger Reagan Texas June 10, 1891 Resigned to take office as the chairman of the Railroad Commission of Texas[10]
John CarlisleKentuckyFebruary 4, 1893
Edward WhiteLouisianaMarch 12, 1894
John ShermanOhioMarch 4, 1897
William ClarkMontanaMay 15, 1900
Charles FairbanksIndianaMarch 3, 1905
Joseph BurtonKansasJune 4, 1906 Resigned following corruption charges (Burton v. United States)[11]
Coit SpoonerWisconsinApril 30, 1907
Philander KnoxPennsylvaniaMarch 4, 1909
Fountain ThompsonNorth DakotaJanuary 31, 1910
Joseph TerrellGeorgiaJuly 14, 1911
Weldon BaileyTexasJanuary 3, 1913
Warren G. HardingOhioJanuary 13, 1921 First President of the United States to be elected during his term as a Senator
John NugentIdahoJanuary 14, 1921
Albert FallNew MexicoMarch 4, 1921
Josiah WolcottDelawareJuly 2, 1921
William KenyonIowaFebruary 24, 1922
Truman NewberryMichiganNovember 18, 1922[11] Resigned after being condemned for violating campaign financing rules[12]
Frank SmithIllinoisDecember 7, 1926
T. Coleman du PontDelawareDecember 8, 1928
Charles CurtisKansasMarch 3, 1929
Evans EdgeNew JerseyNovember 21, 1929
Fred SackettKentuckyJanuary 9, 1930
Cordell HullTennesseeMarch 3, 1933
Claude SwansonVirginiaMarch 3, 1933
Sam BrattonNew MexicoJune 24, 1933
Hugo BlackAlabamaAugust 19, 1937
Bibb GravesAlabamaJanuary 10, 1938
Harry MooreNew JerseyJanuary 17, 1938
Frederick SteiwerOregonJanuary 31, 1938
Gibbs McAdooCaliforniaNovember 8, 1938
Matthew NeelyWest VirginiaJanuary 12, 1941
John E. MillerArkansasMarch 31, 1941
James ByrnesSouth CarolinaJuly 8, 1941
Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.MassachusettsFebruary 3, 1944
Homer BoneWashingtonNovember 13, 1944
Sinclair WeeksMassachusettsDecember 19, 1944
Monrad WallgrenWashingtonJanuary 9, 1945
Harry TrumanMissouriJanuary 17, 1945 Resigned to become Vice President of the United States
Harold BurtonOhioSeptember 30, 1945
Happy ChandlerKentuckyNovember 1, 1945
Warren AustinVermontAugust 2, 1946
Hugh MitchellWashingtonDecember 25, 1946
Vera BushfieldSouth DakotaDecember 26, 1948
Alben BarkleyKentuckyJanuary 19, 1949
Robert WagnerNew YorkJune 28, 1949
Howard McGrathRhode IslandAugust 23, 1949
Raymond BaldwinConnecticutDecember 16, 1949
Sheridan DowneyCaliforniaNovember 30, 1950
Ralph BrewsterMaineDecember 31, 1952
Richard NixonCaliforniaJanuary 1, 1953 Resigned to become Vice President of the United States
Charles DanielSouth CarolinaDecember 23, 1954
Hazel AbelNebraskaDecember 31, 1954
Strom ThurmondSouth CarolinaApril 4, 1956[13]
Price DanielTexasJanuary 14, 1957[14]
John F. KennedyMassachusettsDecember 22, 1960 Resigned to take office as President of the United States[15]
Lyndon JohnsonTexasJanuary 3, 1961[16] Resigned to take office as Vice President of the United States[15]
Hubert HumphreyMinnesotaDecember 29, 1964 Resigned to take office as Vice President of the United States
Pierre SalingerCaliforniaDecember 31, 1964
Harry ByrdVirginiaNovember 10, 1965
John WilliamsDelawareDecember 31, 1970
George MurphyCaliforniaJanuary 2, 1971
William SaxbeOhioJanuary 3, 1974
Alan BibleNevadaDecember 17, 1974
Wallace BennettUtahDecember 20, 1974
Howard MetzenbaumOhioDecember 23, 1974
Marlow CookKentuckyDecember 27, 1974
J. William FulbrightArkansasDecember 31, 1974
Edward GurneyFloridaDecember 31, 1974
Sam ErvinNorth CarolinaDecember 31, 1974
Stuart SymingtonMissouriDecember 27, 1976
John PastoreRhode IslandDecember 28, 1976
Walter MondaleMinnesotaDecember 30, 1976[17] Resigned to take office as Vice President of the United States
Paul HatfieldMontanaDecember 12, 1978
James PearsonKansasDecember 23, 1978
Wendell AndersonMinnesotaDecember 29, 1978
Clifford HansenWyomingDecember 31, 1978
Edmund MuskieMaineMay 7, 1980 Resigned to take office as United States Secretary of State[3]
John DurkinNew HampshireDecember 29, 1980
Richard StoneFloridaDecember 31, 1980
Harrison WilliamsNew JerseyMarch 11, 1982[11]
Paul TsongasMassachusettsJanuary 2, 1985
David KarnesNebraskaDecember 8, 1988
Dan QuayleIndianaJanuary 3, 1989 Resigned to take office as Vice President of the United States
Gordon HumphreyNew HampshireDecember 4, 1990
Pete WilsonCaliforniaJanuary 7, 1991 Resigned to take office as Governor of California
Kent ConradNorth DakotaDecember 14, 1992
Al GoreTennesseeJanuary 2, 1993 Resigned to take office as Vice President of the United States.
Lloyd BentsenTexasJanuary 20, 1993 Resigned to take office as United States Secretary of the Treasury[3]
David BorenOklahomaDecember 15, 1994
Bob PackwoodOregonOctober 1, 1995
Bob DoleKansasJune 11, 1996 Resigned to run for President of the United States[18]
Frank MurkowskiAlaskaDecember 2, 2002 Resigned to become Governor of Alaska
Jon CorzineNew JerseyJanuary 17, 2006 Resigned to become Governor of New Jersey
Trent LottMississippiDecember 18, 2007
Barack ObamaIllinoisNovember 16, 2008[19] Resigned to take office as President of the United States
Joe BidenDelawareJanuary 15, 2009 Resigned to become Vice President of the United States
Ken SalazarColoradoJanuary 20, 2009 Resigned to become United States Secretary of the Interior
Hillary ClintonNew YorkJanuary 21, 2009 Resigned to become Secretary of State.[20]
Mel MartínezFloridaSeptember 9, 2009
John EnsignNevadaMarch 3, 2011
Jim DeMintSouth CarolinaJanuary 1, 2013
John KerryMassachusettsFebruary 1, 2013 Resigned to become Secretary of State
Max BaucusMontanaFebruary 6, 2014 Resigned to become Ambassador to China
Tom CoburnOklahomaJanuary 3, 2015
Jeff SessionsAlabamaFebruary 8, 2017 Resigned to become Attorney General
Al FrankenMinnesotaJanuary 2, 2018[21][22]Resigned after allegations of sexual harassment. He said he expected that an investigation would clear him but he could not do his job and undergo investigation at the same time.
Thad CochranMississippiApril 1, 2018[23] Resigned because of health issues

References

  1. "The Term of A Senator – When Does It Begin and End? – Senate 98-29" (PDF). United States Senate. United States Printing Office. pp. 14–15. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  2. "TICHENOR, Isaac – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "1787: From the Senate to the Cabinet, May 13, 1800". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  4. "1801: John Smith Resigns Under Fire – April 25, 1808". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  5. "1801: Daniel Webster Quits the Senate – July 22, 1850". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  6. "U.S. Senate: 1801: Speech Costs Senator his Seat – March 7, 1850". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  7. "U.S. Senate: James Simmons expulsion case". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  8. "1851: Senator Resigns to Protest Civil War Loyalty Oath – January 29, 1864". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  9. 1 2 "1878: Both New York Senators Resign – May 16, 1881". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  10. Senate, United States Congress (1903). Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 48.
  11. 1 2 3 "U.S. Senate: Expulsion and Censure". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  12. "1921: Senator Condemned for Excessive Campaign Expenditures – January 12, 1922". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  13. "The Term of A Senator – When Does It Begin and End? – Senate 98–29" (PDF). United States Senate. United States Printing Office. p. 5. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  14. "The Term of A Senator – When Does It Begin and End? – Senate 98–29" (PDF). United States Senate. United States Printing Office. p. 9. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  15. 1 2 "1941: Two Senators to the White House". United States Senate. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  16. "The Term of A Senator – When Does It Begin and End? – Senate 98–29" (PDF). United States Senate. United States Printing Office. p. 11. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  17. "The Term of A Senator – When Does It Begin and End? – Senate 98–29" (PDF). United States Senate. United States Printing Office. p. 13. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  18. "Senator Dole Resignation – Video – C-SPAN.org". C-SPAN. Retrieved 2016-02-13.
  19. Barack Obama's letter of resignation from the Senate, address to Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich, at Wikisource
  20. Tumulty, Brian (January 21, 2009). "Clinton sworn in at State Dept. and then resigns Senate". The Journal News.
  21. http://www.startribune.com/transition-time-franken-moves-out-smith-moves-in/467678623/
  22. https://twitter.com/stribrooks/status/948267853668585472/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw&ref_url=http%3A%2F%2Fthehill.com%2Fhomenews%2Fsenate%2F367105-franken-makes-senate-resignation-official Sen. Franken's letter of resignation
  23. https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/03/05/mississippi-republican-sen-thad-cochran-announces-he-retire-april-1-citing-health-issues/397119002/
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