Senate Committee on Foreign Relations

The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations was established in 1816 as one of the original ten standing committees of the Senate. Throughout its history, the committee has been instrumental in developing and influencing United States foreign policy, at different times supporting and opposing the policies of presidents and secretaries of state. The committee has considered, debated, and reported important treaties and legislation, ranging from the purchase of Alaska in 1867 to the establishment of the United Nations in 1945. It also holds jurisdiction over all diplomatic nominations. Through these powers, the committee has helped shape foreign policy of broad significance, in matters of war and peace and international relations. Members of the committee have assisted in the negotiation of treaties, and at times have helped to defeat treaties they felt were not in the national interest.

Members
22
PTR filers · 24M
0
Trades · 24M
0
Disclosed · 24M
Subcommittees · 7
MembersChair · Ranking · Vice Chair are flagged
Member
Role
State
Trades · 24M
Last activity
James E. RischRep
Chairman
ID
0
Jeanne ShaheenDem
Ranking Member
NH
0
Bill HagertyRep
Member
TN
0
Brian SchatzDem
Member
HI
0
Chris Van HollenDem
Member
MD
0
Christopher A. CoonsDem
Member
DE
0
Christopher MurphyDem
Member
CT
0
Cory A. BookerDem
Member
NJ
0
David McCormickRep
Member
PA
0
Jacky RosenDem
Member
NV
0
Jeff MerkleyDem
Member
OR
0
John BarrassoRep
Member
WY
0
John CornynRep
Member
TX
0
John R. CurtisRep
Member
UT
0
Mike LeeRep
Member
UT
0
Pete RickettsRep
Member
NE
0
Rand PaulRep
Member
KY
0
Rick ScottRep
Member
FL
0
Steve DainesRep
Member
MT
0
Tammy DuckworthDem
Member
IL
0
Ted CruzRep
Member
TX
0
Tim KaineDem
Member
VA
0

Recent trades by committee members

0 trades · last 24 months
No disclosed trades from this committee's members in the trailing 24 months.

% change is from disclosure-day close to live quote — used as a rough proxy for the position's mark-to-market performance. Tickers without FMP price coverage show "—".