What are the names, districts, and party affiliations of New York’s 26 U.S. House members in the 118th Congress according to Congress.gov?

Checked on January 14, 2026
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Executive summary

A simple, verifiable roster exists on Congress.gov showing the names, districts, and party affiliations of New York’s 26 U.S. House members in the 118th Congress, but the set of documents provided for this assignment does not contain that complete roster in extractable form; therefore this report identifies the authoritative sources and confirms where selective names appear in the supplied reporting rather than attempting an unverified reconstruction [1] [2].

1. What the user is actually asking and why the primary source matters

The user requests a precise list "according to Congress.gov" — that is a request for an exact transcription of an official federal listing, not a secondary summary or an inference from news coverage — and Congress.gov hosts a state-filtered members search intended to provide that canonical roster [1] [2].

2. What the supplied reporting contains and what it does not

Among the supplied documents there are references and partial extracts pointing to roster tools (Congress.gov search pages) and to secondary aggregators like Ballotpedia and GovTrack, but none of the supplied snippets includes a complete, copy-ready list of all 26 New York representatives and their party labels as presented on Congress.gov; therefore the necessary primary transcription is not present in the provided reporting [1] [3] [4] [2].

3. Verifiable examples that do appear in the supplied material

A small number of individual names and districts can be corroborated in the provided documents: Thomas Suozzi is listed with New York’s 3rd Congressional District on a Queens community board page [5], Gregory Meeks appears linked to New York’s 6th District in that same document [5], and OpenSecrets’ new-members reporting references Marc Molinaro as a New York Republican for District 19 and Brandon Williams as a New York Republican for District 22 [6]. Those isolated citations demonstrate that pieces of the delegation are present in the collection, but they do not substitute for the full, authoritative Congress.gov roster [5] [6].

4. Where to find the exact list Congress.gov provides and how to extract it

Congress.gov offers a members search filtered by state that is intended to show each member’s name, district number, and party affiliation; the specific pages in the supplied material point to that tool and the "Find your member" feature as the canonical retrieval method [1] [2]. For an authoritative answer that exactly matches Congress.gov’s presentation, the correct action is to open the Congress.gov members query for New York and either transcribe the 26 entries directly from that page or use the site’s export/print features if available [1] [2].

5. Alternative corroborating sources and likely reasons to consult them

Ballotpedia and GovTrack maintain contemporaneous lists of congressional delegations and are commonly used as cross-checks when confirming names, districts, and party labels; those sources appear among the supplied reporting and can corroborate Congress.gov’s roster but should be used as corroboration rather than primary citation when the user specifically requested "according to Congress.gov" [3] [7] [4]. Journalists and researchers often compare multiple databases (Congress.gov, Ballotpedia, GovTrack, and official House pages) to spot discrepancies from redistricting, recent special elections, or midterm replacements [3] [4] [1].

6. Assessment and recommended next step

Given the user's explicit instruction to report “according to Congress.gov” and the absence of a complete Congress.gov transcription in the supplied reporting, the responsible course is to direct readers to the Congress.gov members-by-state page and to present the handful of named examples found in the materials while declining to produce an unverified 26-name list; the Congress.gov search and the "Find your member" page are the authoritative sources and will yield the exact names, district numbers, and party affiliations the user requested [1] [2].

Want to dive deeper?
Where on Congress.gov can I download or export the members list for a single state (New York) for the 118th Congress?
How did New York’s congressional delegation change between the 117th and 118th Congress (special elections, retirements, redistricting)?
Which public databases (Congress.gov, Ballotpedia, GovTrack) most reliably reflect midterm special-election updates to House membership, and how do they differ?