Who to Blame: Colleges That Produce Most Members Of Congress
Given the political and personal shenanigans associated with members of the US Congress, perhaps it is time for Americans to review where their elected representatives have been educated.
More members of Congress attended Harvard University than any other higher education institution, with 47 elected officials on Capitol Hill counted as Crimson alumni, according to data compiled and provided to The Huffington Post by Find The Best.
Georgetown University scores the distant runner up spot, with 20 members of Congress counted as alumni, followed by Yale University with 18. But after Yale in third, the Ivy League schools don’t show up again until Princeton, Columbia and Dartmouth appear at No. 20.
The ranking includes only current U.S. Representatives and Senators. So while people like John Kerry and George H. W. Bush were both members of Congress, neither is counted in this ranking.
That allowed for flagship public universities in North Carolina, Georgia, Maryland, Michigan, Florida, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Texas to muscle their way ahead of many of the Ivies. Two University of California schools — Berkeley and Los Angeles — made the top 20, along with California State University-Los Angeles.
Brigham Young University, a Mormon institution based in Utah, tied for 10th place with eight current members of Congress as alumn
i.