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Freedom Index 115-3

The Freedom Index rates congressmen based on their adherence to constitutional principles of limited government, fiscal responsibility, national sovereignty, and a traditional foreign policy of avoiding foreign entanglements.

The scores are derived by dividing a congressman's constitutional votes (pluses) by the total number he cast (pluses and minuses) and multiplying by 100. The average House score for this index is 32 percent, and the average Senate score is 30 percent. Twenty-five representatives and two senators earned 100 percent. We encourage readers to examine how their own congressmen voted on each of the 10 key measures. We also encourage readers to commend legislators for their constitutional votes, and to urge improvement where needed.

Freedom Index 115-3

The Freedom Index rates congressmen based on their adherence to constitutional principles of limited government, fiscal responsibility, national sovereignty, and a traditional foreign policy of avoiding foreign entanglements.

The scores are derived by dividing a congressman's constitutional votes (pluses) by the total number he cast (pluses and minuses) and multiplying by 100. We encourage readers to examine how their own congressmen voted on each of the 10 key measures. We also encourage readers to commend legislators for their constitutional votes, and to urge improvement where needed.

Our third look at the 115th Congress shows how every member of the House and Senate voted on key issues such as the $1.3 trillion omnibus spending bill, warrantless surveillance, raw milk (House), and illegal immigration (Senate).

House of Representatives

21. Warrantless Surveillance

Date: 1/11/2018
Good Vote: Yes

During consideration of the bill (S. 139) reauthorizing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), Representative Justin Amash (R-Mich.) introduced an amendment to end NSA collection of communications data that is neither to nor from an approved foreign target, but rather communications “about” a foreign target entirely between American citizens. It would prohibit the FBI and intelligence agencies from searching the NSA database for information on U.S. citizens without first obtaining a warrant, except in certain circumstances. The amendment would also end “reverse targeting,” in which an American citizen communicating with a foreign target is also subject to surveillance.

The House rejected Amash’s amendment on January 11, 2018 by a vote of 183 to 233 (Roll Call 14). We have assigned pluses to the yeas because this amendment is an attempt to limit NSA surveillance of U.S. citizens. Warrantless surveillance of U.S. citizens is unconstitutional, and NSA surveillance certainly falls under this category. Amash’s amendment would require the FBI to obtain a warrant, rather than merely FISA Court approval, in order to access the NSA’s database.

22. Warrantless Surveillance

Date: 1/11/2018
Good Vote: No

This bill (S. 139) would reauthorize for six years, through 2023, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which governs electronic surveillance of foreign terrorism suspects. The bill would require the development of procedures for searching the NSA database that would protect the Fourth Amendment-guaranteed rights of U.S. citizens, while allowing the FBI to access information with an order from the secret FISA Court, in certain cases.

The House passed S. 139 on January 11, 2018 by a vote of 256 to 164 (Roll Call 16). We have assigned pluses to the nays because FISA, while supposedly put in place to gather intelligence on foreign targets, has been used to spy on U.S. citizens. The bill does provide provisions to, ostensibly, protect the privacy of U.S. citizens, but given the track record of intelligence agencies, it is unlikely that they would actually follow these rules. The FISA Court gives a green light to just about any surveillance request that comes its way, and FISA-approved NSA warrantless surveillance of American citizens has become common knowledge.

23. World Bank

Date: 1/17/2018
Good Vote: No

The World Bank Accountability Act (H.R. 3326) would authorize $3.29 billion in U.S. contributions to the World Bank’s International Development Association, which discharges concessional loans known as “credits” and economic grants to the world’s poorest and most underdeveloped countries.

The House passed H.R. 3326 on January 17, 2018 by a vote of 237 to 184 (Roll Call 24). We have assigned pluses to the nays because authorizing such funds to the WTO’s IDA is foreign aid, which is a form of international welfare and completely unconstitutional, and most World Bank “aid” further enriches plutocrats in Third World countries, at the expense of the poor.

24. School Violence

Date: 3/14/2018
Good Vote: No

The STOP School Violence Act of 2018 (H.R. 4909) would authorize $75 million a year through fiscal year 2028 for the Justice Department’s Secure Our Schools grant program. SOS is a grant program of the Justice Department’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, which has been instrumental in laying the foundations for nationalizing local police by providing federal “assistance” in the form of funds, equipment, training, and development of guidelines to local law-enforcement agencies.

In a podcast interview with Conservative Review, Representative Thomas Massie (RKy.) said the “STOP School Violence Act was bad enough for nationalizing defense of our schools,” but he further revealed, “There is money in that bill that is going to go to gun control groups. It literally says in there you can give it to the 501-C3s, and then it also says in there it can’t go to train anybody on gun safety. It’s got to go for all the liberal sort of agendas.”

The House passed H.R. 4909 on March 14, 2018 by a vote of 407 to 10 (Roll Call 106). We have assigned pluses to the nays because school safety is not a proper function of the federal government, and no action the federal government has ever taken would actually make schools safe. School safety should be addressed at the local level. Furthermore, the nationalizing of local police and school security, as well as any other gun-control measures contained in the bill, are all strictly unconstitutional.

25. Omnibus Appropriations

Date: 3/22/2018
Good Vote: No

This bill (H.R. 1625) would provide $1.3 trillion in discretionary appropriations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2018 for federal government operations and services. This represents an overall increase in discretionary spending of 12 percent over the 2017 level. The big winner was the Department of Defense, with an increase of 10 percent over last year’s appropriations. Democrat negotiators on this bill successfully fought off many Republican riders, such as a rider that would have permitted the Trump administration to withdraw the Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule. Pro-life Republicans were saddened to learn that the omnibus bill continues the more than $500 million in taxpayer dollars Planned Parenthood receives each year.

The House passed the omnibus spending bill on March 22, 2018 by a vote of 256 to 167 (Roll Call 127). We have assigned pluses to the nays because with this omnibus bill, members of Congress are failing to address their fiscally and constitutionally irresponsible budgeting and appropriating process that is currently yielding annual federal deficits measured in the hundreds of billions of dollars, as well as minimizing their accountability to the voters by combining all discretionary federal spending for fiscal 2018 into one gigantic “take it or leave it” bill.

26. Agricultural Crop Subsidies

Date: 5/17/2018
Good Vote: Yes

During consideration of the farm bill (H.R. 2), Representative Tom McClintock (R-Calif.) introduced an amendment that would have phased out agricultural crop subsidies by fiscal year 2030.

The House rejected McClintock’s amendment on May 17, 2018 by a vote of 34 to 380 (Roll Call 194). We have assigned pluses to the yeas because no warrant for the appropriation of crop subsidies is found in the Constitution, and subsidies disrupt the free market economy.

27. Raw Milk

Date: 5/18/2018
Good Vote: Yes

During consideration of the farm bill (H.R. 2), Representative Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) introduced an amendment to prohibit federal interference in the interstate transportation of unpasteurized milk and milk products between states that allow for the distribution of such products for direct human consumption.

The House rejected Massie’s amendment on May 18, 2018 by a vote of 79 to 331 (Roll Call 201). We have assigned pluses to the yeas because the U.S. Constitution does not give the federal government any authority over what foods a person chooses to consume. In other words, it is illegal for the federal government to make raw milk illegal. While the federal government does have authority to “regulate Commerce … among the several States,” there is no reason for federal interference in a scenario such as this, where a product is legally sold in each of the states in question. Massie’s amendment would have limited federal overreach and should have been supported.

28. Waters of the United States

Date: 5/18/2018
Good Vote: Yes

During consideration of the farm bill (H.R. 2), Representative Jim Banks (R-Ind.) introduced an amendment to repeal the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2015 “Waters of the United States” rule. On the floor of the House, Banks called this rule “the poster child of government overreach during the Obama administration,” noting that it gives “unelected bureaucrats at the EPA the power to broadly interpret what is a navigable waterway” under the Clean Water Act — so broadly that “even a puddle in a farm’s drainage ditch could be subjected to Federal regulation.”

The House adopted Banks’ amendment on May 18, 2018 by a vote of 238 to 173 (Roll Call 203). We have assigned pluses to the yeas because both federal water regulations and the EPA are unconstitutional, and if the rule were allowed to stand, activities such as farming and real estate development would be greatly hampered, since farmers and developers would be subject to increased unconstitutional permit requirements and fines concerning their treatment of almost any body of water, no matter how small.

29. Experimental Drugs

Date: 5/22/2018
Good Vote: Yes

This bill (S. 204) would allow patients with life-threatening diseases or conditions who are not participating in clinical trials to seek access to experimental and investigational drugs directly from a drug manufacturer, without approval by the Food and Drug Administration. It would require that in order for the patient to be eligible, the patient must first try all approved treatment options and be unable to participate in a clinical trial. Only drugs that have completed phase 1 clinical trials, that have not been approved or licensed for any use, and that are currently under an active FDA application or are undergoing clinical trials would be eligible for use under the bill’s provisions.

The House passed S. 204 on May 22, 2018 by a vote of 250 to 169 (Roll Call 214). We have assigned pluses to the yeas because the federal government, under the Constitution, has not been given authority over what medical procedures U.S. citizens choose to engage in. If a person wants to try an “unapproved” treatment, he should be able to do so with no interference from the government. In fact, since the Constitution gives the federal government no authority whatsoever over any aspect of healthcare, the FDA should not even exist. Any law that lessens government overreach into the personal medical decisions of citizens is a step in the right direction.

30. Appropriations Cuts

Date: 6/7/2018
Good Vote: Yes

This bill (H.R. 3) would cut nearly $15 billion from previously approved, unspent spending, including $7 billion from the Children’s Health Insurance Program and $4.3 billion from the Department of Energy’s Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program.

The House passed H.R. 3 on June 7, 2018 by a vote of 210 to 206 (Roll Call 243). We have assigned pluses to the yeas not only because the spending falls outside the scope of constitutionally authorized federal powers, but also because the federal government needs to start reining in ballooning federal spending (and debt) somewhere in order to avert fiscal disaster. The cuts in this bill comprise only a fraction of one percent of total federal spending, and according to the Congressional Budget Office, most of the funding targeted by the bill would not be spent anyway. Yet modest cuts are better than none at all.

Senate Member Scores

Legend:
Constitutional Vote Unconstitutional Vote Did not Vote
# Name Party State Score 12345678910
1 Ralph Abraham R LA 40%
2 Alma Adams D NC 13%
3 Robert Aderholt R AL 30%
4 Pete Aguilar D CA 20%
5 Rick Allen R GA 40%
6 Justin Amash L MI 100%
7 Mark Amodei R NV 30%
8 Jodey Arrington R TX 30%
9 Brian Babin R TX 50%
10 Don Bacon R NE 30%
11 Troy Balderson R OH NA
12 Lou Barletta R PA 40%
13 Garland Barr R KY 30%
14 Nanette Barragán D CA 40%
15 Joe Barton R TX 60%
16 Karen Bass D CA 44%
17 Joyce Beatty D OH 33%
18 Xavier Becerra D CA NA
19 Ami Bera D CA 10%
20 Jack Bergman R MI 40%
21 Donald Beyer D VA 33%
22 Andy Biggs R AZ 90%
23 Gus Bilirakis R FL 30%
24 Rob Bishop R UT 60%
25 Sanford Bishop D GA 30%
26 Mike Bishop R MI 30%
27 Diane Black R TN 56%
28 Rod Blum R IA 60%
29 Earl Blumenauer D OR 50%
30 Suzanne Bonamici D OR 30%
31 Mike Bost R IL 30%
32 Brendan Boyle D PA 43%
33 Kevin Brady R TX 33%
34 Robert Brady D PA 30%
35 David Brat R VA 70%
36 Jim Bridenstine R OK 0%
37 Mo Brooks R AL 70%
38 Susan Brooks R IN 30%
39 Anthony Brown D MD 14%
40 Julia Brownley D CA 10%
41 Vern Buchanan R FL 20%
42 Ken Buck R CO 57%
43 Larry Bucshon R IN 30%
44 Michael Burgess R TX 50%
45 Cheri Bustos D IL 20%
46 George Butterfield D NC 30%
47 Bradley Byrne R AL 30%
48 Ken Calvert R CA 30%
49 Michael Capuano D MA 40%
50 Salud Carbajal D CA 14%
51 Tony Cardenas D CA 44%
52 André Carson D IN 22%
53 John Carter R TX 30%
54 Buddy Carter R GA 30%
55 Matthew Cartwright D PA 10%
56 Kathy Castor D FL 10%
57 Joaquin Castro D TX 30%
58 Steve Chabot R OH 40%
59 Jason Chaffetz R UT NA
60 Liz Cheney R WY 40%
61 Judy Chu D CA 40%
62 David Cicilline D RI 30%
63 Katherine Clark D MA 40%
64 Yvette Clarke D NY 40%
65 Wm. Clay D MO 43%
66 Emanuel Cleaver D MO 33%
67 Michael Cloud R TX NA
68 James Clyburn D SC 20%
69 Mike Coffman R CO 50%
70 Steve Cohen D TN 40%
71 Tom Cole R OK 30%
72 Doug Collins R GA 30%
73 Chris Collins R NY 30%
74 James Comer R KY 60%
75 Barbara Comstock R VA 30%
76 K. Conaway R TX 30%
77 Gerald Connolly D VA 30%
78 John Conyers D MI NA
79 Paul Cook R CA 40%
80 Jim Cooper D TN 30%
81 J. Correa D CA 40%
82 Jim Costa D CA 20%
83 Ryan Costello R PA 20%
84 Joe Courtney D CT 30%
85 Eric Crawford R AR 30%
86 Charlie Crist D FL 20%
87 Joseph Crowley D NY 40%
88 Henry Cuellar D TX 20%
89 John Culberson R TX 40%
90 Elijah Cummings D MD 0%
91 Carlos Curbelo R FL 25%
92 Warren Davidson R OH 70%
93 Danny Davis D IL 38%
94 Susan Davis D CA 30%
95 Rodney Davis R IL 40%
96 Peter DeFazio D OR 30%
97 Diana DeGette D CO 40%
98 John Delaney D MD 10%
99 Rosa DeLauro D CT 30%
100 Suzan DelBene D WA 30%
101 Val Demings D FL 10%
102 Jeff Denham R CA 40%
103 Charles Dent R PA 0%
104 Ron DeSantis R FL 60%
105 Mark DeSaulnier D CA 25%
106 Scott DesJarlais R TN 50%
107 Theodore Deutch D FL 20%
108 Mario Diaz-Balart R FL 20%
109 Debbie Dingell D MI 30%
110 Lloyd Doggett D TX 40%
111 Daniel Donovan R NY 30%
112 Michael Doyle D PA 30%
113 Sean Duffy R WI 40%
114 Jeff Duncan R SC 70%
115 John Duncan R TN 90%
116 Neal Dunn R FL 30%
117 Keith Ellison D MN 40%
118 Tom Emmer R MN 60%
119 Eliot Engel D NY 40%
120 Anna Eshoo D CA 30%
121 Adriano Espaillat D NY 40%
122 Ron Estes R KS 30%
123 Elizabeth Esty D CT 20%
124 Dwight Evans D PA 30%
125 Blake Farenthold R TX 60%
126 John Faso R NY 30%
127 Drew Ferguson R GA 30%
128 Brian Fitzpatrick R PA 10%
129 Charles Fleischmann R TN 30%
130 Bill Flores R TX 30%
131 Jeff Fortenberry R NE 30%
132 Bill Foster D IL 20%
133 Virginia Foxx R NC 40%
134 Lois Frankel D FL 10%
135 Trent Franks R AZ NA
136 Rodney Frelinghuysen R NJ 33%
137 Marcia Fudge D OH 30%
138 Tulsi Gabbard D HI 50%
139 Matt Gaetz R FL 70%
140 Mike Gallagher R WI 30%
141 John Garamendi D CA 10%
142 Thomas Garrett R VA 80%
143 Greg Gianforte R MT 50%
144 Bob Gibbs R OH 30%
145 Louie Gohmert R TX 86%
146 Jimmy Gomez D CA 40%
147 Vicente Gonzalez D TX 40%
148 Bob Goodlatte R VA 30%
149 Paul Gosar R AZ 80%
150 Josh Gottheimer D NJ 10%
151 Trey Gowdy R SC 30%
152 Kay Granger R TX 30%
153 Sam Graves R MO 30%
154 Tom Graves R GA 40%
155 Garret Graves R LA 70%
156 Al Green D TX 30%
157 Gene Green D TX 30%
158 H. Griffith R VA 70%
159 Raul Grijalva D AZ 40%
160 Glenn Grothman R WI 50%
161 Brett Guthrie R KY 40%
162 Luis Gutierrez D IL 40%
163 Colleen Hanabusa D HI 13%
164 Karen Handel R GA 30%
165 Gregg Harper R MS 30%
166 Andy Harris R MD 80%
167 Vicky Hartzler R MO 30%
168 Alcee Hastings D FL 30%
169 Denny Heck D WA 20%
170 Jeb Hensarling R TX 40%
171 Kevin Hern R OK NA
172 Jaime Herrera Beutler R WA 70%
173 Jody Hice R GA 60%
174 Brian Higgins D NY 10%
175 Clay Higgins R LA 44%
176 French Hill R AR 30%
177 James Himes D CT 10%
178 George Holding R NC 40%
179 Trey Hollingsworth R IN 40%
180 Steny Hoyer D MD 20%
181 Richard Hudson R NC 30%
182 Jared Huffman D CA 44%
183 Bill Huizenga R MI 40%
184 Randy Hultgren R IL 30%
185 Duncan Hunter R CA 30%
186 Will Hurd R TX 20%
187 Darrell Issa R CA 60%
188 Sheila Jackson-Lee D TX 40%
189 Pramila Jayapal D WA 40%
190 Hakeem Jeffries D NY 30%
191 Lynn Jenkins R KS 30%
192 Evan Jenkins R WV 40%
193 Bill Johnson R OH 30%
194 Eddie Johnson D TX 30%
195 Henry Johnson D GA 50%
196 Sam Johnson R TX 40%
197 Mike Johnson R LA 60%
198 Walter Jones Jr. R NC 89%
199 Jim Jordan R OH 90%
200 David Joyce R OH 30%
201 Marcy Kaptur D OH 20%
202 John Katko R NY 22%
203 William Keating D MA 20%
204 Mike Kelly R PA 30%
205 Robin Kelly D IL 30%
206 Trent Kelly R MS 50%
207 Joseph Kennedy D MA 40%
208 Ro Khanna D CA 40%
209 Ruben Kihuen D NV 40%
210 Daniel Kildee D MI 30%
211 Derek Kilmer D WA 20%
212 Ron Kind D WI 29%
213 Peter King R NY 30%
214 Steve King R IA 40%
215 Adam Kinzinger R IL 30%
216 Steve Knight R CA 30%
217 Raja Krishnamoorthi D IL 20%
218 Ann Kuster D NH 20%
219 David Kustoff R TN 30%
220 Raul Labrador R ID 86%
221 Darin LaHood R IL 40%
222 Doug LaMalfa R CA 40%
223 Conor Lamb D PA 20%
224 Doug Lamborn R CO 50%
225 Leonard Lance R NJ 30%
226 James Langevin D RI 10%
227 Rick Larsen D WA 30%
228 John Larson D CT 40%
229 Robert Latta R OH 40%
230 Brenda Lawrence D MI 30%
231 Al Lawson D FL 10%
232 Barbara Lee D CA 50%
233 Debbie Lesko R AZ 100%
234 Sander Levin D MI 30%
235 John Lewis D GA 33%
236 Jason Lewis R MN 60%
237 Ted Lieu D CA 71%
238 Daniel Lipinski D IL 0%
239 Frank LoBiondo R NJ 40%
240 David Loebsack D IA 10%
241 Zoe Lofgren D CA 50%
242 Billy Long R MO 44%
243 Barry Loudermilk R GA 80%
244 Mia Love R UT 40%
245 Alan Lowenthal D CA 40%
246 Nita Lowey D NY 10%
247 Frank Lucas R OK 30%
248 Blaine Luetkemeyer R MO 30%
249 Michelle Lujan Grisham D NM 30%
250 Stephen Lynch D MA 40%
251 Tom MacArthur R NJ 20%
252 Carolyn Maloney D NY 40%
253 Sean Maloney D NY 20%
254 Kenny Marchant R TX 40%
255 Tom Marino R PA 40%
256 Thomas Massie R KY 90%
257 Brian Mast R FL 40%
258 Doris Matsui D CA 40%
259 Kevin McCarthy R CA 30%
260 Michael McCaul R TX 30%
261 Tom McClintock R CA 90%
262 Betty McCollum D MN 30%
263 A. McEachin D VA 10%
264 James McGovern D MA 40%
265 Patrick McHenry R NC 50%
266 David McKinley R WV 20%
267 Jerry McNerney D CA 38%
268 Mark Meadows R NC 78%
269 Patrick Meehan R PA 0%
270 Gregory Meeks D NY 20%
271 Grace Meng D NY 30%
272 Luke Messer R IN 40%
273 Paul Mitchell R MI 30%
274 John Moolenaar R MI 30%
275 Alex Mooney R WV 80%
276 Gwen Moore D WI 40%
277 Joseph Morelle D NY NA
278 Seth Moulton D MA 20%
279 Mick Mulvaney R SC NA
280 Tim Murphy R PA NA
281 Stephanie Murphy D FL 0%
282 Jerrold Nadler D NY 30%
283 Grace Napolitano D CA 40%
284 Richard Neal D MA 30%
285 Dan Newhouse R WA 40%
286 Kristi Noem R SD 50%
287 Richard Nolan D MN 38%
288 Donald Norcross D NJ 25%
289 Ralph Norman R SC 70%
290 Devin Nunes R CA 30%
291 Tom O'Halleran D AZ 20%
292 Beto O'Rourke D TX 40%
293 Pete Olson R TX 30%
294 Steven Palazzo R MS 22%
295 Frank Pallone D NJ 40%
296 Gary Palmer R AL 50%
297 Jimmy Panetta D CA 20%
298 Bill Pascrell D NJ 22%
299 Erik Paulsen R MN 30%
300 Donald Payne D NJ 30%
301 Stevan Pearce R NM 56%
302 Nancy Pelosi D CA 10%
303 Ed Perlmutter D CO 30%
304 Scott Perry R PA 90%
305 Scott Peters D CA 0%
306 Collin Peterson D MN 30%
307 Chellie Pingree D ME 44%
308 Robert Pittenger R NC 30%
309 Mark Pocan D WI 40%
310 Ted Poe R TX 78%
311 Bruce Poliquin R ME 30%
312 Jared Polis D CO 67%
313 Mike Pompeo R KS NA
314 Bill Posey R FL 70%
315 David Price D NC 30%
316 Tom Price R GA NA
317 Mike Quigley D IL 10%
318 Jamie Raskin D MD 40%
319 John Ratcliffe R TX 40%
320 Tom Reed R NY 40%
321 David Reichert R WA 30%
322 James Renacci R OH 40%
323 Tom Rice R SC 50%
324 Kathleen Rice D NY 11%
325 Cedric Richmond D LA 30%
326 Martha Roby R AL 30%
327 Cathy McMorris Rodgers R WA 40%
328 David Roe R TN 40%
329 Harold Rogers R KY 17%
330 Mike Rogers R AL 30%
331 Dana Rohrabacher R CA 80%
332 Todd Rokita R IN 50%
333 Thomas Rooney R FL 30%
334 Francis Rooney R FL 50%
335 Ileana Ros-Lehtinen R FL 33%
336 Peter Roskam R IL 20%
337 Dennis Ross R FL 30%
338 Keith Rothfus R PA 50%
339 David Rouzer R NC 40%
340 Lucille Roybal-Allard D CA 40%
341 Edward Royce R CA 40%
342 Raul Ruiz D CA 10%
343 C. Ruppersberger D MD 10%
344 Bobby Rush D IL 38%
345 Steve Russell R OK 40%
346 John Rutherford R FL 30%
347 Paul Ryan R WI 0%
348 Tim Ryan D OH 30%
349 Linda Sanchez D CA 40%
350 Marshall Sanford R SC 100%
351 John Sarbanes D MD 30%
352 Steve Scalise R LA 57%
353 Mary Scanlon D PA NA
354 Janice Schakowsky D IL 40%
355 Bradley Schneider D IL 0%
356 Kurt Schrader D OR 30%
357 David Schweikert R AZ 70%
358 Austin Scott R GA 30%
359 David Scott D GA 30%
360 Robert Scott D VA 30%
361 F. Sensenbrenner R WI 80%
362 José Serrano D NY 40%
363 Pete Sessions R TX 30%
364 Terri Sewell D AL 11%
365 Carol Shea-Porter D NH 30%
366 Brad Sherman D CA 20%
367 John Shimkus R IL 22%
368 Bill Shuster R PA 22%
369 Mike Simpson R ID 30%
370 Albio Sires D NJ 10%
371 Louise Slaughter D NY 67%
372 Adam Smith D WA 40%
373 Adrian Smith R NE 40%
374 Christopher Smith R NJ 20%
375 Lamar Smith R TX 30%
376 Jason Smith R MO 56%
377 Lloyd Smucker R PA 50%
378 Darren Soto D FL 40%
379 Jackie Speier D CA 57%
380 Elise Stefanik R NY 20%
381 Chris Stewart R UT 40%
382 Steve Stivers R OH 22%
383 Thomas Suozzi D NY 10%
384 Eric Swalwell D CA 20%
385 Mark Takano D CA 40%
386 Scott Taylor R VA 40%
387 Claudia Tenney R NY 30%
388 Bennie Thompson D MS 30%
389 Mike Thompson D CA 20%
390 Glenn Thompson R PA 30%
391 Mac Thornberry R TX 30%
392 Patrick Tiberi R OH 0%
393 Scott Tipton R CO 40%
394 Dina Titus D NV 40%
395 Paul Tonko D NY 30%
396 Norma Torres D CA 20%
397 Dave Trott R MI 30%
398 Niki Tsongas D MA 43%
399 Michael Turner R OH 20%
400 Fred Upton R MI 20%
401 David Valadao R CA 30%
402 Juan Vargas D CA 44%
403 Marc Veasey D TX 50%
404 Filemon Vela D TX 44%
405 Nydia Velázquez D NY 40%
406 Peter Visclosky D IN 20%
407 Ann Wagner R MO 30%
408 Tim Walberg R MI 30%
409 Greg Walden R OR 30%
410 Bradley Walker R NC 40%
411 Jackie Walorski R IN 20%
412 Mimi Walters R CA 22%
413 Timothy Walz D MN 75%
414 Debbie Wasserman Schultz D FL 10%
415 Maxine Waters D CA 30%
416 Bonnie Watson Coleman D NJ 50%
417 Randy Weber R TX 60%
418 Daniel Webster R FL 70%
419 Brad Wenstrup R OH 30%
420 Bruce Westerman R AR 40%
421 Roger Williams R TX 50%
422 Joe Wilson R SC 30%
423 Frederica Wilson D FL 14%
424 Robert Wittman R VA 50%
425 Steve Womack R AR 30%
426 Rob Woodall R GA 50%
427 John Yarmuth D KY 40%
428 Kevin Yoder R KS 38%
429 Ted Yoho R FL 70%
430 Don Young R AK 40%
431 David Young R IA 30%
432 Lee Zeldin R NY 60%
433 Ryan Zinke R MT NA

Senate Member Scores

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