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An independent, non-government record of how Congress votes Here’s how we know

Congress Vote Tracker is a private, independent project. It is not affiliated with the U.S. government, Congress, or any agency, and it does not speak for them. Every vote count is drawn from official public records (Congress.gov, the House Clerk, and Senate.gov) and linked back to the source on every page.

How Did My Representative Vote?

How did my representative vote? Pick your state below, add your House district if you know it, and you will land on the answer: your representative’s scorecard, or your state’s full delegation with its positions on key roll calls.

Find How Your Members of Congress Voted

Leave blank to see the whole delegation.
Or browse every state

What you will find

  • Your state’s delegation page, with a table of how its senators and House members voted on key roll calls, each position linked to the member’s record.
  • A scorecard for each member, with computed party loyalty and attendance, recent votes, and every tracked key-vote position.
  • Official sources throughout: every tally, date, and position links to Congress.gov, the House Clerk, or Senate.gov.

How to read a voting record

A voting record is the list of recorded votes a member has cast. In a roll-call vote, each member’s position is recorded by name as Yea, Nay, or Present, and members who did not vote are marked as such. Voice votes and unanimous-consent agreements leave no per-member record, so no tracker can tell you how one member voted on those.

Two computed numbers summarize each record on this site. Party loyalty is the share of qualifying votes where the member voted with the majority of their own party, and attendance is the share of eligible roll calls where the member actually voted. The exact formulas are stated on the methodology page, so you can check any figure yourself.

The key-vote tables currently cover 14 key Senate roll calls of the 119th Congress, selected by the rules on the methodology page. Every position in those tables comes from the official member-by-member roll-call record.

Recorded votes happen most weekdays when a chamber is in session. The votes today page lists what the House and Senate voted on today, and the glossary defines the procedural terms that appear in vote titles, such as cloture and the motion to proceed.

congressvotetracker.org

An independent civic project, not affiliated with the U.S. government or any agency. Vote data is sourced from official public records (Congress.gov, the House Clerk, and Senate.gov).