Question:

Is there a government website that lists how congresspersons vote on issues?

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Is there a government website that lists how congresspersons vote on issues?

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  1. Not a gov site but keeps records of everyone in Congress record

    http://www.aflcio.org/issues/legislative...


  2. Issues is a broad term, especially when a single bill may involve several. The Library of Congress site has voting records for each bill, but if there's a specific issue you're concerned with, you might want to find a lobby group with a stake in it, and they'll have a list of past and ongoing bills.

    Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov

  3. I like the Congressmerge.com site.

    http://www.congressmerge.com

    Although there are features political bigwigs and organizations pay for, you don't have to pay to find out who represents you or your state, link to their individual page, and from there, you get links to voting records and text or summaries of legislation.

    This is one to check out for sure.

  4. www.congress.org gives you a quick snapshot on how your representative voted on "key" bills, but it doesn't list all of his votes- it's helpful if you're looking for his/her vote on recent bills/resolutions

  5. Wow - that's an interesting question, I've wondered it myself. It is kinda funny how votes are distorted during election season, you hear things like 'voted 300 times to raise taxes...' or 'voted to support blah blah blah...', then the media pundits "Interpret" things in their own way.

    I've long thought about a web site, Politics RAW. Not the c**p on TV that they call raw as in biased yelling, I mean bills - even the 100+ pages ones, printed in FULL, and how each congressman voted. No spin, no comments/forums, no concicse, dumbed down, or biased summaries of the bills - just the whole deal - raw fact, no opinion. Form your own opinion, spend the time to read the bill, even if its long.

  6. Most congressmen (and women) maintain websites that list their votes. Try that. You can also check the websites of your local newspapers. It's not a gov't source, obviously, but many papers (such as the Star-Ledger in NJ) carry Sunday listings of all the votes in the state and the federal houses.

  7. library of congress

    Or watch CSPAN 1&2 And see it as it happens

  8. http://www.aicc.org.in/delhipcc/

  9. Two sources. Both listed below. The first is the one for C-Span. The other is for the "Thomas" site of the Library of Congress. Both have excellent search engines to download the language of a bill and how it was handled, including the votes recorded on each bill.

  10. The Federal Register is a law mandated register of all activities and legislative action posted daily.  You can get to their website here...

    http://www.archives.gov/federal-register...

  11. You are smart to want to research this. A potential candidate's voting record speaks far more truth than any stump speech or political rhetoric.

    http://ontheissues.org/default.htm

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