Website Status: Beta — All data should be considered a placeholder unless otherwise stated

Article One

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Hover a state, then click to see its representatives
The House

House Overview

A read on the chamber that represents you — its balance of power and how the seats break down today.

119th Congress · Legislative Activity
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Voting Days Held
Floor voting days so far
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Voting Days Remaining
Scheduled through year-end
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Voting Days Canceled
Taken off the calendar
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Days Left in the Year
Business days remaining

Sources · legislative activity from LegiScan (CC BY 4.0) · House floor calendar from DomeWatch, Office of the Democratic Whip

Party balance
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voting seats
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{{ dem }} Democrats {{ rep }} Republicans
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Committee membership
Members on each standing committee
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Seniority
Members by years in office
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Average tenure {{ avgTenure }} years
Largest delegations
Seats by state — click to open on the map
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Average tenure by party
Mean years in office, by caucus
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Years shown are averages across each party's members.
Office buildings
Where members keep their Washington offices
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Notable members
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Chair · {{ comModal.chair }} · {{ comModal.members }} members ({{ comModal.partyR }}R / {{ comModal.partyD }}D)
Bills in Committee
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Sent to Floor
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Law
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Bills referred {{ comModal.referred }} Failed in House {{ comModal.failed }} Success rate {{ comModal.successRate }}
Party composition
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Committee roster · {{ comModal.rosterCount }}
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Bills before the committee · {{ comModal.billsCount }}
📡 RSS
Loading recent bills…
No bill feed configured for this committee yet.
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Most recently active · newest first
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The House

Committees

How the chamber's standing committees split by party — bills referred, passed, and the legislative workload each one carries this Congress.

Legislative activity sourced from LegiScan · 119th Congress · CC BY 4.0

Standing committees
Legislative activity this Congress — 119th only
Democrat Republican
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Chair · {{ cs.chair }}
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Bills in Committee
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Select & permanent select committees
Formed for specific investigations or ongoing intelligence oversight
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Chair · {{ cs.chair }}
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Bills in Committee
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Joint committees
Bicameral — membership drawn from both House and Senate
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Chair · {{ cs.chair }}
Bicameral · House + Senate members
Bills in Committee
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The House

Report Card

How effectively the 119th House is moving legislation — from committee to the floor to the Senate — and which committees are doing the work.

The bill pipeline
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In committee
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Floor vote pending
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Sent to the Senate
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Sent back from the Senate
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Sent from the Senate

House (H.R.) bills, except "Sent from the Senate" (S. bills passed by the Senate and now before the House) · {{ reportCard.becameLaw }} signed into law. "Sent back" = the Senate amended a House-passed bill and returned it for the House to act on.

Who's moving bills

Committees rated on the share of bills referred to them that they vote out to the floor.

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★ rating: 5★ 20%+ · 4★ 15–20% · 3★ 10–15% · 2★ 5–10% · 1★ under 5%. {{ reportCard.lowSampleCount }} committees with too few bills to rate are excluded. Source: LegiScan (CC BY 4.0) · updated {{ reportCard.updated }}.

119th Congress · X Posts
● Draft · sample data

Most-mentioned terms in members' posts, bucketed by party. This is a draft using placeholder words to show the layout — real post data will be wired in once the X feed is connected.

Entire Congress — all members combined
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Democrats
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Republicans
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The Staff

Who staffs the 435 offices

Every member runs a small organization — legislative aides, caseworkers and field staff split between Washington and home. These figures are modeled on real House staffing patterns.

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Role composition
All staff across the chamber, by title
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Pay by role
Typical annual salary
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median office payroll
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All roles sit at or above the $45k House salary floor.
Where staff work
Washington vs. home district
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District offices per member {{ avgDistOffices }} avg
Staff demographics
Who fills the offices
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Staffing footprint
Total staff in the largest delegations
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How the numbers relate
Lower pay, higher turnover
Average turnover by office pay quartile
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Seniority buys staff
Average office size by member's years served
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Turnover by party
Average annual staff turnover
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Staff figures are modeled from public House staffing patterns (Statement of Disbursements, LegiStorm, CRS) and are illustrative — wire in live disbursement data to make them exact.
The Money

Office Spending

How members spend their official Member Representational Allowance — the taxpayer-funded budget for running a congressional office.

MRA spending mix
Official office allowance, by category
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avg utilization
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The Money

Campaign spending

How House members' campaign committees spend what they raise — and, above all, which firms and consultants get paid. This is campaign money (FEC committees), kept separate from the taxpayer-funded official office allowance shown at the bottom.

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Who gets paid
Where the money flows
From service category to the firms that capture it — ribbon thickness is total paid across all House campaigns; color is each firm's partisan lean.
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Spending by category
Campaign disbursements, chamber-wide
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Top firms paid
Most-paid vendors across every campaign
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Top vendors in each party
Most-paid firms across all campaigns — partisan ecosystems rarely cross over
Democratic-side firms
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Republican-side firms
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How the two parties spend
Payroll vs. consultants
Average per member, by party
Democratic Republican
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Cost to raise a dollar
Cents of fundraising spend per dollar raised, by party
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Lower is more efficient — every cent here is spent chasing the next dollar.
Campaign figures are modeled on real House magnitudes and partisan patterns (FEC filings, Statement of Disbursements); vendor names are illustrative placeholders. Connect live FEC bulk data and disbursement records to make every figure exact.