A read on the chamber that represents you — its balance of power and how the seats break down today.
Sources · legislative activity from LegiScan (CC BY 4.0) · House floor calendar from DomeWatch, Office of the Democratic Whip
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
How effectively the 119th House is moving legislation — from committee to the floor to the Senate — and which committees are doing the work.
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.
Committees rated on the share of bills referred to them that they vote out to the floor.
★ 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 }}.
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.
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.
How members spend their official Member Representational Allowance — the taxpayer-funded budget for running a congressional office.
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.