Press Release
Common Cause Releases 2022 “Democracy Scorecard” Showing Growing Support in Congress for Democracy Reform
Scorecard saw more than a 70% increase from 2020 in Members of Congress with a perfect score
Sacramento, CA — As constituents evaluate the performance of their Members of Congress, Common Cause released its 2022 “Democracy Scorecard,” a tracking resource with the positions of all members of Congress on campaign finance reform, ethics and transparency, and voting rights legislation. The fourth biennial scorecard is produced to help constituents hold their leaders in the 117th Congress accountable for passing common-sense legislation that preserves and strengthens our democracy.
“Our Democracy Scorecard empowers constituents with information on where our members of Congress stand on the people’s pro-democracy agenda,” said Karen Hobert Flynn, President of Common Cause. “Support in Congress for democracy reform legislation increased significantly from 2020, when 58 members of Congress had perfect scores compared to 101 this year. It’s further proof of the growing momentum for improving our government.”
The 2022 Democracy Scorecard assesses U.S. Senators’ votes on and co-sponsorship of 15 pieces of legislation and other actions, including confirming Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court, a nonpartisan investigation into the January 6 attack on our country, the DISCLOSE Act, and reforming the filibuster to pass voting rights.
“Absent the Jim Crow filibuster, reforms that expand the freedom to vote, reduce the influence of big money in our politics, protect our elections from racial discrimination, and curb partisan gerrymandering would be the law of the land today,” Flynn said. “If we don’t move forward on this legislation after an insurrection, then when?”
The 2022 Democracy Scorecard graded U.S. Representatives’ votes on and co-sponsorship of 18 pieces of legislation, including the impeachment of Donald Trump, the creation of the nonpartisan January 6 Select Committee, the Protecting our Democracy Act, and the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act.
“Our democracy is strongest when constituents are informed about the job our elected leaders are doing in Washington,” said Jonathan Mehta Stein, California Common Cause Executive Director. “19 members of Congress representing California earned a perfect score on this year’s Democracy Scorecard. After the attack on January 6, there is no greater democracy reform priority for Congress than ensuring the freedom to vote is protected and strengthened by passing comprehensive voting rights legislation.”
Below are highlights from the 2022 Democracy Scorecard:
- California has the highest number of members of Congress (19) with perfect scores: Representatives Pete Aguilar, Nanette Barragán, Karen Bass, Julia Brownley, Salud Carbajal, Mark DeSaulnier, Anna Eshoo, John Garamendi, Jimmy Gomez, Jared Huffman, Barbara Lee, Mike Levin, Ted Lieu, Zoe Lofgren, Alan Lowenthal, Doris Matsui, Scott Peters, Katie Porter, and Raul Ruiz.
- Vermont is the only state with every member of its delegation (3) earning a perfect score
- 7 states have both U.S. Senators earning a perfect score: Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oregon, and Vermont
Over the last six months, Common Cause sent four letters to the offices of every member of Congress, informing them of the Democracy Scorecard and the legislation included in this report. Since the initial letter was sent, legislation we included directly added more than 250 cumulative cosponsors as a result of our Scorecard.
Common Cause is a nonpartisan organization and does not endorse or oppose candidates for elected office. Because Speakers of the House frequently don’t vote and often don’t cosponsor legislation, we didn’t score Speaker Nancy Pelosi, although she championed democracy reform this Congress by prioritizing the For the People Act, John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, and Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act, among other legislation. Additionally, we didn’t score Rep. Connie Conway because she has been in office for less than a year, and we did not score Members who were in office for less than half this session.
To view the 2022 Democracy Scorecard, click here.