
Greg Casar
Democrat · TX-35 · U.S. House
Bio
Gregorio Eduardo Casar is an American politician serving as a U.S. representative from Texas's 35th congressional district since 2023. He served as a member of the Austin City Council from the 4th district from 2015 to 2022. Casar is a member of the Democratic Party and was endorsed by the Working Families Party in his run for Congress. He was first elected to the Austin City Council in 2014, representing District 4. He was reelected in 2016 and 2020. He was elected to Congress in 2022.
Full bio on Wikipedia →Overall lean (DW-NOMINATE)
Issue profile
Each issue runs left ↔ right, scored from how the member voted on bills tagged to that issue (−1…+1). Issues with too few votes are blank. Overall lean uses DW-NOMINATE.
Recent notable votes
Latest news
The Pro-Palestine Movement Is Rewriting the Rules of US PoliticsA major showdown on the House floor seemed imminent. An amendment, advanced by the Rules Committee, was poised to force a rare and telling record vote on stripping Israel of $3.3 billion in annual US military aid. Brought forward by Republican Rep. Thomas Mas…
Common Dreams · Today
'End This War': Progressives in Congress Blast Trump's Return to Bombing IranKey progressives in Congress took aim at President Donald Trump on Wednesday amid his second straight night of attacks on Iran.US Central Command (CENTCOM) first said Tuesday that its forces had "begun launching a series of powerful strikes against Iran," in …
Common Dreams · July 8, 2026
'At Least He Admits It': Trump Says Pro-Democracy Resolution Would Destroy GOPUS President Donald Trump on Sunday attacked a pro-democracy resolution recently introduced by key House caucus leaders, warning that the measure's adoption would strike a fatal blow to the Republican Party."They do this, and the Republican Party is DEAD!" Tr…
Common Dreams · July 6, 2026
What SCOTUS’s Campaign Finance Ruling Means for Democrats“This is Citizens United 2.0,” Representative Greg Casar said Tuesday about the Supreme Court’s ruling allowing political party campaign committees to coordinate directly with campaigns without a cap on spending. Republicans praised the decision, while Democr…
The New Republic · July 1, 2026
Recent coverage via NewsAPI, refreshed daily.