Caucuses
The groups members of Congress choose to join. Each caucus's political position isn't taken from anyone's label — it's computed from its own members' voting records, the same scores behind the political map. Committee assignments live on the committees page.
The ideological caucuses, left to right
The Democrats' organized left flank: Medicare for All, a Green New Deal, and a labor-first economic agenda.
Center-left, pro-business, pro-tech Democrats — the party's largest ideological caucus, focused on growth and fiscal pragmatism.
Fiscally conservative Democrats, mostly from swing districts — the party's right flank on spending and security.
A bipartisan bloc, half Democrats and half Republicans, organized around breaking gridlock with cross-party deals.
Pragmatic, governance-minded House Republicans (formerly the Tuesday Group) — the GOP's moderate wing.
The House GOP's big conservative caucus — most House Republicans belong — pushing spending cuts and social conservatism.
The House GOP's hard-right flank: maximal confrontation on spending and immigration. Membership is not public; this roster is the publicly known members.
Identity & constituency caucuses
Organized around who members are and whom they represent, rather than a point on the spectrum — each page still shows where its members' voting records land.
Founded in 1971, the caucus of Black members of Congress — advancing racial equity in economic opportunity, health, education, and justice.
The caucus of Hispanic and Latino Democrats, focused on immigration, economic opportunity, and Latino communities. (Republican counterparts sit in the separate Congressional Hispanic Conference.)
Members of Asian or Pacific Islander descent and their allies — the roster includes associate members who back the caucus's agenda.
The LGBTQ+ caucus: a small core of LGBTQ+ members plus a large bloc of allied members backing equality legislation — the roster includes those allies.
The caucuses on the political map
Every caucus at its members' average position. The identity caucuses cluster with the Democratic left because that's where their members' records land.
Each dot is a caucus placed at the average position of its members' voting records — hover for the name, click for its page. Economic axis: taxes, healthcare, labor, energy. Social axis: abortion, guns, immigration, civil rights, crime.