VotePredictor
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Senate Committee on Finance

Senate committee · 27 members (12D · 14R · 1I)

On the political map: Center economically · socially centrist — computed from its members' voting records

Official site

On the political map

The members of the Senate Committee on Finance and the group's average position.

Socially conservativeSocially progressiveEconomic leftEconomic rightMichael F. Bennet — view memberRaphael G. Warnock — view memberChuck Grassley — view memberMike Crapo — view memberTodd Young — view memberRoger Marshall — view memberBill Cassidy — view memberElizabeth Warren — view memberTina Smith — view memberSteve Daines — view memberThom Tillis — view memberMargaret Wood Hassan — view memberBen Ray Luján — view memberCatherine Cortez Masto — view memberJames Lankford — view memberRon Wyden — view memberSheldon Whitehouse — view memberTim Scott — view memberJohn Thune — view memberMarsha Blackburn — view memberJohn Cornyn — view memberMark R. Warner — view memberPeter Welch — view memberBernard Sanders — view memberMaria Cantwell — view memberRon Johnson — view memberJohn Barrasso — view memberSenate Committee on Finance
Group average:Senate Committee on Finance

Each small dot is a member of the Senate Committee on Finance — hover for the name, click for their profile. The larger dot is the group's average position. Economic axis: taxes, healthcare, labor, energy. Social axis: abortion, guns, immigration, civil rights, crime.

Where its members stand, issue by issue

Taxes & Fiscal
Center
Healthcare
Center
Immigration & Border
Center
Guns
Center
Abortion & Reproductive Rights
Center
Environment & Energy
Center
Crime & Policing
Center
Defense & Veterans
Right
Economy & Labor
Center
Foreign Policy & Trade
Center
Civil Rights & Social
Center
Education
Center
Government & Democracy
Center
Judicial & Nominations
Center

The average of members' voting-record scores per issue, on the site's leftright (−1…+1) scale — the group's revealed position, not its stated one.

Recently reported measures

When a committee votes in markup to send a measure to the floor, it files a report — the closest thing to a centrally published committee vote record. (The recorded tallies themselves are posted as PDFs on each committee's own site.)

Members

Subcommittees

Where the committee's detailed work happens — each has its own page with roster and political makeup. Subcommittees hold hearings and markups but usually forward measures to the full committee by voice vote, so they rarely produce recorded votes of their own.