UPDATED
feb 2, 2026
Is Your Member of Congress Aligned with Trump?
A record showing how frequently each member of the House and Senate voted in alignment with, or in opposition to, the president in 2025.
By
Visualization by
Luke Wines & LAUREN kim
Trump Margin is Trump's share of the vote minus Harris's share of the vote in the 2024 election. Trump Score is how often the member votes in line with Trump's position.
| Member | Party | Location | Margin | Trump Score ↓ |
|---|
Methodology
In this study, we analyzed floor votes taken in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives during the first session of the 119th Congress, which met in 2025. Of the 659 roll call votes taken in the Senate and 362 taken in the House, this study focused on the 282 votes on which Trump had stated a clear position (support or opposition) before the vote. Of these votes, we calculated a simple percentage showing how often each member of Congress voted in line with Trump’s stated position.
We used the following ground rules for which votes counted as having a presidential position:
- To determine Trump’s position on bills and resolutions, we looked for a clear statement of support or opposition made by him by the time that a floor vote happened. That is, if Trump made a statement of support for a bill only after a vote on its passage in the House, but before a Senate passage vote, his position on that bill would only be included for the Senate vote. Almost all statements by Trump can be found on the White House Office of Management and Budget’s website, though in some cases we sourced his position from news reports when an official statement wasn’t available. If Trump signed a bill but did not make a public statement supporting or opposing it before it was voted on, we did not include it.
- We included only one vote per chamber on a given piece of legislation, unless it received multiple passage votes. In instances where Trump expressed a clear position on a bill that did not receive a final vote on passage, we instead included Trump’s stated position on the last vote that was held on that bill, such as a motion to proceed or a Senate motion to invoke cloture.
- We included all final votes on nominations made by the president, counting votes to confirm the nominee as agreeing with Trump and votes against the nominee as disagreeing with Trump.
- We included all final votes on nominations made by the president, counting votes to confirm the nominee as agreeing with Trump and votes against the nominee as disagreeing with Trump.
- If Trump supported or opposed a bill, any “present” votes are counted as votes against the president’s position.
We assigned an agreement score to all members of the 119th Congress who were present for more than half of all votes on which Trump had a stated position held in their respective chamber last year, excluding three members: Reps. Matt Van Epps, Adelita Grijalva, and James Walkinshaw, who were sworn into the House in September or later.
Three members who are no longer in office are included in the analysis: former Reps. Mikie Sherrill (resigned in November 2025 after being elected governor), Marjorie Taylor Greene (resigned in January 2026), and Doug LaMalfa (died in January 2026).
The data used in this interactive can be downloaded here.