Mike Levin headshot
At a Glance
Seat
Representative for California District 49
Born
October 28, 1978
Age 47
Phone
(202) 225-3906
Office
2352 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington 20515
Congress Member Profile|U.S. Representative|Democrat|California District 49

Mike Levin

Michael Ted Levin is an American politician and attorney who serves as the U.S. representative for California's 49th congressional district since 2019. He is a member of the Democratic Party and represents most of San Diego's North County, as well as part of southern Orange County.

Source: WikipediaView full (CC BY-SA)
Voting Record — 550
Yes45%
No54%
Present1%
Not Voting1%
Party align97%
Cross-party3%
SoupScore
District Map

Congressional District 49

U.S. Census Bureau boundary data.
Mike Levin headshot
Mike Levin
U.S. RepresentativeDemocratCalifornia District 49
SoupScore
Mike's ATmosphere Activity
20 recent posts · 24 sponsored · 93 cosponsored
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Recent ATmosphere posts, sponsorships, and cosponsorships.

Every reporter should keep asking Mike Johnson why he won’t condemn Trump for exploiting the brutal murder of Rob and Michele Reiner in a Truth Social post. Using a family’s tragedy for political bile crosses a basic moral line.
Reposted byMike Levin
This administration often says it stands with our veterans. But standing with veterans means more than words. Cutting VA staffing, maintaining hiring freezes, and pushing care toward privatization weakens the system veterans depend on, leading to longer waits and higher costs.
Veterans earned a strong, fully staffed VA. I will keep fighting to ensure they receive timely, high-quality, affordable care, not political talking points.
This administration often says it stands with our veterans. But standing with veterans means more than words. Cutting VA staffing, maintaining hiring freezes, and pushing care toward privatization weakens the system veterans depend on, leading to longer waits and higher costs.
If the goal is accountability and restoring public trust, the right course is simple: release the files in full. Survivors and the public have a right to know.
Full transparency matters, especially when it comes to crimes that harmed so many survivors. The Epstein Files Transparency Act requires the Epstein files to be released by this Friday. The President said in June 2024 that these records should be made public.
The tone of the speech was angry and backward-looking. Voters sent us to Washington to work together on real solutions. Americans deserve straight talk, real results, and leaders who take responsibility instead of inflating numbers and pointing fingers.
I do support the $1,776 “warrior dividend.” Increasing pay for our service members is the right thing to do. But Congress controls federal spending, not the President. As an appropriator myself, we must support our troops by increasing their pay through the Congressional appropriations process.
At the same time, tariffs on pharmaceutical imports raise costs. You can’t credibly claim to slash prices while increasing them.
Trump also claimed to have secured $18 trillion in new investment. His own administration lists a figure about half that, much of it vague pledges rather than real, committed investment. Claims that drug prices dropped by 600% aren’t supported by reality and aren’t even mathematically possible.
We can and should enforce the law at the border, but we don’t need to invent statistics or demonize immigrants who work, pay taxes, and contribute to our economy. Scapegoating immigrants doesn’t lower your rent or grocery bills.
Many of his claims about prices were false or misleading, and the same goes for his repeated effort to blame immigrants for economic problems.
The President claimed wages are surging. In reality, wages are only modestly outpacing inflation, and wage growth has slowed. That’s modest progress at best, not the breakthrough he described.
People are still paying higher prices for housing, insurance, groceries, and health care. That’s the lived reality.
Inflation was already around 3 percent when this administration took office, and it has stayed roughly in that range since. Holding inflation roughly steady is not the same thing as bringing prices down. Families know that.
The President says “tariff” is his favorite word. But tariffs aren’t magic. They’re paid by American consumers and businesses. They function like a hidden tax, and if you actually care about affordability, you don’t celebrate policies that raise prices while pretending they don’t.
Trump’s speech last night was built on exaggeration, finger-pointing, and inflated numbers. A year into the presidency, blaming the last guy stops being an explanation and starts sounding like an excuse, and that tone ran through the entire address.
Starve the VA of staff, let wait times grow, then claim private care is the only answer. This is privatization by neglect, and it’s pathetic. Shrinking the VA like this is a betrayal of the people who earned better.
They were pushed out, frozen out, or labeled unnecessary. Veterans do not care what word Washington uses. They care whether a doctor is available. Put together, 30,000 gone and 35,000 more on the chopping block is all part of a strategy.
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Voting History
550 total votes
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Recent roll calls with party-majority context so it is easier to scan how this member tends to vote.

DateBillQuestionPositionParty MajAlign?Result
2025-07-17S. 1582 (119th)Final passageYESNOPassed
2025-07-17H.R. 3633 (119th)Final passageYESNOPassed
2025-07-17H. Res. 580 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-07-16H. Res. 580 (119th)Motion to ReconsiderNONOPassed
2025-07-15H.R. 1717 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-07-15H. Res. 580 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOFailed
2025-07-15H. Res. 580 (119th)End debate nowNONOPassed
2025-07-14S. 1596 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-07-14H.R. 1770 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-07-14H.R. 1709 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-07-03H.R. 1 (119th)Accept Senate changesNONOPassed
2025-07-03H. Res. 566 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-07-03H. Res. 566 (119th)Approve amendmentNONOAgreed to
2025-07-02H. Res. 566 (119th)End debate nowNONOPassed
2025-07-02H. Res. 566 (119th)Consideration of the ResolutionNONOPassed
2025-06-27H. Res. 516 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-06-26H.R. 275 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-26H.R. 875 (119th)Final passageYESNOPassed
2025-06-25H.R. 3944 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-25H.R. 3944 (119th)Send back to committeeYESYESFailed
2025-06-25H.R. 3944 (119th)Approve amendmentNONOAgreed to
2025-06-25H. Res. 519 (119th)Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree, as AmendedYESYESPassed
2025-06-24Motion to AdjournYESYESFailed
2025-06-24H. Res. 530 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-06-24H. Res. 530 (119th)End debate nowNONOPassed
2025-06-24H. Res. 537 (119th)Kill the motionYESYESPassed
2025-06-23H.R. 3422 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-06-23H.R. 3394 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-06-23H.R. 1998 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-06-12H.R. 2056 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-12H.R. 2056 (119th)Send back to committeeYESYESFailed
2025-06-12Motion to AdjournYESYESFailed
2025-06-12H.R. 4 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-12H.R. 4 (119th)Send back to committeeYESYESFailed
2025-06-12S. 331 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-06-11H. Res. 499 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-06-11H. Res. 499 (119th)End debate nowNONOPassed
2025-06-10H.R. 884 (119th)Final passageYESNOPassed
2025-06-10H.R. 2096 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-10H. Res. 489 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-06-10H. Res. 489 (119th)End debate nowNONOPassed
2025-06-09H. Res. 481 (119th)Motion to Suspend the Rules and AgreeYESYESPassed
2025-06-09H. Res. 488 (119th)Motion to Suspend the Rules and AgreeNONOPassed
2025-06-09H.R. 2035 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-06-06H.R. 2966 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-05H.R. 2987 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-05H.R. 2987 (119th)Send back to committeeYESYESFailed
2025-06-05H.R. 2931 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-06-05H.R. 2931 (119th)Send back to committeeYESYESFailed
2025-06-04H.R. 2483 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed

Alignment stats consider only votes where a clear yes/no majority existed for the legislator's party. Cross-party marks divergence where the vote matched the opposite party majority. ↔ indicates cross-party divergence.

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