That tradition is what makes this country possible, and it is one thing we must all protect.
Our political opponents are not our enemies. They are our fellow citizens.
Let us remember that we are neighbors first.

Congress Member Profile|U.S. Representative|Democrat|California District 49
Mike Levin
Source: Wikipedia • View full (CC BY-SA)
SoupScoreanalysis-first civic rating · view full breakdown
Loading…
Voting Record — 496
Yes44%
No54%
Present1%
Not Voting1%
Party align97%
Cross-party3%
SoupScore
District Map
Congressional District 49
U.S. Census Bureau boundary data.
Social & Web
External Resources

Mike Levin
U.S. RepresentativeDemocratCalifornia District 49
SoupScore
Mike's ATmosphere Activity
20 recent posts · 24 sponsored · 90 cosponsored
Recent ATmosphere posts, sponsorships, and cosponsorships.
The principle does not bend to the politics of the victim.
We are a nation of more than 340 million people. We disagree on many things. Yet for 250 years, the American experiment has survived because we generally chose to settle those disagreements with voices and votes rather than violence.
Every American should be able to stand behind the same principle: political violence is never the answer.
And if we mean it, we have to mean it every time.
Why does Kash Patel still have his job?
8. Indict the Southern Poverty Law Center for paying informants to infiltrate hate groups
9. Assign a SWAT team to serve as personal security and chauffeurs for the Director’s girlfriend
10. Announce arrests and suspects before the facts are in, then walk it back
5. Fail to find Nancy Guthrie and go chug beers with the US Men’s Hockey Team in Milan
6. Fire a dozen counterintelligence agents with Iran expertise days before the US strikes on Iran
7. Promise bogus 2020 election arrests six years after the fact to appease Donald Trump
3. Bury the Epstein files because, in the Director’s own words from 2023, “of who’s on that list”
4. Stonewall state investigators looking into the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents
Kash Patel’s updated FBI priority list:
1. Investigate a New York Times journalist for reporting on the Director’s girlfriend
2. Sue The Atlantic for $250 million over reporting on the Director’s drinking problem
This is your daily reminder that Trump and Republicans are spending billions of your tax dollars on an unauthorized war in Iran and Stephen Miller’s ICE agenda while gutting Medicaid, slashing SNAP, and driving up your health care costs.
youtu.be/6qJdr1LzOYI?...
Reposted byMike Levin
Americans see it.
Congressional approval has collapsed to near-historic lows.
The IRS polls better than Congress right now.
Reposted byMike Levin
This is what one-party Republican rule looks like: a sidelined Congress, a president without guardrails, and a legislative record you could fit on a napkin.
We don’t fix this by sending the same people back.
We fix it by throwing them out.
This is what one-party Republican rule looks like: a sidelined Congress, a president without guardrails, and a legislative record you could fit on a napkin.
We don’t fix this by sending the same people back.
We fix it by throwing them out.
Americans see it.
Congressional approval has collapsed to near-historic lows.
The IRS polls better than Congress right now.
Republicans sat on their hands as the President refused to spend funds Congress had already allocated.
The Constitution gives Congress the sole power to declare war, yet the GOP blocked every Democratic effort to rein in Trump’s military campaign in Iran.
House members cast just 362 votes in 2025, the second-lowest count in a quarter century. Only 64 bills became law. And while real work stalled, they broke records for partisan censures to scold and punish each other.
They’ve also handed away their own constitutional authority.
The past year has been the most frustrating since I first got to Congress. Not because the work is hard, it’s always hard, but because Republicans in charge have made it nearly impossible to do any work at all.
Reposted byMike Levin
Democrats have spent months pushing basic ICE oversight. These are standard across law enforcement.
But House Republicans have refused to agree to any of this.
The public deserves to know why ICE should be the exception.
He’s not alone.
Cardinals across the country have said so. The Archbishop for the U.S. military said so on Easter Sunday. The U.S. bishops’ own doctrine committee has now rebuked Vance directly.
I hope you read this piece.
Then send it to every person of faith you know.
The pope Vance was lecturing is a scholar who led the Augustinian order for more than a decade. Vance claims Augustine as his personal hero.
Holquin walks through the long-standing rules the Church uses to judge whether a war is just, and he shows how the war with Iran fails every one of them.
SoupScore Breakdown
Loading analysis metrics…
Voting History496 total votesExpandCollapse
Voting History
496 total votes
Recent roll calls with party-majority context so it is easier to scan how this member tends to vote.
| Date | Bill | Question | Position | Party Maj | Align? | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-06-03 | H.R. 1642 (119th) | Fast-track passage | NOT_VOTING | YES | — | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H.R. 1 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H.R. 1 (119th) | Send back to committee | YES | YES | ✓ | Failed |
| 2025-05-22 | S.J. Res. 31 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H. Res. 436 (119th) | Approve resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H. Res. 436 (119th) | End debate now | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H. Res. 436 (119th) | Consideration of the Resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | H. Res. 436 (119th) | Consideration of the Resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-22 | — | Motion to Adjourn | YES | YES | ✓ | Failed |
| 2025-05-20 | S.J. Res. 13 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-20 | H.R. 1223 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-20 | H. Res. 426 (119th) | Approve resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-20 | H. Res. 426 (119th) | End debate now | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-19 | H.R. 1286 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-19 | H.R. 1263 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-15 | H.R. 2240 (119th) | Final passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-15 | H.R. 2255 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-14 | H. Res. 352 (119th) | Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-14 | H.R. 2243 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-14 | H. Res. 405 (119th) | Approve resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-14 | H. Res. 405 (119th) | End debate now | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-14 | H.R. 2215 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-13 | H.R. 249 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-13 | H. Con. Res. 30 (119th) | Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-08 | H.R. 276 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-08 | H.R. 276 (119th) | Send back to committee | YES | YES | ✓ | Failed |
| 2025-05-07 | H.R. 881 (119th) | Final passage | YES | NO | ✕↔ | Passed |
| 2025-05-07 | H.R. 1503 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-06 | H. Res. 377 (119th) | Approve resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-06 | H. Res. 377 (119th) | End debate now | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-05 | H.R. 36 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-05 | H.R. 530 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-01 | H.J. Res. 88 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-05-01 | H.J. Res. 78 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-30 | H.J. Res. 89 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-30 | H.J. Res. 87 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H.J. Res. 60 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H.R. 859 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H.R. 1442 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H.R. 1402 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H. Res. 354 (119th) | Approve resolution | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-29 | H. Res. 354 (119th) | End debate now | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-28 | S. 146 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-28 | H.R. 973 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-10 | H.R. 22 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-10 | H.R. 22 (119th) | Send back to committee | YES | YES | ✓ | Failed |
| 2025-04-10 | H. Con. Res. 14 (119th) | Accept Senate changes | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-10 | H.R. 1228 (119th) | Fast-track passage | YES | YES | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-10 | H.R. 1526 (119th) | Final passage | NO | NO | ✓ | Passed |
| 2025-04-09 | H.R. 1526 (119th) | Send back to committee | YES | YES | ✓ | Failed |
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.