The Most Conservative and Most Liberal Members of Congress

February 26, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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Peter Roff, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

While not exactly on par with FBI's 10 Most Wanted list, the venerable National Journal's list of the top 10 conservatives and liberals in Congress is something all Washington waits to see. For some, the object is to be on one or the other of the two lists--which is compiled based on an analysis of congressional votes--while for others the challenge is to miss the list entirely.

According to the vote rankings for 2009:

• The top five Senate liberals are (in order): Ohio Democrat Sherrod Brown, Illinois Democrat Roland Burris, Maryland Democrat Ben Cardin and Rhode Island Democrats Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse.

• The top five Senate conservatives are: Oklahoma Republican Jim Inhofe, South Carolina Republican Jim DeMint, Kentucky Republican Jim Bunning, Oklahoma Republican Tom Coburn and Idaho Republican Jim Risch.

• The five most liberal House members are: New Jersey Democrat Rush Holt, Wisconsin Democrat Gwen Moore, Massachusetts Democrat John Olver, California Democrat Linda Sanchez and Illinois Democrat Jan Schakowsky.

• The five most conservative House members are Arizona Republican Trent Franks, Colorado Republican Doug Lamborn, Texas Republicans Randy Neugebauer and Pete Olson and Arizona Republican John Shadegg. Oh yeah, right in the middle, Sens. Mark Pryor of Arkansas (No. 50) and North Dakota's Byron Dorgan (No. 51) and New York Democrat Rep. Michael Arcuri, whose voting record puts him smack dab at No. 218 out of 435. And scoring exactly the same Indiana Sens. Richard Lugar and Evan Bayh who, while from different parties, each had a composite liberal score of 40.7 percent and a composite conservative score of 59.3 percent, which might come in pretty handy if someone decides to run for president in 2012 (against a fellow who was once on of the Senate's top five liberals).

Tags:
Jan Schakowsky,
conservatives,
Jim DeMint,
Ben Cardin,
Michael Arcuri,
liberals,
Mark Pryor,
Evan Bayh,
Jim Bunning,
Sheldon Whitehouse,
Jim Risch,
Jack Reed,
Byron Dorgan,
Sherrod Brown,
Richard Lugar,
Tom Coburn,
James Inhofe

Reader Comments Read all comments (8)

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It's, "Whom to vote for," and, "Whom to defeat," retard. Please learn basic grammar skills before you opine like an ignoramus.

er of FL 8:15PM December 21, 2010

As a longtime Republican who left the party when the communist black-supremacist, Obama Zombie, Mike Steele was put in as GOP Chairmen by a communist clique within the republican party, I do not trust the GOP.

I am convinced that what we have here is a one-party system which only pretends to have two parties in order to fool the public.

Democrat-communist and media-communists have been in control of America since the 1970s, although that control was tenuous during the Reagan administration.

Many of you refuse to face the facts that we were fooled for decades about the so-called two-party system.

Most of you will not accept the fact that the one-party system is communistic.

So many conservatives are phony patriots saying whatever they must in order to get elected.

The majority (250 million +) white masses are far to the right of the one party and they deserve to have their own party which singularly represents their best interests.

Its past time to polarize. To hell with cunning communist lies requiring a political party to "represent all the people."

Compromise simply plays into the communist's hands since they control all the tools of influence-manipulation (the media, Hollywood, advertising, college academia, public schools, federal judiciary, federal government, US armed forces)

So what. We must take on that mega-power and whip its black and red ass!

I support Sarah Palin.

Kurt Steiner of TN 7:44AM November 07, 2010

This space cadet has to be in the most liberal camp with all of the terrible legislation she has been ramming through the House. I think she is suffering from some mental disorder based on some her recent comments.

Maybe the voters in her California district will put her out of her misery and vote her out of office this November. If they do, that would be a national holiday of celebration.

Ken of WI 4:12PM July 14, 2010

Peter Roff

Peter Roff

Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. Formerly a senior political writer for United Press International, he’s now affiliated with several public policy organizations including Let Freedom Ring, and Frontiers of Freedom. His writing has appeared in National Review, Fox News’ opinion section, The Daily Caller, Politico and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

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