Picture this: A candidate’s campaign mailer lands in your mailbox claiming they have a “100% Conservative Rating” or an “A+ from the Teachers Union.” Sounds definitive, right? But then you flip to another flyer — maybe from their opponent — and suddenly the same politician has an “F on Healthcare” or “failed families 8 times out of 10.”
Welcome to the world of PoliScores, where the same voting record can generate wildly different report cards depending on who’s holding the gradebook.
What Actually Is a PoliScore?
A PoliScore is exactly what it sounds like — a numerical score assigned to an elected official based on their performance in office. Most often, it’s a percentage: how often they voted “the right way” on a selection of bills, according to whoever’s doing the scoring.
Here’s the basic formula: An advocacy group, think tank, or rating organization picks 10–20 votes from a congressional session that matter to their mission. They decide which way they wanted legislators to vote on each one. Then they calculate what percentage of the time each member of Congress voted that way. Senator Smith voted with us 8 out of 10 times? That’s an 80% score.
Simple math. But here’s where it gets interesting — and where you need to pay attention.
Who’s Making These Scorecards (and Why)?
Dozens of organizations publish legislative scorecards. Some focus on single issues — the environment, gun rights, reproductive healthcare, tax policy. Others try to capture a broader ideological spectrum.
The American Conservative Union has published ratings since 1971. The League of Conservation Voters grades Congress on environmental votes. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce scores based on business-friendly positions. NARAL Pro-Choice America, National Right to Life, the AFL-CIO, Americans for Tax Reform — the list goes on.
Each organization is transparent about their mission (that’s legally required for nonprofits). They’re not hiding the ball about what they care about. A 90% rating from an anti-tax group means that official voted against tax increases 90% of the time on the bills that organization selected. Nothing more, nothing less.
The catch? Different groups select different votes. They’re not grading the same test.
The Devil’s in the Selection
Let’s say Congress votes on 700 bills in a two-year session. A scorecard might include 15 of them. Which 15? That’s the whole ballgame.
Some votes are obvious picks for certain scorecards — a bill explicitly about environmental regulation will definitely show up on the League of Conservation Voters’ list. But what about a massive omnibus spending bill that includes one paragraph about EPA funding buried in 2,000 pages? Does that make the cut?
What about procedural votes — motions to end debate, votes to send a bill back to committee, amendments that tweak language without changing the fundamental policy? These can be scored too, even though most voters never hear about them.
And here’s something that surprises people: sometimes an organization will score a vote even when the legislator was absent. Miss the vote? That might count as a zero, depending on the methodology. (Though many scorecards exclude absences or mark them separately.)
The “Key Vote” Problem
Most scorecards don’t weight votes equally, but some do designate certain votes as more important than others. A “key vote” might count double, or a scorecard might only include what the organization deems the most critical decisions of the session.
That’s a judgment call. A defensible one — not every vote carries the same consequence — but still a choice made by people with a particular perspective.
What PoliScores Actually Tell You
So if these scores are selective and organization-specific, are they worthless? Not at all. You just need to know what you’re looking at.
A PoliScore tells you: On the issues this organization cares about most, and on the votes they selected, this official voted in alignment with the organization’s position X% of the time.
That’s genuinely useful information! If you share that organization’s priorities, their scorecard gives you a quick snapshot of whether an official votes the way you’d want them to on those issues.
The ACLU’s scorecard will tell you how often someone voted to protect civil liberties as the ACLU defines them. The National Taxpayers Union scorecard will show you voting patterns on fiscal policy. If those are your priorities, those scores matter.
What PoliScores don’t tell you:
- How effective the official is at actually passing legislation
- How they voted on issues the scoring organization didn’t include
- Whether they’re showing up and doing constituent services
- How they behave in committee hearings or negotiations
- What bills they introduced or co-sponsored
- Their full voting record across all 700 votes that session
Beyond the Percentage: What Else Gets Measured?
Voting records are the most common basis for PoliScores, but they’re not the only thing that gets quantified. Some organizations track:
Sponsorships and co-sponsorships — Who’s actually writing bills and lending their name to others’ legislation? This shows priorities and alliances.
Committee participation — Attendance at hearings, questions asked, amendments offered. The Congressional Record documents all of this.
Campaign finance patterns — Not a “score” exactly, but the FEC requires detailed reporting of who’s funding each campaign. (More on this: check the FEC’s database at fec.gov.)
Constituent communication — How often does someone hold town halls, issue press releases, or respond to constituent inquiries? Harder to quantify, but some groups try.
POLIRATR pulls from many of these data sources. We show you the votes, the sponsorships, the funding sources — the raw material that goes into other organizations’ scorecards. You get to decide what matters.
How to Actually Use These Scores
Here’s the practical part. You’re researching a candidate or incumbent. You see they have an 85% from Organization A and a 23% from Organization B. What do you do with that?
First, look at who’s scoring. What does that organization advocate for? You can usually find their mission statement in about 30 seconds.
Second, if it matters to you, dig one layer deeper. Most scorecards publish their methodology — which votes they included and why. It’s often in a PDF linked from the scorecard itself.
Third, look at the actual votes, not just the percentage. Did they vote “no” on one critical bill you care about deeply, even if they scored high overall? Did they miss votes due to a family emergency, or because they were consistently absent?
Fourth, compare across multiple scorecards if the issue is important to you. If someone scores high with both the fiscally conservative group and the business regulation group, that tells you something about their approach to economic policy. If they score well with criminal justice reform advocates and law enforcement groups, that might indicate a bridge-building approach — or a mixed record, depending on the specific votes.
And finally — look at the full record. That’s literally why POLIRATR exists. The scorecard is a summary. Summaries are useful. But sometimes you need to see the whole picture.
Why This Actually Matters
Democracy runs on information. Not opinions about information, not spin on information — the actual information itself. PoliScores are one tool among many, useful when you understand what they’re measuring and who’s doing the measuring.
The elected officials representing you cast hundreds of votes every session. They take positions, make trade-offs, and shape policy in ways that affect your daily life — from the infrastructure on your commute to the taxes on your paycheck to the air you breathe. You deserve to know what they’re doing.
Scorecards can point you in the right direction. But the votes themselves? Those are public record. And increasingly, they’re just a few clicks away.
Sources
- Congress.gov — Official source for bills, votes, and Congressional Record
- Federal Election Commission — Campaign finance data and reporting requirements
- U.S. Senate Roll Call Votes
- U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Clerk — House roll call votes