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I should add that both Republican and Democratic senators are in Washington at least some of the time every week when they are campaigning. As a rule, they do not miss important votes.
Note: By important, I mean votes that are expected to be close, and in which their vote could make a difference. Most votes in both the House and Senate are not on passing or defeating a bill, but rather a vote on procedure. Even when the voting is on the passage of a bill, the votes of a few Senators, or even more than a few Representatives, often are meaningless.
Example: Party A holds a 57-43 edge in Senate seats, and all of all Party A are going to vote the same way on a bill. The votes of at least 6 (possibly more) of the members of Party A aren't realy needed if the vote is to be decided by a simple majority. In the House, with its 435 members, even more of the majority party can be absent and still not endanger their party's passage or blockage of a bill.
There is also, I believe, a vote on whether or not to end each day's session. Often, that passes with just a few total votes, since the requirement is that a majority of those present must vote for ending the day's session.
What all this says is that a Congressman's record of missing X% of votes is usually indicative of nothing, unless the percentage is significantly larger than anyone else's. A voting record of 100% is akin to those students in school who never miss a day. So what? Since almost every kid gets sick now and then, those kids probably made other kids sick just by showing up with a bad cold or worse. (Some of them made others sick by showing up at all. And, yes, teachers secretly hope for some students to be absent as much as possible.)
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| Posts: 17027 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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