Diana DeGette — Voting Record & Political Positions
U.S. Representative for CO's 1st Congressional District · Democrat
Diana DeGette is a Democrat U.S. Representative for CO's 1st Congressional District. This page tracks Diana DeGette's congressional voting record, attendance, legislative effectiveness, and positions on key issues. In office since 1997.
Party-line voting: votes with Democrat 97.89% of the time (2.11% of votes break with the party).
Legislative effectiveness: sponsored 3922 bills, 132 of which were enacted into law.
Top Issues Diana DeGette Votes On
Taxation
Health Insurance
Immigration
Defense Spending
Climate Change
Infrastructure
How Diana DeGette Voted on Recent Bills
Yea on “Clergy Act” (2026-04-27) — Passed
Yea on “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (2025-07-03) — Failed
Yea on “Disaster Related Extension of Deadlines Act” (2025-04-01) — Passed
Yea on “Filing Relief for Natural Disasters Act” (2025-03-31) — Passed
Yea on “National Taxpayer Advocate Enhancement Act of 2025” (2025-03-31) — Passed
Nay on “Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Internal Revenue Service relating to "Gross Proceeds Reporting by Brokers That Regularly Provide Services Effectuating Digital Asset Sales".” (2025-03-27) — Passed
When Diana DeGette Broke With the Democrat Party
Diana DeGette has voted against the Democrat majority on about 2.1% of party-line votes tracked. Recent examples:
Voted Yea on “Directing the President pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution to remove United States Armed Forces from Lebanon.” (2026-06-04) while most Democrats voted No — Failed.
Voted Nay on “Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025” (2026-05-12) while most Democrats voted Yea — Passed.
Voted Nay on “Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026” (2026-01-22) while most Democrats voted Yea — Passed.
Voted Nay on “Abducted Ukrainian Children Recovery and Accountability Act” (2025-12-10) while most Democrats voted Yea — Passed.
Voted Yea on “To direct the United States Postal Service to designate single, unique ZIP Codes for certain communities, and for other purposes.” (2025-07-21) while most Democrats voted No — Passed.