WASHINGTON — Sen. Marco Rubio took some lumps in a presidential competition from his Floridian foil Jeb Bush for blank about a third of his votes this year, though he’s not alone in unwell to uncover adult in Washington.
Plenty of members of Congress have missed a tenth or some-more of authorised building votes given 2007, according to a new tool
Those who missed votes have an event to contention a “personal explanation†to a Congressional Record, explaining how they would have voted and because — though those entries are mostly mislaid or left deceptive with descriptions like “inadvertently detained.†ProPublica highlights a best of a garland in their new app.
Travel headaches and family emergencies are common causes for no-shows, though many reps find a way, like New Jersey Republican Leonard Lance, who missed only dual of his 5,031 authorised votes.
“I trust that those who have inaugurated me to Congress have inaugurated me to opinion — it’s a primary responsibility,†Lance said, acknowledging embankment and easy sight schedules assistance him contend a stellar lane record.
Here’s a roundup of others in a House of Representatives who missed poignant time:
1. Bobby Rush, D - Ill. — 22%
Rush missed 1,549 of 6,906 authorised votes. He missed hundreds of votes during a five-month camber in 2008 while he underwent medicine to mislay a carcenogenic salivary gland tumor. Â Rush did not respond to questions about his voting record.
2. Luis Gutiérrez, D – Ill. — 15%
Gutierrez missed 1,044 of 6,902 authorised votes. Almost all of Gutierrez’s time divided from Washington is attributed to work on immigration reform, his orator Doug Rivlin said.Gutierrez also travels several times a year to Puerto Rico where his mom and other family live.
“There are a lot of requests for his time and he typically has immigrant- and Latino-related events many weeks and/or weekends, both inside and outward his district,†Rivlin said. “Because he can't be in dual places during a same time, critical events outward Washington force him to skip votes.â€
3. Rubén Hinojosa, D - Texas — 13%
Hinojosa missed 874 of 6,906 authorised votes. Hinojosa missed several votes in early 2015 recuperating from knee surgery. His staff did not respond to questions about his time divided from Washington.
4. Don Young, R - Alaska — 12%
Young missed 828 of 6,906 authorised votes. Young charge several missed votes in Feb to a influenza (despite carrying taken a influenza shot, he notes).
“Like many members of Congress, Rep. Young has missed votes,†orator Matthew Shuckerow said. “It is not something he likes to do, though there are instances where he is assembly with voters who have trafficked thousands of miles to accommodate with him and others when he himself is roving to and from a state to attend critical meetings or events.â€
5. Alma Adams, D – N.C. — 12%
Adams missed 73 of 629 authorised votes. Elected in 2014, Adams missed a handful of votes due to a illness and genocide of her mom in June.
“Anyone who has mislaid a primogenitor or a desired one knows many time and appetite goes into laying them to rest. A chairman also deserves to suffer in their possess right,†pronounced mouthpiece Shadawn Reddick-Smith. “Congresswoman Adams returned to DC for votes on Jun 10, only a day and half after her mother’s funeral, a sum of only 4 missed voting days.â€
6. Charles Rangel, D – N.Y. — 11%
Rangel missed 787 of 6,906 authorised votes. He missed several votes in 2012 recuperating from a spinal infection. Despite that, mouthpiece Hannah Kim called Rangel, “a arguable voter with one of a aloft percentages in a house†dating behind to his initial votes in 1971.
“Those votes were missed mostly due to singular circumstances, such as a new ancestral outing to Africa with President Obama and hospitalization in early 2012, that apparently brought his commission down,†Kim said.
7. Jackie Speier, D – Calif. — 11%
Speier missed 605 of 5,542 authorised votes. She says she attended many critical votes and missed poignant time due to ill relatives and mother-in-law and time out with a flu.
“I’d contend many people in Washington take voting seriously, though infrequently life happens and nobody begrudges we time with family when they’re failing or if we have a family member graduating high school,†Speier told USA TODAY. “The enlightenment in Congress is one that we don’t go home even for a tighten friends’ funeral, though I’m of a opposite faith and wasn’t going to skip my beloved friend’s funeral.â€
Speier fractured her kneecap in a tumble final Tuesday and trafficked to Washington a same day to be there for votes.
8. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R – Wash. — 11%
9. Ken Buck, R – Colo. — 10%
Buck missed 59 of 581 authorised votes. He missed several votes in Sep while home recuperating from behind surgery, and for a outing to Kansas for a pinning rite of his son’s graduation to in a U.S. Army.
“As for logging a reason in a Congressional Record, we consider as one of a many regressive members of Congress, Rep. Buck’s position on issues is flattering clear,†pronounced orator Kyle Huwa. “Also, voters are speedy to strech out to his bureau if they have questions about how he would have voted.â€
10. Trent Kelly, R - Miss. — 10%
Kelly missed 26 of 271 authorised votes. Kelly’s missed votes in Jun were due to troops use with a Mississippi Army National Guard.
“I had a before joining to this republic and to 1,400 soldiers,†Kelly pronounced by a spokeswoman. “I discussed with care that we done that joining before to being inaugurated and respected that joining to this republic and to those soldiers.â€
Follow @npenzenstadler
Article source: http://rssfeeds.usatoday.com/~/122944555/0/usatodaycomwashington-topstories~These-Members-of-Congress-missed-hundreds-of-House-votes/