Rep. Bill Flores’s 2020 Report Card

Representative
from Texas's 17th District
Republican
Served Jan 5, 2011 – Jan 3, 2021
These statistics cover Flores’s record during the 116th Congress (Jan 3, 2019-Jan 3, 2021) and compare him to other representatives also serving at the end of the session. Last updated on Jan 30, 2021.
A higher or lower number below doesn’t necessarily make this legislator any better or worse, or more or less effective, than other Members of Congress. We present these statistics for you to understand the quantitative aspects of Flores’s legislative career and make your own judgements based on what activities you think are important.
Keep in mind that there are many important aspects of being a legislator besides what can be measured, such as constituent services and performing oversight of the executive branch, which aren’t reflected here.
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Got the 3rd fewest cosponsors on their bills compared to Texas DelegationFlores’s bills and resolutions had 40 cosponsors in the 116th Congress. Securing cosponsors is an important part of getting support for a bill, although having more cosponsors does not always mean a bill will get a vote. View Bills » Compare to all Texas Delegation (6th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (10th percentile); House Republicans (16th percentile); All Representatives (9th percentile). |
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Ranked the 45th bottom/follower compared to All RepresentativesOur unique leadership analysis looks at who is cosponsoring whose bills. A higher score shows a greater ability to get cosponsors on bills. For more, see our methodology. Note that because on this page only legislative activity in the 116th Congress is considered, the leadership score here may differ from Flores’s score elsewhere on GovTrack. Compare to all Texas Delegation (14th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (11th percentile); House Republicans (19th percentile); All Representatives (10th percentile). |
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Cosponsored the 45th most bills compared to House Republicans (tied with 1 other)Flores cosponsored 292 bills and resolutions introduced by other Members of Congress. Cosponsorship shows a willingness to work with others to advance policy goals. View Cosponsored Bills » Compare to all Texas Delegation (51st percentile); Serving 10+ Years (42nd percentile); House Republicans (77th percentile); All Representatives (40th percentile). |
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Joined bipartisan bills the 49th least often compared to House RepublicansOf the 292 bills that Flores cosponsored, 32% were introduced by a legislator who was not a Republican. View Cosponsored Bills » Compare to all Texas Delegation (57th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (62nd percentile); House Republicans (24th percentile); All Representatives (65th percentile). Only Democratic and Republican Members of Congress who cosponsored more than 10 bills and resolutions are included in this statistic. |
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Was 86th most absent in votes compared to All Representatives (tied with 2 others)Flores missed 4.9% of votes (47 of 954 votes) in the 116th Congress. View Flores’s Profile » Compare to all Texas Delegation (71st percentile); Serving 10+ Years (78th percentile); All Representatives (80th percentile). The Speaker of the House, per current House rules, is not required to vote in “ordinary legislative proceedings” and is never recorded as missing a vote, and may not be included in the comparison with other representatives if not voting. The delegates from the five island territories and the District of Columbia are not eligible to vote in most roll call votes and so may not appear here if not elligible for any vote during the time period of these statistics. |
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Got bipartisan cosponsors on the 75th fewest bills compared to All Representatives (tied with 25 others)In this era of partisanship, it is important to see Members of Congress working across the aisle. 4 of Flores’s 20 bills and resolutions had a cosponsor from a different political party than the party Flores caucused with in the 116th Congress. Compare to all Texas Delegation (26th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (18th percentile); House Republicans (30th percentile); All Representatives (17th percentile). Cosponsors who caucused with neither the Democratic nor Republican party do not count toward this statistic. |
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Got bicameral support on the 110th fewest bills compared to All Representatives (tied with 59 others)The House and Senate often work on the same issue simultaneously by introducing Those bills were: H.R. 990: Hatch-Waxman Integrity Act of 2019; H.R. 7676: Health Care PRICE Transparency Act Compare to all Texas Delegation (31st percentile); Serving 10+ Years (25th percentile); House Republicans (42nd percentile); All Representatives (25th percentile). Companion bills are those that are identified as “identical” by Congress’s Congressional Research Service. |
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Laws EnactedFlores introduced 0 bills that became law, including via incorporation into other measures, in the 116th Congress. Keep in mind that it takes a law to repeal a law. Very few bills ever become law. Compare to all Texas Delegation (0th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (0th percentile); House Republicans (0th percentile); All Representatives (0th percentile). The legislator must be the primary sponsor of the bill or joint resolution that was enacted or the primary sponsor of a bill or joint resolution for which at least about one third of its text was incorporated into another bill or joint resolution that was enacted as law, as determined by an automated analysis. While a legislator may lay claim to authoring other bills that became law, these cases are difficult for us to track quantitatively. We also exclude bills where the sponsor’s original intent is not in the final bill. |
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Bills IntroducedFlores introduced 20 bills and resolutions in the 116th Congress. View Bills » Compare to all Texas Delegation (60th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (42nd percentile); House Republicans (71st percentile); All Representatives (42nd percentile). |
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Bills Out of CommitteeMost bills and resolutions languish in committee without any action. Flores introduced 2 bills in the 116th Congress that got past committee and to the floor for consideration. Those bills were: H.Res. 575: Expressing the sense of the …; H.R. 1760: Advanced Nuclear Fuel Availability Act Compare to all Texas Delegation (43rd percentile); Serving 10+ Years (31st percentile); House Republicans (55th percentile); All Representatives (32nd percentile). |
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Powerful Cosponsors3 of Flores’s bills and resolutions in the 116th Congress had a cosponsor who was a chair or ranking member of a committee that the bill was referred to. Getting support from committee leaders on relevant committees is a crucial step in moving legislation forward. Those bills were: H.R. 1760: Advanced Nuclear Fuel Availability Act; H.R. 3982: STEWARD Act; H.R. 4690: 21st Century Transportation Fuels Act Compare to all Texas Delegation (46th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (31st percentile); House Republicans (62nd percentile); All Representatives (37th percentile). |
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Committee PositionsFlores held a leadership position on 0 committees and 0 subcommittees, as either a chair (majority party) or ranking member (minority party), at the end of the session. View Flores’s Profile » Compare to all Texas Delegation (0th percentile); Serving 10+ Years (0th percentile); House Republicans (0th percentile); All Representatives (0th percentile). |
Additional Notes
Leadership/Ideology: The leadership and ideology scores are not displayed for Members of Congress who introduced fewer than 10 bills, or, for ideology, for Members of Congress that have a low leadership score, as there is usually not enough data in these cases to compute reliable leadership and ideology statistics.
Missing Bills: We exclude bills from some statistics where the sponsor’s original intent is not in the final bill because the bill’s text was replaced in whole with unrelated provisions (i.e. it became a vehicle for passage of unrelated provisions).
Ranking Members (RkMembs): The chair of a committee is always selected from the political party that holds the most seats in the chamber, called the “majority party”. The “ranking member” (sometimes “RkMembs”) is the title given to the senior-most member of the committee not in the majority party.
Freshmen/Sophomores: Freshmen and sophomores are Members of Congress whose first term (in the same chamber at the end of the 116th Congress) was the 116th Congress (freshmen) or 115th (sophomores). Members of Congress who took office within the last few months of a Congress are considered freshmen in the next Congress as well.