Rep. Mark Neumann
Former Representative for Wisconsin’s 1st District
Neumann was the representative for Wisconsin’s 1st congressional district and was a Republican. He served from 1995 to 1998.
![Photo of Rep. Mark Neumann [R-WI1, 1995-1998]](/static/legislator-photos/408142-200px.jpeg)
Analysis
Ideology–Leadership Chart
Neumann is shown as a purple triangle ▲ in our ideology-leadership chart below. Each dot was a member of the House of Representatives in 1998 positioned according to our ideology score (left to right) and our leadership score (leaders are toward the top).
The chart is based on the bills Neumann sponsored and cosponsored from Jan 5, 1993 to Dec 17, 1998. See full analysis methodology.
Bills Sponsored
Issue Areas
Neumann sponsored bills primarily in these issue areas:
Economics and Public Finance (27%) Social Welfare (20%) Government Operations and Politics (18%) Finance and Financial Sector (10%) Health (6%) Taxation (6%) Labor and Employment (6%) Environmental Protection (6%)
Recently Introduced Bills
Neumann recently introduced the following legislation:
- H.R. 4414 (105th): Repeal the Social Security Tax Increase Act
- H.R. 4074 (105th): Tax Dollars Accountability Act
- H.Res. 447 (105th): Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives regarding financial management by …
- H.R. 3008 (105th): Notch Fairness Act of 1997
- H.R. 2907 (105th): Nonself-Destructive Landmine Stockpile Elimination Act
- H.R. 2906 (105th): To authorize and direct the Director of the Office of Management and …
- H.R. 2191 (105th): National Debt Repayment Act of 1997
View All » | View Cosponsors »
Most legislation has no activity after being introduced.
Voting Record
Missed Votes
From Jan 1995 to Dec 1998, Neumann missed 77 of 2,527 roll call votes, which is 3.0%. This is on par with the median of 2.6% among the lifetime records of representatives serving in Dec 1998. The chart below reports missed votes over time.
We don’t track why legislators miss votes, but it’s often due to medical absenses, major life events, and running for higher office.
Primary Sources
The information on this page is originally sourced from a variety of materials, including:
- unitedstates/congress-legislators, a community project gathering congressional information
- The House and Senate websites, for committee membership and voting records
- Biographical Directory of the United States Congress for the photo
- GovInfo.gov, for sponsored bills