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How did Jasmine Crockett vote on key federal prosecutorial reform bills like the EQUAL Act or RECOVER Act?
Executive summary
Available sources in the provided set do not report how Rep. Jasmine Crockett voted on the EQUAL Act or the RECOVER Act; I found no roll‑call citations or news reports in the supplied material that list her votes on those specific federal prosecutorial reform bills (not found in current reporting) [1] [2]. The materials show general information about Crockett’s priorities on criminal justice and voting rights but do not enumerate votes on EQUAL or RECOVER by name [3] [4].
1. What the available records explicitly show — general profile, not specific votes
Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett’s official and aggregating profiles emphasize criminal justice and voting‑rights priorities: her House site highlights criminal‑justice initiatives and voting‑rights work [3], and GovTrack and other aggregators maintain a legislative profile that records bills she’s sponsored and general roll‑call histories without listing the two named bills in the supplied snippets [2] [5]. Those sources document activity but, in the excerpts provided here, do not specify votes on the EQUAL Act or RECOVER Act [2] [5].
2. What the supplied campaign and press materials say about her priorities
Crockett’s campaign/official pages position her as a reform‑minded Democrat who has pushed for public‑defender support, voting‑access reforms, and court safeguards — framing her as aligned with progressive criminal‑justice concerns [6] [4]. That policy posture suggests she might be sympathetic to prosecutorial‑reform measures, but the supplied materials do not convert that positional context into documented roll‑call votes on the EQUAL or RECOVER Acts [6] [4].
3. Aggregators and vote trackers included here do not provide the needed roll calls in excerpts
BillTrack50, Ballotpedia, GovTrack, Vote Smart and Congress.gov are present among the search results and are typical places to find roll‑call votes [5] [7] [2] [8] [9]. However, the specific snippets you provided from those sites do not include text showing votes on the EQUAL Act or RECOVER Act. For example, the GovTrack and Congress.gov snippets list bills and sponsored measures but the excerpts shown do not mention either named act or a roll call on them [2] [9].
4. What I cannot responsibly say given these sources
I cannot assert that Crockett voted for, against, or abstained on the EQUAL Act or the RECOVER Act because the supplied material contains no roll‑call entries or news stories documenting such votes — therefore any definitive claim about her votes on those bills would be unsupported by the provided sources (not found in current reporting) [1] [2].
5. How you can confirm her votes (next steps I recommend)
Check the official roll‑call archives on the U.S. House clerk or Congress.gov roll call pages for the specific bill numbers and dates; Ballotpedia and GovTrack typically list how each member voted on marquee bills and will show a named entry for EQUAL or RECOVER if those bills received recorded House votes [9] [7] [2]. Crockett’s official “Votes and Legislation” page also promises roll‑call visibility — that page is the most direct official source to verify a specific vote [1].
6. Context on the bills and why votes matter (why your question is relevant)
Prosecutorial‑reform bills such as the EQUAL Act and RECOVER Act aim to change charging practices, sentencing discretion, or oversight of prosecutors — positions that intersect with Crockett’s stated interests in criminal‑justice reform and public defender support [3] [6]. Because her public materials emphasize those themes, constituents reasonably seek to know how she voted; however, available excerpts here do not show the concrete roll calls needed to answer that question [3] [6].
Limitations: This analysis relies strictly on the supplied search results and their snippets; I did not find explicit roll‑call records or news coverage of Crockett’s votes on the two bills in those materials, so I avoid any unsupported assertions about how she voted (not found in current reporting) [1] [2].