How often has jasmine crockett voted with the congressional progressive caucus on key votes since 2023?
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Executive summary
Available public records and scorecards list Rep. Jasmine Crockett’s roll‑call votes since she took office in January 2023 and confirm she is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) [1]. Sources catalog her votes (Congress.gov, GovTrack, VoteSmart) but none of the provided material gives a single aggregated percentage showing how often she voted with the CPC on “key votes” since 2023; detailed roll‑call comparisons or CPC unity tallies are not found in current reporting [2] [3] [4].
1. What the official records show: raw roll calls, attendance, and public vote lists
Congress.gov publishes Crockett’s individual roll‑call entries so researchers can check how she voted on specific measures, and GovTrack compiles her missed votes (59 of 1,557 from Jan 2023–Dec 2025) and other roll‑call statistics [2] [3]. Those primary sources let you build a vote‑by‑vote comparison to any caucus position, but they do not by themselves state how often she agreed with CPC leadership on “key” items [2] [3].
2. Membership matters but doesn’t equal wholesale voting unity
Crockett is listed as a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus on her official committee/caucus pages [1]. Membership indicates ideological alignment and access to CPC policy positions, but membership alone does not quantify a “with the CPC” voting rate; CPC does not publish, in the provided sources, a running unified‑vote percentage for members that could be directly applied to Crockett [1] [4].
3. Independent trackers and scorecards capture selected coalitions — not CPC unity
Vote Smart, Ballotpedia and other trackers list “key votes” and groupings of issue votes for Crockett, enabling side‑by‑side checks of specific high‑profile items [4] [5]. Heritage Action, AFL‑CIO and LCV publish scorecards that show how Crockett voted relative to their issue frames (e.g., Heritage gave her 17% for the 118th Congress, AFL‑CIO recorded 100% alignment with labor positions in 2023), but those are interest‑group metrics — not CPC unity rates — and they use different selections of votes [6] [7] [8].
4. Where reporters have raised divergence within progressive ranks
Multiple outlets and watchdogs note that Crockett voted for Israel and Ukraine aid measures after October 2023 and that some progressive and pro‑Palestinian groups criticized those votes; those critiques indicate she did not always align with certain progressive‑bloc expectations on those foreign‑aid items [9] [10] [11]. Those stories show that voting within the progressive coalition has fractures on specific foreign‑policy votes — a useful reminder that “voted with the CPC” can vary sharply by issue area [9] [10].
5. Why an exact “how often” number is not in the available reporting
None of the sources supplied here calculates a single percentage or count of how often Crockett voted with CPC positions on an agreed set of “key votes.” Congress.gov and GovTrack give raw votes and missed‑vote totals [2] [3]; Vote Smart and Ballotpedia list selected key votes [4] [5]; but an aggregated CPC‑vs‑member unity score is not provided in the documents you gave me — so an exact frequency cannot be stated from these sources alone [2] [3] [4].
6. How you could get the precise answer (method and caveats)
To produce a defensible percentage you would need: (a) a defined set of “key votes” (e.g., an agreed list of X votes or all roll calls in a timeframe), (b) the CPC’s stated positions on each of those votes (or a CPC whip count), and (c) Crockett’s vote on each roll call from Congress.gov or GovTrack; then compute alignment. The provided sources supply (c) and selected “key votes” lists but do not supply a CPC position list or a CPC unity measure, so any aggregated figure would require additional source material not included here [2] [3] [4].
7. Bottom line and balanced takeaway
Records show Crockett is an active House member, a CPC member, and that she has voted in line with many mainstream Democratic votes (and with several progressive priorities), but also that she took votes on foreign aid that drew criticism from some progressive groups — illustrating real limits to perfect bloc voting [1] [9] [10]. Available sources do not mention a single, sourced tally of “how often” she voted with the CPC on key votes since 2023, so any headline figure would require assembling votes and CPC positions not provided in the material cited above [2] [3] [4].