Commentary
December 27, 2012, MichiganVotes.org Weekly Roll Call
Every Roll Call vote by every state legislator tallied for 2012
By Staff Reports
|
January 2, 2013
Individual legislators missed 2,234 votes in 2012, according to MichiganVotes.org 'Missed Votes Report'
Michigan’s 38 senators and 110 representatives missed 2,234 votes in 2012, according to the Missed Votes Report compiled by Jack McHugh, editor of MichiganVotes.org.
The Michigan Senate took 1,082 roll call votes during 2012, and the House took 904*. Although the figure is slightly higher than the 1,437 votes missed by individual lawmakers in 2011, on a percentage basis it is lower since nearly twice as many total votes were taken this year.
The number of missed votes has been on a dramatic downward trajectory since 2001-2002, when MichiganVotes.org began tracking this information and the average number was more than 10,000 every year.
Here are the tallies for the full two-year session of the just concluded 96th Michigan Legislature, and of the previous five Legislatures:
2001-2002 (21,162 missed votes);
2003-2004 (12,178);
2005-2006 (9,598);
2007-2008 (10,324);
2009-2010 (7,173);
2011-2012 (3,669);
total missed votes, 2001-2011 (64,104).
During the 2012 session, four senators and six representatives missed 50 or more votes each. Thirteen Senators and 62 Michigan lawmakers missed no votes. Find out how many (and which) votes your local state legislators missed at the full “Missed Votes Report.”
The online report can be sorted by name or by number of missed votes. The total number of possible votes is also listed for each legislator (those who were not in office for the entire session have lower numbers). By clicking on a legislator’s name, you can see a brief, plain-English description of the actual votes that he or she missed. Missed vote totals for previous periods can be viewed by entering a different date range.
McHugh said the missed-votes feature is an example of the power of the MichiganVotes.org database. “We now have 12 years of bills and votes in the system — the complete legislative careers of many members. To obtain this information anywhere else, it would be necessary to read and record information from thousands of pages of legislative journals,” he said.
McHugh added that in most cases missed votes occur when other demands within the legislative process call a lawmaker off the floor for a few minutes, or when serious family or personal issues require an absence for an entire day or longer.
"Legislators are people too," McHugh said. "We shouldn't jump to conclusions or assume bad faith. But if a legislator demonstrates a consistent pattern of missed votes for months on end, voters have a right to ask why.
"Large numbers of missed votes get people’s attention, but they should be more concerned about the votes their own legislators actually do take, especially when many of these appear to serve the system ahead of the people."
MichiganVotes.org is a free website provided by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. It provides concise, objective, plain-English descriptions of every bill and every vote by every politician in the Michigan Legislature, searchable and sortable by legislator, topic, keywords, date range and more.
MichiganVotes.org roll call vote totals do not include some purely procedural or duplicate votes. When these are included there were 913 House roll calls in 2012, and 1095 in the Senate, not including any votes taken on a pro-forma Dec. 27 “sine die” session.
December 27, 2012, MichiganVotes.org Weekly Roll Call
Every Roll Call vote by every state legislator tallied for 2012
Individual legislators missed 2,234 votes in 2012, according to MichiganVotes.org 'Missed Votes Report'
Michigan’s 38 senators and 110 representatives missed 2,234 votes in 2012, according to the Missed Votes Report compiled by Jack McHugh, editor of MichiganVotes.org.
The Michigan Senate took 1,082 roll call votes during 2012, and the House took 904*. Although the figure is slightly higher than the 1,437 votes missed by individual lawmakers in 2011, on a percentage basis it is lower since nearly twice as many total votes were taken this year.
The number of missed votes has been on a dramatic downward trajectory since 2001-2002, when MichiganVotes.org began tracking this information and the average number was more than 10,000 every year.
Here are the tallies for the full two-year session of the just concluded 96th Michigan Legislature, and of the previous five Legislatures:
2001-2002 (21,162 missed votes);
2003-2004 (12,178);
2005-2006 (9,598);
2007-2008 (10,324);
2009-2010 (7,173);
2011-2012 (3,669);
total missed votes, 2001-2011 (64,104).
During the 2012 session, four senators and six representatives missed 50 or more votes each. Thirteen Senators and 62 Michigan lawmakers missed no votes. Find out how many (and which) votes your local state legislators missed at the full “Missed Votes Report.”
The online report can be sorted by name or by number of missed votes. The total number of possible votes is also listed for each legislator (those who were not in office for the entire session have lower numbers). By clicking on a legislator’s name, you can see a brief, plain-English description of the actual votes that he or she missed. Missed vote totals for previous periods can be viewed by entering a different date range.
McHugh said the missed-votes feature is an example of the power of the MichiganVotes.org database. “We now have 12 years of bills and votes in the system — the complete legislative careers of many members. To obtain this information anywhere else, it would be necessary to read and record information from thousands of pages of legislative journals,” he said.
McHugh added that in most cases missed votes occur when other demands within the legislative process call a lawmaker off the floor for a few minutes, or when serious family or personal issues require an absence for an entire day or longer.
"Legislators are people too," McHugh said. "We shouldn't jump to conclusions or assume bad faith. But if a legislator demonstrates a consistent pattern of missed votes for months on end, voters have a right to ask why.
"Large numbers of missed votes get people’s attention, but they should be more concerned about the votes their own legislators actually do take, especially when many of these appear to serve the system ahead of the people."
MichiganVotes.org is a free website provided by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. It provides concise, objective, plain-English descriptions of every bill and every vote by every politician in the Michigan Legislature, searchable and sortable by legislator, topic, keywords, date range and more.
MichiganVotes.org roll call vote totals do not include some purely procedural or duplicate votes. When these are included there were 913 House roll calls in 2012, and 1095 in the Senate, not including any votes taken on a pro-forma Dec. 27 “sine die” session.
Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.
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