U.S. House · NH-02

Stances are based on mapped issues and the public record (Congress.gov, FEC, and related sources). Add your own views to see how you line up.
Public record freshness
Your alignment
Issue spotlight
High confidence based on 21 mapped decisive vote(s): 14 supporting and 7 opposing.
7
Opposing votes
14
Supporting votes
21 votes analyzed
Based on public votes and official records. Browse by topic or sort by confidence.
High confidence based on 34 mapped decisive vote(s): 30 supporting and 4 opposing.
High confidence based on 31 mapped decisive vote(s): 30 supporting and 1 opposing.
High confidence based on 25 mapped decisive vote(s): 12 supporting and 13 opposing.
High confidence based on 19 mapped decisive vote(s): 13 supporting and 6 opposing with 1 absence/present vote(s).
High confidence based on 19 mapped decisive vote(s): 12 supporting and 7 opposing.
High confidence based on 18 mapped decisive vote(s): 8 supporting and 10 opposing.
Rep. Goodlander voted on 331 recorded votes with 59.9% attendance and an 8.8% party deviation rate. On top-tier issues, she mapped as supporting immigration (20 of 26 votes), climate change (34 of 47), gun control (3 of 5), abortion rights (4 of 5), LGBTQ+ rights (5 of 5), and environmental protection (33 of 53). She mapped as opposing tax policy (16 of 24), healthcare affordability (7 of 7), public education funding (17 of 24), government spending (36 of 56), and defense spending (33 of 42). She showed neutral patterns on voting rights (7 supporting, 7 opposing) and criminal justice reform (14 supporting, 16 opposing). Across economic issues, she opposed minimum wage, affordable housing, workers' rights (mixed), trade policy, infrastructure investment, job creation, and small business support. She also opposed most healthcare and social spending measures including Medicare, Medicaid, and mental healthcare.
Supported immigration, climate change, gun control, abortion rights, and LGBTQ+ rights on mapped votes
Opposed tax policy, government spending, defense spending, and most social safety net expansions
Showed mixed or neutral patterns on voting rights, criminal justice reform, and workers' rights
Consistently opposed economic support measures including job creation, small business support, and infrastructure investment
Signature issues
Synthesized from public voting and stance records only; not motive, corruption, electoral prospects, or district-wide opinion.
38 mapped issues • Updated May 23, 2026 • 38 non-gated high-confidence issues · Model claude-haiku-4-5-20251001
Sources: Congress.gov · FEC · public disclosures. Methodology and citations on this district record.