
Digital Democracy Project members are the first in the nation to choose bills, discuss featured bills, and submit bills. We can't wait to hear your voice!
Vote Yes on this bill if you want Social Security to keep testing ways to help disabled Americans work without risking a drop in their total income.
Organizations that support this bill may include disability rights groups, Social Security advocates, vocational rehabilitation providers, and employers that support expanding work opportunities for people with disabilities.
Vote No on this bill if you want to limit federal demonstration projects, avoid possible added administrative costs, and keep current disability insurance rules in place.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include taxpayer watchdog groups, budget hawks, and advocates who worry that extended federal pilot programs could increase spending or weaken clear benefit rules.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to block the EPA's Montana regional haze rule, reduce federal air pollution requirements on affected facilities, and give industry and the state more flexibility.
Organizations that support this bill may include electric utility companies, mining and manufacturing trade groups, and organizations that favor less federal environmental regulation.
Vote No on this bill if you want the EPA's Montana regional haze rule to stay in effect in order to push for cleaner air, better visibility in natural areas, and stronger public health protections.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include clean air advocates, conservation groups, public health organizations, and supporters of stronger federal pollution controls.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to require congressional approval before the United States stays in military conflict with Iran, while still allowing action to stop an immediate attack on the United States or its allies.
Organizations that support this bill may include anti-war groups, civil liberties organizations, and groups that want Congress—not only the President—to decide when the United States goes to war.
Vote No on this bill if you want the President to keep more freedom to use U.S. forces against Iran without needing a new, specific approval from Congress first.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include hawkish foreign policy groups, some national security organizations, and others who want the President to keep broad flexibility to respond militarily to Iran.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to expand veterans’ and survivors’ benefits, improve access to VA and community health care, strengthen mental health and rural care, support caregivers, and require the VA to be more transparent and responsive.
Organizations that support this bill may include veterans service organizations, military family and caregiver advocates, rural hospitals and clinics, mental health providers, and groups that want stronger VA benefits, health care access, and survivor support.
Vote No on this bill if you want to avoid large new federal costs, limit expansion of VA programs and administrative structures, and prevent policy changes such as tighter rules for some future disability ratings and broader government oversight systems.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include fiscal watchdog groups, budget hawks, and organizations concerned that the bill increases federal spending, expands VA bureaucracy, and changes some disability rating rules in ways they believe could limit future claims.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want more federal funding for dams, ports, flood control, water systems, science, grid security, and nuclear programs, along with tougher limits on some China-linked energy deals and faster support for small nuclear reactors.
Organizations that support this bill may include electric utilities, nuclear energy companies, engineering and construction groups, water districts, port authorities, farm and flood-control interests, defense advocates, and labor unions tied to energy and infrastructure projects.
Vote No on this bill if you want to protect clean building standards, avoid shifting funds from other clean energy efforts to nuclear projects, limit nuclear weapons spending, keep guns more restricted at federal water sites, or reduce overall federal spending.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include environmental groups, clean energy and climate advocates, anti-nuclear organizations, gun safety groups, and fiscal watchdogs concerned about large spending and the shift of money away from other clean energy programs.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to fund diplomacy and embassy security, speed up passport processing, strengthen aid and military support for key allies, crack down on fentanyl and U.S. rivals like China, Russia, Iran, and Cuba, and block federal support for certain climate, abortion-related, DEI, transgender, and online censorship programs.
Organizations that support this bill may include defense and national security groups, pro-Israel and pro-Taiwan advocates, anti-fentanyl and border security groups, anti-abortion organizations, and groups that oppose government-backed online speech policing and DEI mandates.
Vote No on this bill if you want a less restrictive foreign aid policy, more support for global climate and U.N. programs, fewer limits tied to abortion, gender, and speech issues, less military-focused spending, and fewer barriers on humanitarian and development efforts in places like Gaza and other conflict zones.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include climate advocacy groups, reproductive rights organizations, LGBTQ rights groups, refugee and humanitarian aid advocates, United Nations supporters, and civil liberties groups concerned about cuts, restrictions, and culture-war limits in foreign assistance.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want Michigan to run its own health insurance marketplace, give residents and small businesses easier ways to compare plans and find financial help, and add more state oversight, transparency, and consumer assistance.
Organizations that support this bill may include consumer health advocates, hospitals and clinics, groups helping uninsured residents, and small business organizations that want an easier way to compare and buy coverage.
Vote No on this bill if you want to avoid creating a new state-run insurance system, prevent new user fees and administrative costs, and keep Michigan from taking on more control over the health insurance marketplace.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include anti-tax and limited-government groups, organizations opposed to the Affordable Care Act, and insurers or business groups concerned about new fees, regulation, and the cost of creating a state-run marketplace.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want car owners to control repair data, choose their own mechanic and parts, protect their vehicle information from misuse, and make repairs more competitive and affordable.
Organizations that support this bill may include consumer rights groups, independent auto repair shops, aftermarket parts and tool makers, towing companies, fleet operators, and others that want more competition and lower repair costs.
Vote No on this bill if you want manufacturers and dealerships to keep tighter control over vehicle data, repair tools, and service networks because you believe that better protects product quality, security, and company oversight.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include vehicle manufacturers, dealer service networks, and companies tied closely to factory-only repair systems that could lose control over repair data, parts sales, and service business.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want to temporarily extend current foreign intelligence surveillance powers through July 2, 2026, so the government does not lose these tools during the short extension period.
Organizations that support this bill may include intelligence and national security groups, federal law enforcement agencies, and policy organizations that favor keeping surveillance tools available without interruption.
Vote No on this bill if you want these surveillance powers to expire on schedule unless Congress first adopts stronger privacy protections, tighter limits, or broader reforms.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include civil liberties groups, digital privacy advocates, and policy organizations that believe foreign intelligence surveillance powers should expire or be narrowed unless stronger safeguards are added.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want major new federal spending on roads, bridges, transit, rail, freight, and safety, faster project approvals, more truck parking and bridge repairs, and new annual fees on electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles to help fund transportation.
Organizations that support this bill may include state transportation departments, road builders, engineering and construction groups, trucking and freight organizations, transit agencies, passenger rail supporters, and labor unions tied to transportation and infrastructure work.
Vote No on this bill if you want to avoid large new transportation spending, keep stronger environmental review, preserve climate and neighborhood equity programs that the bill ends, and block new annual registration fees on electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include environmental groups, climate advocates, electric vehicle organizations, neighborhood equity advocates, anti-highway-expansion groups, and fiscal watchdogs concerned about the bill’s cost and reduced environmental review.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want bigger homestead tax breaks, slower growth in property tax assessments for many properties, and stricter rules limiting county and city property tax spending to core public services.
Organizations that support this bill may include homeowner associations, anti-tax groups, real estate industry groups, and small business organizations that want lower property taxes and tighter limits on assessment increases.
Vote No on this bill if you want local governments to keep broader control over property tax revenue and if you are concerned that large tax cuts could reduce funding for schools, infrastructure, emergency services, and other community needs.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include county and city governments, public school advocates, public employee unions, and local government associations concerned about reduced revenue and less budget flexibility.
Vote Yes on this bill if you want stricter limits on local property tax rate increases, stronger voter approval requirements for bigger tax hikes, and statewide notices and online tools that help property owners understand a proposed tax amendment.
Organizations that support this bill may include taxpayer advocacy groups, homeowner associations, and real estate organizations that favor tighter limits on local property tax increases and more notice to voters about possible tax-saving amendments.
Vote No on this bill if you want local governments to keep more flexibility to raise property tax revenue for services, avoid extra state-required mailings and administrative costs, and prevent new rules that could constrain local budgeting decisions.
Organizations that oppose this bill may include county and city government associations, special district groups, and local public service advocates who worry it could make it harder to raise revenue for services and add new mailing and administrative duties.