Addressing a motion to proceed under section 3101A of title 31, United States Code.
Brett Guthrie
Brett Guthrie is a Republican Representative representing Kentucky's 2nd District in the 111th Congress (2009–2011). Now in their 9th term, they have cast 1633 recorded votes, seen 179 measures become law, and sponsored 9 bills. They won their 2024 election with 73.1% of the vote, a 46.2-point margin. Their office has spent $1,719,955 in taxpayer-funded expenses this period. Up for re-election November 2026.
How congressional sessions work
Each numbered Congress spans two calendar years and is divided into two sessions: the first session (odd-numbered year, e.g., 2009) and the second session (even-numbered year, e.g., 2010). Modern Congresses begin on January 3 of odd-numbered years and end on January 3 two years later, unless a law sets a different date. The House is elected every two years, while Senators serve six-year terms staggered so that roughly one-third of the Senate is up for election every two years.
Raising a question of the privileges of the House.
Disaster Relief Appropriations Act, 2012
Rattlesnake Mountain Public Access Act of 2011
United States Marshals Service 225th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act
Iran, North Korea, and Syria Nonproliferation Reform and Modernization Act of 2011
Syria Human Rights Accountability Act of 2012
Unemployment Benefits Extension Act of 2012
Committee memberships will load automatically if available.
Election History
Source: MIT Election Data + Science Lab
Current Election Status
Campaign Finance (FEC)
Source: Federal Election Commission · Candidate ID: H8KY02031 · Through 12/31/2025 · 2026 Cycle
Taxpayer-Funded Office Spending (MRA)
Top Recipients This Quarter
Source: House Statement of Disbursements · Oct 1 - Dec 31, 2025
What The Facts Score
Measured from public voting records, Census district demographics, and CRS bill data. Not an editorial judgment — the same formula applies to every member regardless of party.
Did You Know?
Institutional Tilt
Sponsor Contradiction
Sponsors Healthcare bills but voted NO on this one
Sponsors Technology bills but voted NO on this one
Sponsors Defense bills but voted NO on this one
Sponsors Infrastructure bills but voted NO on this one
Sponsors Agriculture bills but voted NO on this one
Sources: Congress.gov · Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates · Legislative Dossier on The Honest Copy
Kentucky Congressional Delegation
Other members of the 111th Congress representing Kentucky. View full Kentucky delegation