75% pass rate. They supported 28 bills, 21 became law.
96% kill rate. They opposed 24 bills, 23 did not become law.
- Showing contributions
- 2001-2004
Top 10 Recipients Funded
| Recipient | Amount | Legislator voted with this interest |
|---|---|---|
| Gray Davis | $249,436 | |
| Dario Frommer | $78,967 | 54% (30 out of 56 bills) |
| Herb Wesson Jr. | $49,500 | 46% (21 out of 46 bills) |
| Arnold Schwarzenegger | $47,400 | |
| Dave Cox | $33,000 | 36% (12 out of 33 bills) |
| Jackie Speier | $32,800 | 59% (32 out of 54 bills) |
| Juan Vargas | $28,500 | 59% (26 out of 44 bills) |
| Deborah Ortiz | $28,450 | 59% (29 out of 49 bills) |
| Jim Brulte | $27,500 | 31% (11 out of 36 bills) |
| Ed Chavez | $26,700 | 56% (30 out of 54 bills) |
How were these voting percentages calculated? Here is an example:
Accident & health insurance supported or opposed 52 bills in California. Of these bills, Dario Frommer, a legislator, cast votes on 56 of them.
He voted in the same direction as Accident & health insurance on 30 bills, 54% of the time.
If an interest (such as Accident & health insurance) supports a bill and the legislator votes Yes, this is counted as vote in the same direction as the interest. If an interest opposes a bill and the legislator votes No, this is also counted as vote in the same direction as the interest. We examine the last substantive vote on each bill to determine a legislator's position.
