Christopher A. Coons headshot
At a Glance
Seat
U.S. Senator from Delaware
Born
September 9, 1963
Age 62
Phone
(202) 224-5042
Office
218 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510, Washington 20510
Congress Member Profile|U.S. Senator|Democrat|Delaware

Christopher A. Coons

Christopher Andrew Coons is an American lawyer and politician serving as the senior United States senator from Delaware, a seat he has held since 2010. A member of the Democratic Party, Coons served as the county executive of New Castle County from 2005 to 2010.

Source: WikipediaView full (CC BY-SA)
Voting Record — 789
Yes31%
No64%
Present0%
Not Voting5%
Party align94%
Cross-party6%
SoupScore
District Map

Senate District (Statewide)

U.S. Census Bureau boundary data.
Christopher A. Coons headshot
Christopher A. Coons
U.S. SenatorDemocratDelaware
SoupScore
Christopher A.'s ATmosphere Activity
20 recent posts · 51 sponsored · 354 cosponsored
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Recent ATmosphere posts, sponsorships, and cosponsorships.

President & CEO of the Delaware Healthcare Association Brian Frazee is already seeing the negative effects of Trump’s health care cuts. We must work together to bring down health care costs and stop premiums from skyrocketing for Delawareans.
This week, I met with some inspiring advocates living with ALS, including Eric Dane. Hearing their stories was a powerful reminder of why we must keep fighting for more research, better treatments, and ultimately a cure to this disease that has devastated far too many families.
Here’s the point: Pete Hegseth is degrading our military readiness and making our adversaries take us less seriously. Until Republicans in the Senate who know better stand up, that won’t change.
Don't take it from me–failure to act will cause health care premiums to more than DOUBLE next year for millions of working Americans who buy their own health insurance from the ACA marketplace. Democrats want to help, but Republicans would rather shut down the government. www.kff.org/affordable-c...
How does this end? It ends with you – calling your Member of Congress and telling them that they need to reverse course and end Trump’s healthcare cuts. You’re the only way we can change direction.
Healthcare is more expensive than ever. Premiums are set to rise. But instead of working to bring costs down, Trump and Republicans are cutting hundreds of billions of dollars from affordable health care options like Medicaid.
This is about health care. Trump and Republicans in Congress have raised health care prices time and again—and now they’re shutting down the government instead of providing Americans with relief.
Tonight, Republicans failed again to fund the government—forcing a shutdown that will harm federal workers, servicemembers, and law enforcement who will now work without pay. All because President Trump and Republicans refuse to change course on rising health care costs for every American.
This isn't just insane, dangerous, and illegal – it's an insult to the U.S. armed forces. Our warfighters are the greatest fighting force in the world. Trump thinks they're more valuable running errands for DHS than competing with China.
JUST IN: Trump floats using U.S. cities as military "training grounds"
Republicans are lying about undocumented immigrants to distract from their real goal: taking away YOUR health care. 20 million Americans will see skyrocketing health insurance costs if Republicans choose to let ACA tax credits expire.
Bringing our nation's top military generals in from around the world and putting them in one place is a massive national security risk. If you're going to do that, you better have a hell of better reason for it than to spout off Twitter hashtags.
Hegseth: "Should our enemies choose foolishly to challenge us, they will be crushed by the violence, precision, and ferocity of the War Department. To our enemies, FAFO."
Today’s the last day to fund the government—and Republicans have thrown their hands up and done nothing to protect health care or ensure federal workers get paid.
Secretary Hegseth and President Trump pulled in hundreds of military leaders from front lines around the world and put them all in a room so he can lecture them about "toxic leadership" and grooming standards. We need a Defense Secretary focused on fighting real wars instead of culture wars.
Hegseth declared an end to "ideological garbage," citing concerns over climate change, bullying, "toxic" leaders and promotions based on race or gender as examples.
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Voting History
789 total votes
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Recent roll calls with party-majority context so it is easier to scan how this member tends to vote.

DateBillQuestionPositionParty MajAlign?Result
2025-02-06Begin considerationNONOMotion to Proceed Agreed to (52-47)
2025-02-06Kill the motionNONOMotion to Table Agreed to (52-47)
2025-02-06Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (53-47)
2025-02-05End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (53-47)
2025-02-05Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (55-44)
2025-02-04End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (55-45)
2025-02-04Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (54-46)
2025-02-04Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (77-23)
2025-02-03End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (52-46)
2025-02-03Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (59-38)
2025-02-03Begin considerationNONOMotion to Proceed Agreed to (51-46)
2025-01-30End debateNOYESCloture Motion Agreed to (83-13)
2025-01-30End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (62-35)
2025-01-30Confirm nomineeNOYESNomination Confirmed (80-17)
2025-01-29End debateNOYESCloture Motion Agreed to (78-20)
2025-01-29Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (56-42)
2025-01-29End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (56-42)
2025-01-28H.R. 23 (119th)End filibuster to begin debateNONOCloture on the Motion to Proceed Rejected (54-45, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-28Confirm nomineeNOYESNomination Confirmed (77-22)
2025-01-27End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (97-0)
2025-01-27Confirm nomineeYESNONomination Confirmed (68-29)
2025-01-25End debateYESNOCloture Motion Agreed to (67-23)
2025-01-25Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (59-34)
2025-01-24End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (61-39)
2025-01-24Confirm nomineeNONONomination Confirmed (50-50, Vice President of the United States, voted Yea)
2025-01-23End debateNONOCloture Motion Agreed to (51-49)
2025-01-23Confirm nomineeYESNONomination Confirmed (74-25)
2025-01-23End debateYESNOCloture Motion Agreed to (72-26)
2025-01-22S. 6 (119th)End filibuster to begin debateNONOCloture on the Motion to Proceed Rejected (52-47, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-21Begin considerationNONOMotion to Proceed Agreed to (53-45)
2025-01-21Begin considerationNONOMotion to Proceed Agreed to (54-46)
2025-01-20Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (99-0)
2025-01-20S. 5 (119th)Final passageNONOBill Passed (64-35)
2025-01-20S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentYESNOAmendment Agreed to (75-24)
2025-01-17S. 5 (119th)End debateNOT_VOTINGNOCloture Motion Agreed to (61-35, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-15S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentYESYESAmendment Rejected (46-49)
2025-01-15S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentYESNOAmendment Agreed to (70-25)
2025-01-13S. 5 (119th)Begin considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (82-10)
2025-01-09S. 5 (119th)End filibuster to begin debateYESYESCloture on the Motion to Proceed Agreed to (84-9, 3/5 majority required)

Alignment stats consider only votes where a clear yes/no majority existed for the legislator's party. Cross-party marks divergence where the vote matched the opposite party majority. ↔ indicates cross-party divergence.

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