Cindy Hyde-Smith headshot
At a Glance
Seat
U.S. Senator from Mississippi
Born
May 10, 1959
Age 67
Phone
(202) 224-5054
Office
528 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510, Washington 20510
Congress Member Profile|U.S. Senator|Republican|Mississippi

Cindy Hyde-Smith

Cindy Hyde-Smith is an American politician and lobbyist serving since 2018 as the junior United States senator from Mississippi. A member of the Republican Party, she served from 2012 to 2018 as the Mississippi Commissioner of Agriculture and Commerce and from 2000 to 2012 in the Mississippi State Senate.

Source: WikipediaView full (CC BY-SA)
Voting Record — 841
Yes72%
No26%
Present0%
Not Voting2%
Party align99%
Cross-party0%
SoupScore
District Map

Senate District (Statewide)

U.S. Census Bureau boundary data.
Cindy Hyde-Smith headshot
Cindy Hyde-Smith
U.S. SenatorRepublicanMississippi
SoupScore
Cindy's ATmosphere Activity
20 recent posts · 39 sponsored · 189 cosponsored
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Recent ATmosphere posts, sponsorships, and cosponsorships.

Since they’re abusing the Congressional Review Act to get around the filibuster, I am reserving some of my time so I can make closing remarks in the morning before the final vote. Maybe they’ll listen to reason after a night’s sleep. Stay tuned. Save the Boundary Waters.
Photo of my desk with a boundary waters canoe area forest service sign next to the Minnesota state flag and a framed photo of my parents.
70% of Minnesotans do NOT want copper nickel mining near the Boundary Waters. The Senate has a chance to do right by them by leaving the mining moratorium in place.
Reposted byTina Smith
As soon as today, the US Senate will vote on a House resolution that allows copper mining by a Chilean company near Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. The Boundary Waters is the most-visited wilderness area in the country, and it cannot be replaced.
The Boundary Waters don’t just belong to Minnesotans. They’re the birthright of every single American. Why would we let a foreign mining company ruin them just so they can mine OUR resources, ship them off to China and enrich their shareholders?
Map showing the pollution a proposed copper-nickel mine would have on the Boundary Waters, Voyageurs National Park and Quetico Provincial Park.
The threat to the Boundary Waters isn’t just about Minnesota — the legislative gymnastics being thrust upon us to allow copper-nickel mining in this watershed would mean no public lands are ever truly protected. We would be opening Pandora’s box… for what? The profits of a foreign mining company?
Photo of a canoe in the Boundary Waters. The waters are so still that the sky is reflected on the surface.
From the guy who promised to “bring back American manufacturing” …the irony would be comical if it weren’t so frustrating
Trump, who has promoted "Buy America" policies and vowed to protect American steel, has secured tens of millions of dollars worth of donated foreign steel for his $400 million ballroom project, report @anaswanson.bsky.social and @lukebroadwater.bsky.social. www.nytimes.com/2026/04/08/u...
Can’t trust a word they say. They’re lying about what they’re doing in Minnesota and across the country. This is exactly why I’m not voting for a single penny for ICE or CBP without massive, agency-wide changes.
Reposted byTina Smith
Today is day 127 of the ICE occupation of MN. ICE is still here. Neighbors are still being abducted. So we’re here too. Still carrying whistles. Still standing watch in our neighborhoods. Still doing mutual aid. Still fighting for ICE OUT EVERYWHERE.
Americans are less safe and paying more for gas and everyday goods. He wasted billions of dollars on an unjustified war and we are worse off because of it.
Grateful there wasn’t further escalation, but this ceasefire is anything but a win. So much chaos and pain for an ill-conceived war. A massive strategic failure.
Republicans should be calling us back to DC right now. We should be voting to stop him.
Threatening to wipe out an entire civilization is morally bankrupt and a major war crime, risking the lives of innocent civilians - including children. He seems detached from reality. I don’t know who (if anyone) can get through to him. Congress needs to step in and stop him.
Not to mention the serious danger this poses to American troops and risk of entrapping us in another endless war in the Middle East that nobody asked for.
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Voting History
841 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 considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (52-47)
2025-02-06Begin considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (52-46)
2025-02-06Begin considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (52-47)
2025-02-06Kill the motionYESYESMotion to Table Agreed to (52-47)
2025-02-06Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (53-47)
2025-02-05End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (53-47)
2025-02-05Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (55-44)
2025-02-04End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (55-45)
2025-02-04Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (54-46)
2025-02-04Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (77-23)
2025-02-03End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (52-46)
2025-02-03Confirm nomineeNOT_VOTINGYESNomination Confirmed (59-38)
2025-02-03Begin considerationNOT_VOTINGYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (51-46)
2025-01-30End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (83-13)
2025-01-30End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (62-35)
2025-01-30Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (80-17)
2025-01-29End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (78-20)
2025-01-29Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (56-42)
2025-01-29End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (56-42)
2025-01-28H.R. 23 (119th)End filibuster to begin debateYESYESCloture on the Motion to Proceed Rejected (54-45, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-28Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (77-22)
2025-01-27End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (97-0)
2025-01-27Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (68-29)
2025-01-25End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (67-23)
2025-01-25Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (59-34)
2025-01-24End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (61-39)
2025-01-24Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (50-50, Vice President of the United States, voted Yea)
2025-01-23End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (51-49)
2025-01-23Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (74-25)
2025-01-23End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (72-26)
2025-01-22S. 6 (119th)End filibuster to begin debateYESYESCloture on the Motion to Proceed Rejected (52-47, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-21Begin considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (53-45)
2025-01-21Begin considerationYESYESMotion to Proceed Agreed to (54-46)
2025-01-20Confirm nomineeYESYESNomination Confirmed (99-0)
2025-01-20S. 5 (119th)Final passageYESYESBill Passed (64-35)
2025-01-20S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentYESYESAmendment Agreed to (75-24)
2025-01-17S. 5 (119th)End debateYESYESCloture Motion Agreed to (61-35, 3/5 majority required)
2025-01-15S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentNONOAmendment Rejected (46-49)
2025-01-15S. 5 (119th)Vote on amendmentYESYESAmendment 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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