Mark Harris headshot
At a Glance
Seat
Representative for North Carolina District 8
Born
April 24, 1966
Age 60
Phone
(202) 225-1976
Office
126 Cannon House Office Building, Washington 20515
Congress Member Profile|U.S. Representative|Republican|North Carolina District 8

Mark Harris

Mark Everette Harris is an American Baptist pastor and politician from North Carolina. A member of the Republican Party, he is the U.S. representative for North Carolina's 8th congressional district since 2025.

Source: WikipediaView full (CC BY-SA)
Voting Record — 517
Yes75%
No24%
Present0%
Not Voting0%
Party align92%
Cross-party1%
SoupScore
District Map

Congressional District 8

U.S. Census Bureau boundary data.
Mark Harris headshot
Mark Harris
U.S. RepresentativeRepublicanNorth Carolina District 8
SoupScore
Mark's ATmosphere Activity
20 recent posts · 14 sponsored · 69 cosponsored
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Recent ATmosphere posts, sponsorships, and cosponsorships.

Sorry, I made my own mistake in this thread! THR wrote that Perrine got an Oscar NOMINATION for two Superman movies, which is just as wrong, but differently wrong. Post in rage, repent in leisure.
Sorry to rant but I'm doing so as someone deep into my third act. At every stage, I benefited from editors who had faith in me, colleagues who taught me, writers I wanted to be like. When the very people who should be giving younger writers those chances go on about AI, they are failing their field.
A thriving community of culture writing makes everyone in it smarter; we learn from colleagues, from competitors, from writers who are better than we are! A community that devalues knowledge and accuracy demeans and degrades everyone in it and everyone it's trying to reach. We have to do better.
Today I reposted an obit for Valerie Perrine, who "won an Oscar for two Superman movies." I don't want to beat up whoever wrote that--unless it was a what, not a who--but @THR.com, I can introduce you to half a dozen people who would spot the first AND second mistake in that post in ten seconds.
I can't recall a time when more talented reporters and writers on movies and culture who have real skill and knowledge are struggling to find a foothold. We live in an "Everyone's an expert" era. But everyone isn't. Editors: Please take a chance on folks you haven't tried before. Read their clips!
Come on, this is not that hard. Valerie Perrine earned her Best Actress nomination--and she did earn it--for her vulnerable, touching performance in Bob Fosse's 1974 film Lenny. She was a fun, spirited presence in many subsequent movies made by an industry that didn't know what to do with her. RIP.
"I must say, Boseman impressed me. I didn't expect to find Donna Karan."--wicked city woman to bff Michelle Pfeiffer after a shopping trip. The actress playing the part, Rebecca Spence, does a really nice job, but not even a drag queen doing Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestley could sell that line.
I'm now up to a scene in which the Big City characters explain to the Big Sky character, who has never heard of this fancy contraption called a "Peloton" because he is a Man of the Land, that nobody rides a bike in New York City (played by Fort Worth) because you "get robbed." Taylor, who hurt you?
I am 17 mins into E4 of The Madison and I am starting to understand it not as a narrative but as a meditation room, a tranquilizer, the music that plays during a massage. Come, leave, listen, don't, depart, return. It doesn't matter. The characters will be in the same place saying the same things.
The idea that a pro-Israel group perniciously bent Hollywood to its will with a takedown campaign is a serious claim, and one that reinforces some bad stereotypes. There is no evidence that happened here. If anything, the movie was a surprise nominee, powered by voters saying "You HAVE to see this."
With respect, I don't think this movie lost because of this pretty ineffectual smear campaign. One group of Oscar voters elevated it from 90 submissions to the top 15; then another elevated it to the top 5. It is excruciatingly difficult to sit through and it lost to a movie with nine nominations.>
'The Voice of Hind Rajab' didn't win an Oscar tonight. Here's a reminder of the smear campaign it faced in Hollywood:
It's sort of funny/sad that for all of our hourly rage here, if November turns out to be a wave election, it will probably be for the most ordinary and traditional of reasons: People don't like the way things are going and they're tired of the man/party in charge.
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Voting History
517 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
2026-01-08H.R. 6938 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2026-01-08H.R. 6938 (119th)Retaining Divisions B and CYESYESPassed
2026-01-08H.R. 6938 (119th)Retaining Division ANOYESPassed
2026-01-07H. Res. 780 (119th)Motion to DischargeNONOPassed
2026-01-07H. Res. 977 (119th)Approve resolutionYESYESPassed
2026-01-07H. Res. 977 (119th)End debate nowYESYESPassed
2026-01-06Call of the HousePRESENTPassed
2025-12-18H.R. 498 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-18H.R. 498 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 845 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-18H.R. 845 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 1366 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-18H.R. 1366 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 4776 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-18H.R. 4776 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 4776 (119th)Approve amendmentYESYESFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 4776 (119th)Approve amendmentYESYESFailed
2025-12-18H.R. 4776 (119th)Approve amendmentYESYESFailed
2025-12-17H.R. 3492 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-17H.R. 3492 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-17H.R. 6703 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-17H.R. 6703 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-17H.R. 3616 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-17H. Con. Res. 64 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOFailed
2025-12-17H. Con. Res. 61 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOFailed
2025-12-17H. Res. 953 (119th)Approve resolutionYESYESPassed
2025-12-17H. Res. 953 (119th)End debate nowYESYESPassed
2025-12-16H.R. 3632 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-16H.R. 3632 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-16H.R. 4371 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-16H.R. 4371 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-16H. Res. 951 (119th)Approve resolutionYESYESPassed
2025-12-16H. Res. 951 (119th)End debate nowYESYESPassed
2025-12-16H.R. 3187 (119th)Fast-track passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-15S. 284 (119th)Fast-track passageNOYESPassed
2025-12-12H.R. 3668 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-12H.R. 3668 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-11H.R. 2550 (119th)Final passageNONOPassed
2025-12-11H. Res. 432 (119th)Approve resolutionNONOPassed
2025-12-11H.R. 3898 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-11H.R. 3898 (119th)Send back to committeeNONOFailed
2025-12-11H.R. 3383 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-11H.R. 3383 (119th)Approve amendmentNONOFailed
2025-12-11H.R. 3383 (119th)Approve amendmentNONOFailed
2025-12-11H.R. 3383 (119th)Approve amendmentYESNOFailed
2025-12-11H.R. 3638 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-11H.R. 3628 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed
2025-12-11H. Res. 939 (119th)Kill the motionYESYESPassed
2025-12-10H. Res. 432 (119th)Motion to DischargeNONOPassed
2025-12-10S. 1071 (119th)Final passageYESYESPassed

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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