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Representative Rich Cunningham
Utah legislator profile

Years served in the Utah legislature

First session in legislature: 2013
Most recent year of service for which data are available: 2016
Total sessions served in Utah House as of 2016: 4
Total sessions served in Utah Senate as of 2016: 0

How to read the statistical profile

I present a variety of statistics about Rep. Rich Cunningham's service in the Utah legislature. I highlight differences from chamber averages using little green and red arrows. The number of arrows is statistically determined. More arrows indicate a larger difference compared to the chamber average, in relation to how much diversity there is among legislators on this metric. If all legislators introduce exactly 5 bills, then a legislator who introduces 10 is very different; if legislators vary wildly in how many bills they introduce (but the average is still 5), then a legislator who introduces 10 bills may be less different from average. The standard deviation measures this diversity.

Rep. Cunningham's statistical profile

2013201420152016
Service summary. Service prior to 2007 (if any) is not shown here. My database goes back only to 2007.
  Chamber HouseHouseHouseHouse
  District H50H50H50H50
  Party RRRR
Leadership NoneNoneNoneNone
Years in chamber 1234
Years comparison LowerLowerLowerLower
 
2013201420152016
Bills sponsored (learn more) Bills written and promoted by the legislator in his/her own chamber.
Introduced by Cunningham 2588
Chamber average 5.86.46.77.0
Difference -3.8-1.4+1.3+1.0
Comparison LowerLower====
 
2013201420152016
Bill passage rate (learn more). What percent of Rep. Cunningham's sponsored bills pass and are officially "enrolled"? (I ignore whether the governor signed or vetoted the bill.)
Bills introduced 2588
Bills passed 2371
Passage rate 100%60%88%13%
Chamber average 66%52%63%54%
Difference +34+7.8+25-40.5
Comparison HigherHigher==HigherLowerLower
 
2013201420152016
Bills floor sponsored. A "floor sponsor" is like a secondary sponsor of a bill. After a bill passes the sponsor's chamber, its sponsor needs to find a "floor sponsor" in the other chamber to usher it through the other chamber.
Total floor sponsored 2350
Chamber average 3.53.53.83.3
Difference -1.5-0.5+1.2-3.3
Comparison Lower====Lower
 
2013201420152016
Missed votes (learn more). Usually missed votes occur because of competing obligations within the legislature, not because the legislator has left the capitol.
Missed votes 13414447
Total votes held 658664699657
Absentee rate 2.0%6.2%6.3%7.2%
Chamber average 5.9%6.2%6.3%6.4%
Difference -3.9+0.0+0.0+0.8
Comparison Lower======
 
2013201420152016
"Nay" votes (learn more). Most floor votes pass by overwhelming majorities, since unpopular bills get weeded out long before they reach the floor. As a result, "nay" votes are rare.
"Nay" votes 37505955
Total votes held 658664699657
"Nay" rate 5.6%7.5%8.4%8.4%
Chamber average 7.3%7.5%8.6%7.3%
Difference -1.70.0-0.2+1.1
Comparison Lower====Higher
 
2013201420152016
Winning side rate (learn more). What percentage of the time (excluding near-unanimous votes) is the legislator on the winning side of a floor vote?
Winning side rate 68%66%66%57%
Chamber average 67%67%67%66%
Difference +1.2-1.3-0.9-9.4
Comparison ======Lower
 
2013201420152016
Ideology score (NOMINATE method) (learn more). Using W-NOMINATE algorithm developed by Congressional scholars, I calculate each legislator's relative ideology after each General Session. I describe the method here. Scores have no intrinsic meaning. They are only relative: A legislator with a higher score is to the right ideologically of a legislator with a lower scale. Scores may be compared only within a single chamber and a single year. In most years, a conservative Republican will have a score above 0; a score close to 100 is extreme.
Contact me for scores. They get misinterpreted often enough that I now provide them only to political scientists.
 
2013201420152016
Party support score (overall) (learn more). How consistently does Rep. Cunningham support his/her party? That is, what percentage of the time does the legislator vote with the majority of the other members of his/her party? Scores are usually easily above 90%.
Score (overall) 95%94%93%92%
Chamber average 95%94%94%95%
Difference +0.5+0.1-1.0-2.3
Comparison ====LowerLower
 
2013201420152016
Party support score (party-line only) (learn more). This is the same as the "raw" party support score, but we look only at party-line votes when calculating this. A "party-line" vote occurs when the majority of Democrats votes against the majority of Republicans. Although party-line votes are rare, looking at the legislator's party support score in this setting can be revealing.
Score (party-line only) 75%80%77%81%
Chamber average 81%80%82%85%
Difference -6.5-0.4-4.5-4.0
Comparison Lower==LowerLower

Votes on Rep. Cunningham's bills

Only 16 bills sponsored by Rep. Cunningham have come to a vote. Listed below are all votes held on bills that Rep. Cunningham sponsored. The votes are sorted by vote margin, with the most divisive votes listed first.

Year Sponsor Bill Ayes Nays Margin
(as % of total votes)
Type of vote
2016 Cunningham HB0086S03 45 28 23% House/ passed 3rd reading
2015 Cunningham HB0337S02 50 23 37% House/ passed 3rd reading
2015 Cunningham HB0337S02 56 14 60% House/ concurs with Senate amendment
2013 Cunningham HB0118S02 22 4 69% Senate/ passed 3rd reading
2014 Cunningham HB0116S01 62 6 82% House/ concurs with Senate amendment
2014 Cunningham HB0221 63 5 85% House/ passed 3rd reading
2014 Cunningham HB0116S01 66 2 94% House/ passed 3rd reading
2014 Cunningham HB0335 67 1 97% House/ passed 3rd reading
2015 Cunningham HB0077S02 71 1 97% House/ passed 3rd reading
2013 Cunningham HB0118S02 71 1 97% House/ passed 3rd reading