Public-source voter research

See where federal lawmakers stand on Bitcoin.

Track public Bitcoin positions from senators and House members, review source-backed policy signals, and explore educational resources for voters who care about digital asset policy.

Why this exists

Bitcoin voters need better source-backed summaries.

Track signals, not slogans

Each profile combines direct statements, legislation, and public actions into a plain-language summary.

Separate certainty from opinion

A senator can look favorable to Bitcoin while still having only medium-confidence evidence. Both should be visible.

Help newcomers learn fast

A resource section gives voters context before they try to judge Bitcoin policy on campaign vibes alone.

Legislation tracker

Bitcoin-specific bills and executive actions

View federal bills and executive actions that directly affect Bitcoin itself, with status, source links, and senator vote information where a recorded vote exists.

The policy tracker is limited to Bitcoin-specific federal measures so broader crypto and stablecoin actions do not muddy the picture.

Open policy tracker

Federal lawmaker directory

Public Bitcoin lawmaker tracker

Filter senators and representatives, then open a card to read the summary, confidence level, and cited public sources.

Classification model

Simple labels keep the site understandable.

Learning links

Bitcoin resources for voters

External links here are educational starting points, not endorsements of every opinion on those sites.

For campaigns and offices

Respond directly to the site’s Bitcoin policy survey.

Offices and campaigns can submit an official position so voters can compare public records with direct responses.

Help improve the record

Missing a lawmaker, quote, vote, or source?

Visitors can submit proposed additions or corrections through a structured suggestion form.

Use the suggestion page to flag missing lawmakers, public statements, broken links, outdated vote status, or any source that should be reviewed.

Open suggestion form

Methodology

How senator positions are classified