1. What Is a Congressional Caucus?
A caucus is an informal organization of members who coordinate to promote a specific cause, region, or viewpoint.
- Some are partisan, others bipartisan or even bicameral (House and Senate combined).
- Caucuses are not official committees — they operate outside the formal legislative structure.
The term “caucus” can also refer to party strategy meetings, but in this context it means voluntary issue-based groups.