Every bill has a sponsor — the member of Congress who introduces it —
and often dozens or even hundreds of cosponsors who signal support.
Cosponsorship doesn’t make a bill law, but it’s one of the clearest indicators of political momentum.
1. What a Cosponsor Is
A cosponsor is any member of Congress who formally adds their name to a bill to express support.
They are not authors, but their endorsement carries political weight.
Original cosponsors sign on the day the bill is introduced.
Subsequent cosponsors join later, sometimes after revisions or hearings.
Both are displayed under “Cosponsors” on LegiList.
2. Why Cosponsorship Matters
Cosponsorship doesn’t affect the text of the bill, but it signals:
Political viability — bills with broad, bipartisan cosponsors are more likely to advance.
Constituent interest — lawmakers use cosponsorship to align with issues their voters care about.
Media visibility — a large sponsor list can attract press and advocacy group attention.
Think of cosponsors as a bill’s early vote of confidence.
3. Timing Tells a Story
When members add their names — and when they don’t — can reveal political dynamics.
Early cosponsors often indicate leadership buy-in or party unity.
Late additions may reflect public pressure or a shift in momentum.
Withdrawals (rare but recorded) can show controversy or changing priorities.
4. Reading the Cosponsor Table
On each bill’s page, LegiList lists:
Name of the legislator (linked to their profile).
Party and State — to visualize partisan balance.
These fields come directly from the official Congress.gov dataset.
5. Bipartisan vs. Partisan Support
Analysts often classify bills by the mix of cosponsors:
Bipartisan: At least one cosponsor from each party.
Partisan: All cosponsors from one party.
Unilateral: Only the sponsor; no cosponsors at all.
Bipartisanship isn’t required — but it can signal greater legislative potential.
6. How LegiList Tracks Support
LegiList automatically syncs cosponsor lists from the official Congress.gov API every day.
Each bill page displays:
An up-to-date list of all current cosponsors.
Each name linked to their LegiList legislator profile.
The list is refreshed daily for accuracy, ensuring that every name shown reflects the current public record.