U.S. House of Representatives
Tenure Thompson is a member of the conservative
Blue Dog Coalition. Thompson voted with President
Joe Biden's stated position 100% of the time in the
117th Congress, according to a
FiveThirtyEight analysis.
Political positions Abortion Thompson is a
Roman Catholic, In February 2006, Thompson was one of 55 Democratic U.S. representatives identifying as Catholic who signed a "Statement of Principles" that affirmed a commitment to their faith but acknowledged opposition to Catholic doctrine on some issues. They wrote that on those issues, such as
abortion rights, they would follow their conscience instead of the
church's teachings. In response, the
U.S. Catholic Bishops issued a "Statement on Responsibilities of Catholics in Public Life" that said, in part, "Catholic teaching calls all Catholics to work actively to restrain, restrict and bring to an end the destruction of unborn human life." Thompson opposed the
overturning of Roe v. Wade, calling it "an assault on women."
Cannabis In 2015, Thompson proposed tougher penalties for
marijuana growers who operate on trespassed land. The
U.S. Sentencing Commission adopted the tougher sentencing guidelines, which went into effect in November 2015, after a six-month congressional review. The guidelines were intended to increase public safety.
Environmental issues Thompson voted for President
George W. Bush's
Healthy Forests Initiative, which some environmentalists saw as a favor to the timber industry. He has disappointed some environmentalists with votes against limits to new commercial logging roads in Alaska's
Tongass National Forest and against limits to
hunting bears over bait. He was also one of only 30 Democrats to vote against an amendment to maintain roadless areas protected under the
Roadless Rule. Thompson received a B rating from the American Wilderness Coalition in 2003 and an A+ in 2004. The
Sierra Club endorsed Thompson for reelection in 2010. Thompson has voted several times to weaken the
Clean Water Act. In March 2012, Thompson and state Assemblyman
Jared Huffman voiced their opposition to a piece of water legislation that the House would be voting on, which Thompson argued would "kill local jobs, ignore 20 years of established science and overturn a century of California water law."
Foreign policy In late 2002, Thompson joined Representatives
Jim McDermott and
David Bonior on a fact-finding trip to
Iraq. During the trip, they spoke to officials in
Baghdad and residents of
Basra. They expressed skepticism about the
George W. Bush administration's claims that Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein was stockpiling
weapons of mass destruction. On March 26, 2008, Muthanna Al-Hanooti, an official of a
Michigan charity, was accused of underwriting three members of Congress to travel to
Iraq on behalf of Iraqi intelligence officials. McDermott's office was already organizing the trip when the charity offered to pay the trip expenses. McDermott's spokesman claimed the charity was fully vetted by the U.S. government. He also stated that the representatives obtained a license from the
State Department's
Office of Foreign Assets Control for the group to travel to Iraq.
Health care Thompson has supported a public option for
health insurance. In 2009, he wrote, "[b]y streamlining health care, reducing fraud and abuse, ending unnecessary testing, discouraging over-utilization, investing in smart reforms, and emphasizing preventive health care, we can significantly bring down the cost of health care." In 2010, Thompson voted for the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).
Committee assignments For the
119th Congress: •
Committee on Ways and Means •
Subcommittee on Health •
Subcommittee on Tax (Ranking Member)
Caucus memberships •
Blue Dog Coalition • Congressional Wine Caucus (Co-chair) •
Congressional Arts Caucus •
Congressional NextGen 9-1-1 Caucus •
Congressional Wildlife Refuge Caucus •
Climate Solutions Caucus •
U.S.-Japan Caucus ==Electoral history==