U.S. House of Representatives (2013–2019)
Elections 1996 In 1996, House Majority Leader
Dick Armey of Texas—a North Dakota native—persuaded Cramer to challenge Democratic U.S. Congressman
Earl Pomeroy for
North Dakota's at-large congressional seat. Pomeroy defeated him, 55%–43%.
1998 In 1998, Cramer challenged Pomeroy again. Pomeroy won, 56%–41%.
2010 On January 14, Cramer announced that he would run for North Dakota's seat in the
United States House of Representatives for a third time in the
2010 election. In early 2010, he appeared at North Dakota town hall meetings, where he opposed the
Affordable Care Act. Cramer attended numerous
Tea Party rallies in
North Dakota, speaking about energy, taxes, jobs, and the
U.S. Constitution. At the state Republican Party convention in March 2010, former House Majority Leader
Rick Berg won the Republican congressional nomination; Berg was elected to Congress in November.
2012 In 2012, Berg retired in order to run for the U.S. Senate. Cramer decided to run for the seat a fourth time. Various national conservative groups, include
FreedomWorks and the
Club for Growth, endorsed Cramer, while Berg endorsed Cramer's rival, fellow
Public Service Commissioner Brian Kalk. In the Republican primary election in June 2012, Cramer received 54,405 votes (54%) to Kalk's 45,415 (45%). In the November 2012 general election Cramer defeated Democratic-NPL
State Representative Pam Gulleson, with 173,585 votes (55%) to Gulleson's 131,870 (42%).
Libertarian Party candidate Eric Olson received about 3% of the vote. He was sworn in on January 3, 2013.
2014 In 2014 Cramer ran for reelection and was unopposed in the Republican primary. He won the general election with 55% of the vote, defeating Democratic-NPL nominee
George B. Sinner, who received 38%. Libertarian candidate Jack Seaman received slightly under 6%.
2016 In 2016 Cramer ran for a third term in Congress. He was unopposed in the primary and defeated Democratic-NPL nominee
Chase Iron Eyes, a Native American activist, in the general election with 69% of the vote.
Tenure and political positions in
National Harbor, Maryland Abortion Cramer
opposes abortion. He is a critic of
Planned Parenthood and has called for cutting off public funding of the group. In 2013 Cramer condemned the Supreme Court decision
Roe v. Wade and said an uptick in mass shootings was linked to the
legalization of abortion and a decline in religious values. The remark was criticized by the director of the North Dakota Democratic Party and in
Cosmopolitan. Cramer said, "I was asked recently by a reporter if I am afraid that some people would attack me if I speak like this... I said, 'No, I am not afraid they will, I am quite certain they will.'" In the same speech, Cramer said of U.S. society: "We have normalized perversion and perverted God's natural law." Cramer supported Trump's 2017
executive order banning entry to the U.S. by citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries, saying, "I think what Donald Trump is doing is he's pulling America's head out of the sand and facing the reality that we have not been kept very safe by current immigration and refugee policies." He is said to be one of Trump's allies in Congress and pledged to be with Trump "100 percent of the time". In February 2017, during Trump's first address to a joint session of Congress, House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi and a number of other female Democratic members of Congress wore white, a color honoring suffragettes. Cramer mocked them, saying Pelosi dressed "poorly" and remarking, "It is a syndrome. There is no question, there is a disease associated with the notion that a bunch of women would wear bad-looking white pantsuits in solidarity with
Hillary Clinton to celebrate her loss. You cannot get that weird." In June 2020, Cramer blocked bipartisan legislation to sanction China over its actions to undermine Hong Kong's independence—legislation he had co-sponsored—because the
Trump administration requested that he do so. On May 28, 2021, Cramer voted against creating an independent commission to investigate the
2021 United States Capitol attack.
Environment and energy Cramer rejects the
scientific consensus on climate change. He has said that he would support a small
carbon tax if the revenue went to
research and development on clean fuel.
Reuters has described Cramer as "one of America's most ardent drilling advocates." He supports an increase in oil and gas drilling on
public lands and cutting taxes for energy producers, and opposes what he characterizes as overreach by the
United States Environmental Protection Agency. In May 2016 Trump asked Cramer to draft his campaign's energy policy. In June 2023, Cramer was the lead Republican sponsor of the
PROVE IT Act, which would direct the
United States Department of Energy to collect data on the
greenhouse gas intensity of certain goods made in the United States and other countries, data that could enable trade policy addressing international disparities in environmental standards. He was joined by lead Democratic sponsor
Chris Coons.
Food stamps Cramer supports cuts in
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly the Food Stamp Program), and attracted controversy in 2013 when he cited a Biblical quotation several times in support of Republicans' efforts to cut $40 billion from the program over 10 years.
Gun policy Cramer said that
gun control would not have prevented the
Orlando nightclub shooting. In 2016 he criticized proposed gun control legislation, saying, "The problem isn't the U.S. Constitution. The problem is Islamic terrorism."
Health care Cramer opposes the
Affordable Care Act ("Obamacare") and voted to repeal it without a replacement five times. He has voted against health insurance protections for patients with
preexisting conditions and against the expansion of
Medicaid. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Cramer introduced legislation to ban vaccine and mask mandates. He opposed adding unruly passengers to the "no-fly" list, saying that unruly passengers who refuse to comply with mask requirements are not the same as terrorists.
LGBT rights Cramer opposes
same-sex marriage and condemned the
Supreme Court's decision in
Obergefell v. Hodges. Cramer questioned whether Ford's allegation would disqualify Kavanaugh from the Supreme Court even if true, but said that if Kavanaugh were found to have lied in denying the allegation, that would be disqualifying.
Taxes Cramer has voted to repeal the
estate tax, which imposes a tax after the first several million dollars on a dead person's estate. He supports
Trump's 25% tax on many types of imports, which may have decreased sales for North Dakota's soybean industry in 2018, but has said he believes the long-term benefits of a trade war are worth it.
Violence Against Women Act In 2013, at a forum on the
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), Cramer engaged in "a testy exchange with Native American victim assistance leaders." He later released a statement apologizing for his "tone and rhetoric" during the exchange. but opposed language in the act that would allow
tribal courts to prosecute non-Natives "for abusing or assaulting Native American women on Indian land." Cramer asked, "How could a non-Native man get a fair trial on a reservation?"''' •
Subcommittee on Communications and Technology •
Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy •
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations Caucus memberships •
Congressional NextGen 9-1-1 Caucus •
Congressional Western Caucus •
Congressional Coalition on Adoption (co-chair) ==U.S. Senate (2019–present)==