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Patrick Hope

Patrick Hope

Patrick Hope has served in the House of Delegates since 2010.
Democrat
Currently represents House of Delegates District 1

Voting Unity: Democratic Caucus

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How often does Patrick Hope vote with the party when at least two-thirds of other Democrats take the same position?

With Caucus
Other

  • 03/14/2026 - House: House Conferees: Tran, Ward, Wilt
    03/14/2026 - House: Conference report agreed to by House (61-Y 36-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 02/26/2026 - House: Read third time
    02/26/2026 - House: Passed House (94-Y 3-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/13/2026 - Senate: Conference report agreed to by Senate (21-Y 17-N 0-A)
    03/14/2026 - House: Conference report agreed to by House (55-Y 40-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

  • 02/25/2026 - House: Engrossed by House as amended
    02/25/2026 - House: Passed House with amendments (61-Y 37-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 02/23/2026 - House: Read third time
    02/23/2026 - House: Passed House (62-Y 35-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/04/2026 - House: Read third time
    03/04/2026 - House: Passed House (95-Y 3-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 02/26/2026 - House: Read third time
    02/26/2026 - House: Passed House (93-Y 4-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/04/2026 - House: Engrossed by House - committee substitute
    03/04/2026 - House: Passed House with substitute (63-Y 36-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/11/2026 - House: Read third time
    03/11/2026 - House: Passed House (63-Y 36-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/13/2026 - Conference Report released
    03/14/2026 - House: Conference report agreed to by House (73-Y 24-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details
  • 03/04/2026 - House: Read third time
    03/04/2026 - House: Passed House (62-Y 37-N 0-A)

    Patrick Hope:
    Yes

Bill Details

VPAP's unity score should not be interpreted as a partisan litmus test. For instance, Republicans who more often split from caucus does not necessarily mean they are less conservative than peers. It could mean they are more conservative. A nuanced reading of bills involved is needed to reach any conclusions.