The Humane Society Legislative Fund today posted a preview of its 2008 Humane Scorecard. The scorecard, which is published annually, provides the records of U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives on major animal welfare policies. This most recent report card covers 2007-2008, the two-year span of the 110th Congress.
The Humane Scorecard provides an easy way for constituents to assess how their federal lawmakers acted on animal protection issues, and it helps chart the progress of our public policy work on behalf of animals. Animal protection is more than ever being treated like the serious moral issue it is on Capitol Hill, and lawmakers are debating policies that have enormous implications for animals.
During this session, Congress passed measures dealing with animal fighting, puppy mills, Animal Welfare Act enforcement, chimpanzee sanctuaries, pet food safety, the Canadian seal hunt, and a war dog memorial. Appropriators provided record levels of funding for the enforcement of animal welfare laws and support for alternatives to animal testing, cut spending for horse slaughter, and directed agencies to take action on de-clawing of cats, humane slaughter of poultry, and trophy hunting subsidies.
The 2008 report scores lawmakers on their floor votes on legislation to crack down on animal fighting; protect wild horses and burros from slaughter; stop the imports of sport-hunted polar bear trophies; bar the trade in captive primates for the exotic pet industry; support conservation programs for endangered cranes, great cats, and rare canids; and override President Bush's veto of the Farm Bill that included core animal welfare provisions on animal fighting, puppy mills, and Animal Welfare Act enforcement.
We also rated legislators on their co-sponsorship of key bills such as those to stop horse slaughter; stop the abuse of "downer" livestock too sick or injured to walk; end the use in research of random source dogs and cats (including stolen pets) from "Class B" dealers; and require the labeling of fur-trimmed apparel; and their signing of a letter requesting funding for enforcement of animal welfare laws. Members who led as prime sponsors of animal protection legislation receive extra credit.
We hope you'll study this scorecard and use it as a tool to ensure that your legislators represent your interests in Washington, D.C. Let legislators know that you're watching and you appreciate their support for pro-animal legislation; or if they haven't done enough, let them know you'd like to see them do more. Here are some of my favorite highlights from the 2008 Humane Scorecard:
- A bipartisan group of 37 Senators and 105 Representatives representing 41 states and two U.S. territories led as prime sponsors of pro-animal legislation and/or scored a perfect 100--more than one-third of the Senate and nearly one-quarter of the House.
I would especially like to acknowledge the following 7 Senators and 23 Representatives who scored the highest possible 100+ for receiving a perfect score and also leading on animal protection legislation:
- Sen. Joseph Biden (D-Del.)