Ben Cline
Ben Cline is an American attorney and Republican politician serving as the U.S. representative for Virginia's 6th congressional district since 2019.[1]
Prior to Congress, Cline represented Virginia's 24th House of Delegates district from 2002 to 2018, during which he chaired the Committee on Militia, Police, and Public Safety.[2][3]
In the House of Representatives, he serves on the Committee on the Judiciary and has been recognized for consistent support of limited government principles, earning awards such as the Champion of Limited Government from the Institute for Legislative Analysis and the Defender of Economic Freedom from the Club for Growth.[1][4][5]
Cline's legislative priorities include securing the southern border, reforming fiscal baselines to reduce spending distortions, and enhancing U.S.-Israel security cooperation, reflecting his commitment to conservative policy positions.[6][7][8]
Background
Early life and education
Benjamin Lee Cline was born on February 29, 1972, in Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma.[9] He was raised in Rockbridge County, Virginia, a rural area in the Shenandoah Valley region that emphasized community self-reliance and traditional agrarian values.[2][10] Cline attended Lexington High School in Lexington, Virginia, graduating in 1990.[9] He pursued higher education at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science in 1994.[9][10] Later, after initial professional experience, Cline obtained his Juris Doctor from the University of Richmond School of Law in 2007.[3][9] His academic focus on political science during undergraduate studies provided early grounding in principles of governance and public policy, aligning with the conservative ethos rooted in his Virginia upbringing.[10]Pre-political career
Legal and prosecutorial roles
Cline commenced his legal career in private practice in Virginia following his graduation with a Juris Doctor from the University of Richmond School of Law in 1997.[11] In conjunction with this practice, he served several years as a part-time Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney for Appomattox County prior to his 2002 election to the Virginia House of Delegates.[10] From 2007 to 2013, while concurrently holding legislative office, Cline acted as Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney for Rockingham County and the City of Harrisonburg.[2][9] In this capacity, he prosecuted thousands of criminal cases encompassing serious felonies, drug-related offenses, acts of violence, property crimes, and misdemeanor traffic violations.[12] His prosecutorial duties extended to appeals before the Virginia Court of Appeals.[12] This work involved direct engagement with law enforcement and judicial processes to uphold criminal statutes and ensure accountability for violations.[12]Virginia General Assembly service
Elections to the House of Delegates
Cline won a special election on November 5, 2002, to represent Virginia's House of Delegates District 24, which included Rockbridge County, the cities of Buena Vista and Lexington, and portions of Amherst, Augusta, and Bath counties. Running as a Republican, he defeated Democrat Mimi Elrod, capturing all but a few precincts in the rural, conservative-leaning district.[13] He was sworn into office on November 26, 2002, succeeding the prior incumbent and beginning service in the 2003 legislative session.[3] In the November 4, 2003, general election for a full term, Cline secured reelection without facing a primary challenge, a pattern that persisted through his state legislative career until his 2018 federal bid.[14] His campaigns focused on fiscal restraint through tax reductions, bolstering public safety via support for law enforcement, and resisting expansions of state government authority, themes resonating with District 24's emphasis on limited government and traditional values. These positions contributed to consistent voter backing in a district characterized by rural communities prioritizing conservative governance over urban progressive policies. Cline maintained strong electoral dominance, often defeating Democratic challengers by double-digit margins or running unopposed in general elections. The table below summarizes key results:| Year | Election Type | Opponent | Cline Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Special | Mimi Elrod (D) | Majority (precise % unavailable; won vast majority of precincts)[13] |
| 2005 | General | Democrat (name unavailable in records) | 62.44%[15] |
| 2011 | General | None | Unopposed[14] |
| 2013 | General | None | Unopposed[14] |
| 2015 | General | Democrat (name unavailable in records) | 71%[14] |
| 2017 | General | Democrat (name unavailable in records) | 72% (handily won re-election)[14][16] |
Committee assignments
Upon entering the U.S. House of Representatives in January 2019, Cline was assigned to the House Committee on the Judiciary, where he has served continuously through the 119th Congress (2025–2027).[17] This assignment positioned him to engage in oversight of federal law enforcement, judicial matters, and constitutional issues, including participation in hearings on executive overreach and the second impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump in 2020, during which he voted against conviction.[18] Within the Judiciary Committee, Cline has held seats on subcommittees addressing antitrust enforcement, courts and intellectual property, and the administrative state, enabling scrutiny of Big Tech monopolies through empirical analysis of market dominance and regulatory capture, as well as challenges to unelected bureaucratic expansions.[17] Cline also serves on the House Committee on Appropriations, with a focus on the Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for farm programs critical to Virginia's rural economy, including subsidies for commodity crops and disaster assistance that supported over $1.2 billion in agricultural aid to the state in fiscal year 2023.[19] This role facilitates advocacy for fossil fuel infrastructure and energy independence policies benefiting southwestern Virginia's coal and natural gas sectors, countering regulatory constraints on domestic production. In the 119th Congress, he joined the House Committee on the Budget, contributing to fiscal restraint efforts amid debates over $34 trillion in national debt as of October 2025, emphasizing first-principles cuts to discretionary spending.[17] These assignments collectively empower Cline to contest expansions of the administrative state and prioritize evidence-based antitrust measures against concentrated corporate power, while addressing district-specific needs in agriculture and energy.[18]Key legislative initiatives
During his tenure in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2012 to 2018, Ben Cline sponsored and championed legislation aimed at balancing public safety with limits on government practices. In 2012, he played a key role in negotiating a compromise amendment to HB 836, which restricted the routine use of physical restraints on pregnant inmates during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy, labor, and postpartum recovery, while permitting restraints in cases deemed necessary for security or flight risks based on individualized assessments.[20] This measure passed after initial versions faced opposition, reflecting an effort to curb automatic restraints without compromising correctional officer discretion.[20] Cline also advanced bills to strengthen penalties for serious crimes, including a measure addressing human trafficking that passed the House unanimously, helping Virginia establish clearer statutes where previously lacking compared to other states.[21] In the realm of economic policy, he introduced HB 1358 in the 2013 session to create a Taxpayer Surplus Relief Fund, directing state budget surpluses toward one-time tax rebates or credits to alleviate fiscal burdens, particularly benefiting rural constituents through reduced government retention of excess revenues.[22] As a member of the House Courts of Justice Committee's Subcommittee on Criminal Law, he supported deregulation efforts by opposing expansive mandates, such as unnecessary regulatory impositions on local businesses, to foster growth in underserved areas.[23] On public safety, Cline collaborated on reforms building on post-2007 Virginia Tech shooting protocols, emphasizing empirical approaches like enhanced threat identification over broad controls; this included sponsoring HB 1577 to elevate identity theft penalties to felony levels for repeat offenders, bolstering preventive measures against financial exploitation tied to broader security threats.[](https://lis.virginia.gov/bill-search/?q=eyJzZWxlY3RlZFBhdHJvblR5cGUiOlsxXSwic2VsZWN0ZWRQYXRyb24iOjc5LCJzZWxlY3RlZFNlc3Npb24iOjIw fQ%3D%3D) He further championed concealed carry permit reforms, such as HB 1161, which eliminated local fingerprint requirements to streamline access for law-abiding citizens, prioritizing individual self-defense capabilities informed by data on defensive gun uses rather than reactive restrictions.[24]Positions on state-level issues
During his service in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2012 to 2018, Ben Cline advocated for measures imposing strict limits on abortion, emphasizing informed consent and restrictions on public funding to protect fetal rights. He supported House Bill 462 in 2012, which required abortion providers to perform and display ultrasound imaging prior to procedures unless medically contraindicated, passing the House 61-35 after his backing as a co-patron.[25] Similarly, Cline voted for Senate Bill 484 that session, mandating ultrasound prior to abortion and passing 65-32, rationalizing the requirements as necessary for women to receive accurate medical information on fetal development, including heartbeat and viability stages supported by embryological data showing cardiac activity by six weeks gestation.[25] In 2017, he endorsed House Bill 2264 prohibiting state funding for elective abortions beyond cases of rape, incest, or maternal health threats, which passed 60-33, arguing such policies align with causal evidence that unrestricted access correlates with higher procedure rates without reducing underlying socioeconomic drivers.[25] Pro-choice advocates countered these with claims prioritizing bodily autonomy and access equity, though empirical reviews indicate informed consent laws do not demonstrably increase procedure rates or risks when accounting for baseline demand factors. Cline opposed expansions of state welfare programs, particularly Medicaid, citing risks of fiscal strain and dependency incentives over market-driven health solutions. In 2018, he voted against the House budget incorporating Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, which would have extended coverage to able-bodied adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level, warning of budget shortfalls akin to those in other expanding states where costs exceeded projections by 20-50% within five years.[26] His stance drew from causal analyses showing work disincentives, as expanded eligibility correlated with labor participation drops of 2-5% among non-elderly adults in early-adopting states, per federal labor data. Advocates for expansion highlighted equity gains, such as covering 300,000 uninsured Virginians, but Cline prioritized evidence of long-term unsustainability, including provider shortages and deferred maintenance in core services observed in states like Kentucky post-expansion. On firearms rights, Cline backed deregulation efforts, resisting restrictions amid Virginia debates on concealed carry and ownership, grounded in data refuting gun control's efficacy in curbing crime. During sessions with proposed limits following national incidents, he aligned with measures preserving reciprocity and open carry, arguing empirical studies across states show no causal link between stricter laws and reduced violent crime rates—Virginia's permissive framework post-2013 correlated with homicide declines from 6.4 to 5.3 per 100,000 by 2017, mirroring national trends absent control expansions. Opponents invoked public safety rationales, citing urban correlations with availability, yet multivariate analyses controlling for socioeconomic variables indicate substitution effects and inefficacy, as evidenced by Chicago's post-2010 handgun ban failure to lower rates. Cline's pro-rights posture extended to critiquing regulatory overreach, favoring business-friendly rollbacks to empirical failures of compliance burdens stifling small enterprises in rural districts.U.S. House of Representatives
2018 congressional election
Incumbent U.S. Representative Bob Goodlatte announced his retirement from Virginia's 6th congressional district on January 8, 2018, after 26 years in office, creating an open seat for the 2018 election. The Republican Party opted for a district convention rather than a primary to select their nominee, held on May 19, 2018, in Harrisonburg.) State Delegate Ben Cline, who had represented House District 24 since 2002, defeated state Senator Mark Obenshain, positioning himself as a continuation of Goodlatte's conservative legacy despite Obenshain's establishment ties and prior statewide runs.[27] Cline secured the nomination through strong grassroots support from local Republican committees and delegates emphasizing fiscal conservatism and limited government, reflecting the district's preference for aligned ideological continuity over broader name recognition.[27] In the general election on November 6, 2018, Cline faced Democratic nominee Jennifer Lewis, a former Republican who switched parties and received an endorsement from Goodlatte's son, Bobby Goodlatte, in a public rebuke of party leadership.[28] Cline campaigned on priorities aligned with the Trump administration, including strengthening border security to address illegal immigration and reducing federal regulations to promote economic growth in the district's rural and manufacturing sectors.[29] He won decisively with 60.9% of the vote (174,562 votes) to Lewis's 35.8% (103,103 votes), a margin of 25.1 percentage points, amid high rural voter turnout in the Shenandoah Valley and western Virginia counties that favored Republican consistency over Democratic challenges.[30] The outcome underscored the district's entrenched Republican lean, shaped by 2016 redistricting that emphasized rural, conservative-leaning areas, rejecting alternatives perceived as less committed to core issues like Second Amendment rights and opposition to Obamacare expansion.[30]Re-elections (2020–2024)
In the 2020 election, Cline secured re-election to Virginia's 6th congressional district on November 3, defeating Democratic nominee Nick Freudenberg with 250,577 votes (66.5%) to Freudenberg's 126,230 (33.5%), a margin of 33 percentage points. This victory occurred amid national controversies over COVID-19 lockdowns and mandates, where Cline campaigned on prioritizing economic recovery through reduced regulatory burdens and tax relief rather than prolonged restrictions, resonating with the district's rural and conservative electorate.[31] The result reflected the district's strong Republican lean, with Cline outperforming Donald Trump's statewide performance in Virginia.[32] Cline won a second term in 2022, defeating Democrat Jennifer Lewis on November 8 with 70.1% of the vote to her 29.9%, expanding his margin to over 40 percentage points amid midterm national Republican gains.[33] His campaign highlighted inflation driven by federal spending and advocated for energy independence via deregulation of domestic production, critiquing Biden administration policies as inflationary and overly restrictive on fossil fuels.[34] Voter turnout and district demographics, including post-2020 redistricting that maintained its conservative composition, contributed to the lopsided outcome in a cycle marked by economic discontent. For his 2024 re-election on November 5, Cline defeated Democrat Ken Mitchell and independent Robby Wells Jr., capturing approximately 68% of the vote in a district solidified as a GOP stronghold following continued national polarization.[35] Cline's platform emphasized critiques of the Biden-Harris administration's handling of inflation, border security, and energy policies, including resolutions condemning failures in immigration enforcement.[36] The wide margin underscored enduring support in the Shenandoah Valley and surrounding areas, with no significant post-election challenges reported through 2025.[37]Committee assignments
Upon entering the U.S. House of Representatives in January 2019, Cline was assigned to the House Committee on the Judiciary, where he has served continuously through the 119th Congress (2025–2027).[17] This assignment positioned him to engage in oversight of federal law enforcement, judicial matters, and constitutional issues, including participation in hearings on executive overreach and the second impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump in 2020, during which he voted against conviction.[18] Within the Judiciary Committee, Cline has held seats on subcommittees addressing antitrust enforcement, courts and intellectual property, and the administrative state, enabling scrutiny of Big Tech monopolies through empirical analysis of market dominance and regulatory capture, as well as challenges to unelected bureaucratic expansions.[17] Cline also serves on the House Committee on Appropriations, with a focus on the Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for farm programs critical to Virginia's rural economy, including subsidies for commodity crops and disaster assistance that supported over $1.2 billion in agricultural aid to the state in fiscal year 2023.[19] This role facilitates advocacy for fossil fuel infrastructure and energy independence policies benefiting southwestern Virginia's coal and natural gas sectors, countering regulatory constraints on domestic production. In the 119th Congress, he joined the House Committee on the Budget, contributing to fiscal restraint efforts amid debates over $34 trillion in national debt as of October 2025, emphasizing first-principles cuts to discretionary spending.[17] These assignments collectively empower Cline to contest expansions of the administrative state and prioritize evidence-based antitrust measures against concentrated corporate power, while addressing district-specific needs in agriculture and energy.[18]Caucus memberships
Cline is a member of the House Freedom Caucus, which emphasizes fiscal restraint, limited government, and adherence to conservative principles.[17][11] He also holds the position of vice chair in the Republican Study Committee (RSC), the largest conservative caucus in the House of Representatives, elected to this leadership role in December 2024 to advance priorities like reduced federal spending and policy reforms aligned with traditional Republican values.[38][39] In alignment with social conservatism, Cline participates in the Congressional Pro-Life Caucus, Values Action Team, and Congressional Coalition on Adoption, groups dedicated to advancing protections for unborn life and family-oriented policies.[17] On rights and security issues reflective of his rural Virginia district, he belongs to the Congressional Second Amendment Caucus and Sportsmen's Caucus, supporting the preservation of firearm ownership and outdoor heritage activities.[17] These affiliations position Cline within core conservative factions, prioritizing principled conservatism over broader bipartisan compromises, though he has joined select cross-aisle groups like the Problem Solvers Caucus for targeted issue collaboration.[17][40]Legislative record and sponsored bills
During the 118th Congress (2023–2025), Cline introduced 14 bills and cosponsored 333 measures introduced by other members.[41][42] Of his sponsored bills, three advanced beyond committee, including H.R. 357, the Ensuring Accountability in Agency Rulemaking Act, which passed the House on December 12, 2023, by requiring federal agencies to provide detailed justifications for proposed regulations exceeding economic impact thresholds.[42][43] A key sponsored bill was H.R. 8979, the No Bias in the Baseline Act, introduced on July 10, 2024, which sought to amend budget baseline projections by assuming continuation of current law spending and revenue levels without automatic inflation adjustments or policy extensions, aiming to reduce embedded fiscal assumptions in Congressional Budget Office estimates. In the 119th Congress, Cline voted for passage of H.R. 1919, the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act, on July 17, 2025, prohibiting the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail central bank digital currency or facilitating its development without congressional authorization.[44][45] Cline's legislative activity has emphasized oversight and accountability, including a February 19, 2025, call for an ethics probe by the Virginia General Assembly into allegations of political retaliation by state lawmakers against the Virginia Military Institute's board of visitors.[46] His record earned a 100% rating from Heritage Action in the 118th Congress, reflecting success in advancing bills through a narrowly divided House on priorities like regulatory reform and fiscal baselines.[47] Overall, across his tenure through the 119th Congress, he has sponsored 47 bills and cosponsored nearly 1,000.[18]Political positions
Fiscal policy and government regulation
Cline supports tax cuts to incentivize economic growth, including efforts to prevent the expiration of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions, which he argues would otherwise impose the largest automatic tax increase in U.S. history on businesses and workers.[48] [31] As chair of the Republican Study Committee's (RSC) Budget and Spending Task Force, he has endorsed annual alternative budgets that aim to balance the federal budget within seven years through mandatory savings of over $1 trillion by targeting waste, fraud, and abuse without altering core benefits in entitlement programs.[49] [50] These proposals critique baseline budgeting practices, which project automatic spending increases and distort incentives toward deficit expansion rather than restraint, a method Cline attributes to perpetuating $34.5 trillion in national debt as of 2024.[51] To enforce genuine spending reductions, Cline introduced the No Bias in the Baseline Act (H.R. 8979) on July 10, 2024, which revises Congressional Budget Office projections to exclude inflationary assumptions and scheduled expirations, thereby removing fiscal distortions that bias Congress toward higher outlays and revenues. [51] Proponents of Keynesian stimulus, often advanced by progressive policymakers, contend that deficit spending boosts aggregate demand during downturns; however, Cline's positions align with evidence from periods like the 1970s stagflation and post-2021 inflation surges—where federal outlays exceeded $6 trillion amid recovery efforts—correlating expanded deficits with sustained price increases exceeding 7% annually, rather than proportional long-term growth.[52] On government regulation, Cline advocates deregulation to alleviate burdens on businesses, introducing the Federal Insurance Office Elimination Act in 2021 and reintroducing it in 2023 to repeal the Dodd-Frank-created Federal Insurance Office, which he views as duplicative federal overreach infringing on effective state oversight and contributing to compliance costs estimated in billions annually for the insurance sector.[53] [54] He has opposed expansive energy regulations, voting on March 9, 2023, to overturn the EPA's Waters of the United States rule for potentially subjecting private land and small water bodies to federal control, and criticizing Biden administration efficiency standards imposed in 2024 for raising appliance and home construction costs by thousands per unit with negligible environmental gains.[55] [56] While advocates for such rules cite prevention of market failures like the 2008 financial crisis, empirical data from deregulatory periods, such as post-1980s reforms, show accelerated job creation in energy sectors—adding over 1 million positions—and innovation, countering claims of inherent instability by highlighting regulatory stifling of private investment.[57]Social and cultural issues
Cline opposes abortion and has co-sponsored multiple bills to restrict it federally, including the Life at Conception Act (H.R. 722, 119th Congress), which asserts that human life begins at conception and warrants protection under the Fourteenth Amendment.[58] He also supports the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act (H.R. 21, 119th Congress), mandating care for infants born alive after attempted abortions, and the Teleabortion Prevention Act (H.R. 729, 119th Congress), prohibiting remote distribution of abortion-inducing drugs without in-person exams.[59] These positions align with his advocacy for natural rights protections from conception, amid empirical data showing normalized abortion correlating with fertility rates below replacement levels in nations with permissive laws, such as 1.3 births per woman in South Korea as of 2023. Cline defends the Second Amendment as essential for self-defense and natural rights, earning an A+ rating from the National Rifle Association for his voting record opposing gun control measures. He received the National Shooting Sports Foundation's Dean's List recognition in 2024 for safeguarding firearm manufacturing and ownership rights.[60] In 2025, he co-sponsored the Hearing Protection Act to deregulate suppressors, facilitating hearing protection during lawful use without infringing core rights.[61] This stance draws on crime data indicating armed self-defense prevents victimization, with estimates of 500,000 to 3 million defensive gun uses annually in the U.S. On religious liberty, Cline has criticized government mandates infringing on faith practices, voting against bills endangering such protections during the COVID-19 era.[62] He condemned Biden's 2021 vaccine mandates as an unconstitutional overreach, arguing they bypassed individual conscience and threatened pluralism by coercing compliance over voluntary choice.[63] Cline's positions emphasize causal safeguards for diverse beliefs, countering intolerance from centralized edicts that historically erode tolerance, as seen in reduced church attendance post-mandate restrictions.[64] Cline prioritizes parental rights in education, supporting the Parents Bill of Rights Act (H.R. 5, 118th Congress) to mandate transparency on curricula, parental notification of violent incidents, and consent for changes to a child's gender markers or records.[65] [66] He argues parents, not federal bureaucrats, best direct child-rearing, rejecting outcome-based equity models unsupported by merit-driven evidence in student performance data.[67] This includes advocacy for school choice alternatives to public systems, enabling families to opt for environments aligning with their values over standardized frameworks lacking empirical backing for uniform efficacy.[68]Foreign policy and national security
Cline serves on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, including subcommittees focused on defense intelligence and the National Security Agency, informing his emphasis on robust intelligence capabilities to deter threats.[17] He advocates for strategic alliances that enhance U.S. security, particularly unwavering support for Israel as a frontline partner against terrorism backed by Iran and its proxies.[69] Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, Cline publicly affirmed U.S. solidarity, stating the nation must stand with its greatest Middle East ally, and voted for supplemental aid to Israel and Taiwan while opposing aid to Ukraine on grounds of prioritizing direct U.S. interests over open-ended commitments.[70][71] In national security, Cline prioritizes border enforcement as essential to sovereignty and deterrence against transnational threats like cartels and illicit networks. He co-sponsored and voted for the Secure the Border Act of 2023, which mandates completion of border barriers, expands detention capacity for 100,000 individuals daily, and funds 10,000 additional ICE officers to facilitate one million annual removals, citing empirical surges in encounters—over 2.4 million in fiscal year 2023—as evidence of policy failures enabling crime and trafficking.[6] This approach balances enforcement with targeted humanitarian vetting but subordinates aid to national priorities, rejecting amnesty that incentivizes violations.[72] Cline expresses skepticism toward multilateral institutions that encroach on U.S. autonomy, favoring bilateral arrangements aligned with American interests. He has sponsored legislation to prohibit U.S. taxpayer funding for the World Health Organization, arguing it promotes inefficient globalism over effective national responses, as seen in his support for H.R. 419 and amendments restricting appropriations.[73] Additionally, he introduced the Foreign Agents Transparency Act in 2025 to mandate retroactive registration for former foreign lobbyists, closing loopholes exploited by adversaries to influence policy without disclosure, thereby bolstering defenses against covert interference.[74] These positions reflect a deterrence-oriented realism, emphasizing verifiable strategic returns from engagements rather than unconditional multilateralism or isolation.[75]Technology and surveillance state concerns
Cline has opposed the development of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) on grounds that they would erode financial privacy and enable a surveillance state by allowing the Federal Reserve to track individual transactions without adequate safeguards.[44] In July 2025, he voted for H.R. 1919, the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act, which prohibits Federal Reserve banks from issuing CBDCs, offering related services directly to individuals, or maintaining personal accounts, requiring explicit congressional authorization for any such program.[76] [77] The legislation declares that the Federal Reserve lacks inherent authority to deploy CBDCs and exempts privacy-preserving, permissionless digital alternatives like certain stablecoins.[78] Cline's stance counters arguments for CBDCs as efficient payment tools by highlighting risks of programmable money enabling government control over spending, potential for inflation through unchecked monetary expansion, and absence of pseudonymity found in physical cash.[79] He has framed CBDCs as a step toward centralized financial oversight, contrasting them with decentralized innovations that avoid Fed intermediation.[80] On Big Tech platforms, Cline has criticized content moderation practices that suppress conservative viewpoints, advocating reforms to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to strip liability protections if companies act as editorial curators rather than neutral hosts. He argues such biases, evidenced by algorithmic deboosting and shadowbanning of right-leaning accounts, undermine free speech without fostering competition, though he defends market-driven innovation absent monopolistic censorship.[81] Cline has raised alarms over broader surveillance state expansions, including warrantless data collection by federal agencies under laws like Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act, which he views as enabling incidental collection on Americans without judicial oversight.[82] In November 2023, he joined conservatives in opposing the inclusion of surveillance reauthorizations in the National Defense Authorization Act, citing risks of unchecked "deep state" monitoring.[83] These positions align with his support for reforms requiring warrants for querying U.S. persons' data incidentally obtained via foreign intelligence gathering.[84]Controversies and criticisms
Responses to major national events
Cline condemned the breach of the U.S. Capitol by protesters on January 6, 2021, stating, "I condemn their actions," while emphasizing that the events did not alter his planned objections to the certification of electoral votes from states with unresolved concerns about election procedures.[85][86] Following the disruption, he proceeded to vote against certifying Arizona's and Pennsylvania's electors, joining over 100 House Republicans in rejecting those states' results on the grounds of procedural irregularities and lack of transparency in vote counting.[87] In response to the House's second impeachment of President Donald Trump on January 13, 2021, for incitement of insurrection related to January 6, Cline voted against the article, asserting that the legal standard for incitement of violence had not been met and that the process lacked due process, including witness testimony and evidence presentation.[88][89] He similarly opposed the first impeachment in December 2019, voting against both articles as politically motivated without sufficient evidence of high crimes and misdemeanors.) On the 2020 presidential election, Cline advocated for federal scrutiny of reported irregularities, writing to Attorney General William Barr on November 6, 2020, to inquire about Department of Justice actions to safeguard vote integrity amid allegations of procedural flaws in multiple states.[90] He reiterated this position on November 10, 2020, supporting examination of "substantial allegations" without claiming widespread fraud, and backed legal challenges and congressional objections to certification in states like Arizona and Pennsylvania where audits later identified discrepancies in ballot handling and signature verification.[91][92] Regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, Cline criticized extended state-level restrictions for imposing conflicting orders on businesses and urged a shift toward reopening, expressing relief in May 2021 when Virginia's governor lifted most mandates while highlighting economic harms from prolonged closures that exceeded benefits in low-risk areas.[93] He opposed federal vaccine mandates for essential workers, co-sponsoring legislation in 2021 to exempt them from requirements tied to government contracts, arguing such policies infringed on personal choice amid evidence of uneven public health outcomes from lockdowns versus targeted protections.[94][95]Policy-related disputes
Cline has faced criticism from environmental advocacy organizations for his voting record opposing expanded federal regulations on energy production. The League of Conservation Voters (LCV), which evaluates lawmakers based on alignment with pro-regulatory environmental priorities, assigned Cline a lifetime score of 1%, with 0% ratings in 2024 (0 pro-environment votes out of 33 scored), 2023 (0 out of 35), and 2022 (0 out of 18).[96] Specific disputes include his opposition to measures restricting oil and gas leasing reforms and limiting liquefied natural gas (LNG) export authority, which LCV characterizes as undermining climate protections.[96] In response, Cline advocates an "all-of-the-above" energy policy emphasizing domestic fossil fuel production to achieve energy independence, reduce household costs, and support economic growth, as evidenced by his support for H.R. 1 (Lower Energy Costs Act) to counter restrictions on drilling and pipelines.[97][57] He argues that overly stringent green regulations impose undue economic burdens, citing the need for reliable, affordable energy sources like natural gas and oil to avoid supply disruptions, while critiquing intermittent renewables like wind and solar for unreliability without corresponding fossil fuel backups.[98] Civil liberties groups have scrutinized Cline's positions on surveillance authorities under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), particularly Section 702, which enables warrantless collection of foreign communications that incidentally capture Americans' data. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has opposed reauthorizations lacking mandatory warrants for querying U.S. persons' data, arguing they enable backdoor searches violating Fourth Amendment protections.[99] Cline voted against FISA extensions permitting such queries without warrants, stating that ongoing abuses necessitate reforms to prevent intelligence agencies from spying on citizens absent judicial oversight.[100] Cline counters these critiques by stressing national security imperatives amid threats from adversaries, supporting targeted FISA reforms like those in debated bills to enhance transparency and limit incidental collection while preserving tools essential for counterterrorism and foreign intelligence.[101] He has highlighted FBI overreach in queries—exceeding 3.4 million on U.S. persons in 2021 alone—as justification for stricter compliance rather than program termination, which could lapse critical capabilities without adequate replacements.[102] Cline's pro-life stances, including opposition to federal funding for abortion providers and votes against codifying expansive reproductive rights post-Roe v. Wade, have drawn fire from abortion-rights advocates who label them as restricting access amid state-level bans.[103][104] Similarly, gun control proponents criticize his resistance to enhanced background checks or assault weapon restrictions, viewing them as enabling violence despite data on mass shootings. Cline upholds Second Amendment rights as fundamental to self-defense, aligning with empirical estimates of 500,000 to 3 million annual defensive gun uses that deter or halt crimes, often without firing, thereby reducing victimization rates.[105][106][107] These positions reflect a cost-benefit prioritization of individual protections and empirical deterrence over regulatory expansions amid disputed causal links between ownership levels and overall crime trends.[108]Electoral history
Virginia House of Delegates elections
Cline was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates in a special general election on November 5, 2002, for District 24, defeating Democratic nominee Mimi Milner Elrod with 10,176 votes (57.44%) to her 7,533 votes (42.56%).[109] The vacancy arose following the resignation of Republican Del. Morgan Griffith, who was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. District 24 covered rural counties including Rockbridge, Augusta, and parts of Nelson, a reliably Republican area.[14] Cline secured reelection in every subsequent cycle through 2017, typically capturing 60-70% of the vote against Democratic challengers or running unopposed in several instances, reflecting the district's strong Republican lean.[109] Voter turnout in these off-year state elections varied, with higher participation in contested races like 2015 and 2017 amid broader Virginia legislative battles. No primary challenges disrupted his nominations during this period.[14]| Year | Election Type | Opponent(s) | Cline Votes (%) | Opponent Votes (%) | Total Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Special General (HD 24) | Mimi Elrod (D) | 10,176 (57.44%) | 7,533 (42.56%) | 17,709 |
| 2003 | General (HD 24) | Unopposed | 100% | N/A | N/A |
| 2005 | General (HD 24) | Eddie Yob (D) | ~65% | ~35% | N/A |
| 2007 | General (HD 24) | Marc Milam (D) | 62.5% | 37.5% | N/A |
| 2009 | General (HD 24) | Unopposed | 100% | N/A | N/A |
| 2011 | General (HD 24) | Unopposed | 100% | N/A | N/A |
| 2013 | General (HD 24) | Unopposed | 100% | N/A | N/A |
| 2015 | General (HD 24) | Linda Rose (D) | 71% | 29% | N/A |
| 2017 | General (HD 24) | Linda Rose (D) | 72% | 28% | N/A |
U.S. House elections
Ben Cline first won election to represent Virginia's 6th congressional district in 2018, securing the Republican nomination through an uncontested primary before defeating Democrat Jennifer Lewis in the general election with 59.7% of the vote (167,957 votes to her 113,133). The district, encompassing rural areas of the Shenandoah Valley and portions of western Virginia with a population that includes above-average concentrations of veterans (approximately 9% of adults), favored Cline's conservative platform amid a national Democratic midterm wave.[110]| Year | Election Type | Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | General | Ben Cline | R | 167,957 | 59.7% |
| Jennifer Lewis | D | 113,133 | 40.2% | ||
| 2020 | General | Ben Cline | R | 246,606 | 64.6% |
| Nicholas Betts | D | 134,729 | 35.3% | ||
| 2022 | Republican Primary | Ben Cline | R | 19,620 | 82.1% |
| Merritt Hale | R | 4,264 | 17.9% | ||
| General | Ben Cline | R | 173,352 | 64.4% | |
| Jennifer Lewis | D | 95,410 | 35.4% | ||
| 2024 | General | Ben Cline | R | 256,933 | 63.1% |
| Ken Mitchell | D | 141,612 | 34.8% | ||
| Robert Wells Jr. | I | 7,980 | 2.0% |