Problem Solvers Caucus
The Problem Solvers Caucus is a bipartisan caucus in the United States House of Representatives consisting of an equal number of Republican and Democratic members committed to developing pragmatic solutions to major national policy challenges through cross-party collaboration.[1]
Established in 2017 with roots in the centrist organization No Labels, the caucus requires endorsement of legislation to achieve at least 75% internal support, including majority approval from both parties, aiming to bypass partisan gridlock via structured debate and consensus-building.[2][3][1]
Led by co-chairs Representative Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) and Representative Tom Suozzi (D-NY) in the 119th Congress, the group maintains around 50 members who pledge to prioritize problem-solving over ideology.[4][5]
Among its notable efforts, the caucus has endorsed over 30 bipartisan bills in the 118th Congress covering immigration, infrastructure, and border security, contributed to averting a 2023 government shutdown, and supported conservation measures like the Great American Outdoors Act, which permanently funds the Land and Water Conservation Fund.[6][7][6]
However, the caucus has encountered internal divisions, particularly during the October 2023 removal of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, when Democratic members joined conservatives in voting against him, leading Republican participants to threaten departure and highlighting tensions over party loyalty versus bipartisan commitments.[8][9]
Formation and Organizational Structure
Founding and Initial Launch
The Problem Solvers Caucus was established in January 2017 during the 115th United States Congress as a bipartisan group of House representatives committed to advancing pragmatic, cross-party legislation.[3] It originated from discussions organized by the centrist advocacy group No Labels, which had convened informal bipartisan meetings among lawmakers as early as 2014 to address congressional gridlock.[3] The caucus's structure emphasized equal membership from Democrats and Republicans—initially around 40 members total—to enforce balanced voting requirements and prioritize solutions over partisan posturing.[2] Initial leadership included co-chairs Representatives Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) and Tom Reed (R-NY), who focused on building a coalition for fiscal responsibility and policy innovation.[10] The group's launch coincided with efforts to influence major debates, such as healthcare reform amid the Republican-led push to repeal the Affordable Care Act. On July 31, 2017, the caucus released its inaugural policy proposal: a bipartisan framework to stabilize healthcare markets, reduce premiums, and expand coverage options without full repeal, marking its first substantive intervention in legislative negotiations.[11] This action underscored the caucus's intent to serve as a counterweight to ideological extremes in both parties, though early successes were limited by broader partisan dynamics.[12]Leadership and Co-Chairs
The Problem Solvers Caucus maintains a bipartisan leadership structure featuring two co-chairs—one Democrat and one Republican—elected by caucus members at the outset of each congressional session to direct its operations and negotiation efforts. This arrangement ensures balanced representation and facilitates cross-party collaboration on legislative priorities. The co-chairs preside over the caucus's executive council, which includes vice chairs, whips, and policy committee leads responsible for coordinating member input and advancing proposals.[4] The caucus was established in 2017 with Representatives Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) and Tom Reed (R-NY) as its founding co-chairs, who focused on initial bipartisan initiatives such as healthcare reforms and fiscal policy discussions. Gottheimer continued in the Democratic co-chair role through the 118th Congress, partnering with Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) starting in 2021 after Fitzpatrick's election to the position, amid Reed's departure from leadership. This pairing led efforts on pandemic relief packages and infrastructure negotiations during narrow congressional majorities.[13][14][15] For the 119th Congress, the caucus elected Representative Tom Suozzi (D-NY) as Democratic co-chair alongside Fitzpatrick on January 15, 2025, emphasizing continuity in Republican leadership while refreshing the Democratic side to address ongoing gridlock on appropriations and immigration. Suozzi, a moderate with experience in local governance, stated his intent to prioritize pragmatic solutions over partisan standoffs. The co-chairs have since coordinated open letters and media appearances to urge House leadership toward bipartisan appropriations processes.[4][16][17]Membership Composition and Rules
The Problem Solvers Caucus maintains a strictly bipartisan composition, with membership equally divided between Democrats and Republicans to foster balanced cross-party dialogue.[1] This parity rule ensures that no single party holds a majority within the group, and adjustments are made as needed—such as declining applications or invitations from one party if balance would be disrupted—to preserve equality.[5] In the 119th Congress (2025–2027), the caucus comprises 54 members, with 27 Democrats and 27 Republicans, reflecting a reduction from the 62 members (31 per party) in the prior 118th Congress due to electoral losses and retirements.[4][18] Membership is not open to self-nomination without vetting; prospective members must be invited or approved by existing leadership, typically prioritizing House members from competitive or swing districts who have demonstrated a track record of moderation and willingness to prioritize pragmatic solutions over partisan orthodoxy.[19] The caucus announces its roster at the outset of each Congress, incorporating new members—such as the four added for the 119th session—while excluding those who fail to align with its commitment to regular bipartisan engagement, including weekly meetings.[4] There are no codified ideological litmus tests beyond this practical focus, though the group emphasizes recruiting lawmakers open to fiscal restraint and compromise on issues like infrastructure and healthcare.[1] Internal operating rules reinforce the bipartisan framework, particularly for endorsing legislation, which demands approval from 75 percent of the full membership, including at least 50 percent from each party to prevent unilateral dominance.[1] Leadership positions, such as the two co-chairs (one from each party), four vice chairs, and two whips, are also evenly split to maintain equilibrium in decision-making.[5] These mechanisms have sustained the caucus's functionality across sessions, though membership fluctuations tied to election outcomes can limit its size when fewer moderates secure reelection.[4]Core Principles and Ideology
Bipartisan Compromise Framework
The Problem Solvers Caucus employs a structured internal voting mechanism to ensure endorsements reflect genuine bipartisan consensus, requiring 75% support from its membership, with at least 50% approval from both Republicans and Democrats.[1] This supermajority threshold, applied to bill endorsements and policy positions, compels members to negotiate and refine proposals through cross-party dialogue, prioritizing pragmatic solutions over partisan extremes.[1] The caucus maintains an equal number of members from each party, currently 48 total as of the 119th Congress, to balance influence and prevent dominance by one side.[5] Weekly meetings facilitate this process, where members debate ideas, exchange policy proposals, and build toward the required consensus, often focusing on fiscal responsibility, infrastructure, and crisis avoidance.[1] For instance, the framework underpinned the caucus's endorsement of the bipartisan debt ceiling agreement in May 2023, which incorporated spending restraints and debt limit adjustments after internal deliberations met the voting criteria.[20] Similarly, in September 2023, it enabled support for an appropriations framework averting a government shutdown by securing the necessary bipartisan backing for targeted funding measures.[21] This approach contrasts with standard congressional procedures by institutionalizing minority party veto power within the group, theoretically reducing gridlock but occasionally drawing criticism for diluting party-line priorities.[22] The framework's emphasis on consensus has yielded endorsements for over 30 bills in the 118th Congress, five of which became law, demonstrating its role in bridging divides on issues like permitting reform and infrastructure investment.[1] However, its effectiveness depends on voluntary adherence, as the caucus lacks formal enforcement and relies on members' commitment to common-sense outcomes amid broader partisan pressures in the House.[1] By design, this process privileges incremental, evidence-based compromises—such as streamlining environmental reviews while maintaining oversight—over sweeping ideological overhauls, aligning with the caucus's goal of advancing legislation viable for final passage.[23]Policy Priorities and Fiscal Conservatism
The Problem Solvers Caucus outlines policy priorities centered on bipartisan solutions to economic recovery, infrastructure development, and national security challenges, including endorsements for permitting reforms to expedite energy projects and reduce regulatory barriers, as articulated in their September 2025 framework aiming to lower costs and bolster job creation.[24][23] Additional focuses encompass immigration and border security enhancements, such as improving asylum processes and providing resources for law enforcement, alongside public safety measures and child care access expansions, reflected in their endorsement of 30 bipartisan bills during the 118th Congress.[6][25] These priorities build on earlier agendas, like the 117th Congress plan emphasizing post-pandemic economic rebuilding through targeted investments while cautioning against unchecked borrowing during crises.[26] In the realm of fiscal conservatism, the Caucus advocates for deficit reduction and budgetary discipline, endorsing the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (H.R. 3746), which established spending caps projected to curb federal deficits by approximately $1.5 trillion over ten years via discretionary spending limits and work requirements for certain programs.[27] This support aligns with their April 2023 endorsement of a bipartisan debt ceiling framework prioritizing deficit cuts alongside debt limit increases, emphasizing "common sense" measures to avert default without exacerbating fiscal imbalances.[28] Further, in October 2020, they released principles to address post-COVID budget crises, calling for eventual spending restraint and revenue measures to stabilize the deficit once emergency responses concluded.[29] To institutionalize these efforts, the Caucus has proposed a BRAC-style commission—modeled on the military base closure process—for developing long-term deficit reduction plans incorporating both spending cuts and targeted tax increases, as detailed in their March 2025 initiative to foster bipartisan consensus on entitlements and discretionary outlays.[30] Their September 2023 appropriations framework similarly sought to prevent government shutdowns while adhering to Fiscal Responsibility Act levels, avoiding automatic cuts but promoting "fiscally responsible" offsets.[31][32] In 2025, a dedicated Deficit Working Group, led by representatives including Rep. Chuck Edwards, continued this focus by examining national debt trajectories and reform pathways.[33] These positions reflect a pragmatic approach to fiscal restraint, prioritizing structural reforms over partisan spending escalations, though implementation has hinged on broader congressional negotiations.Historical Activities
Early Reforms (2017–2019)
The Problem Solvers Caucus, launched in January 2017 by co-chairs Representatives Tom Reed (R-NY) and Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), initially concentrated on policy proposals to demonstrate bipartisan functionality amid partisan gridlock. In July 2017, the group released its first major initiative, a bipartisan framework aimed at stabilizing healthcare markets through measures such as stabilizing insurance payments, enhancing transparency in pricing, and promoting competition among insurers, though it did not advance to enactment.[11] This effort underscored the caucus's early emphasis on pragmatic, cross-aisle solutions rather than ideological overhauls, drawing from discussions originating in No Labels meetings as far back as 2014.[12] By mid-2018, the caucus shifted focus toward institutional reforms to address congressional dysfunction, proposing changes to House rules that would prioritize bipartisan legislation. In June 2018, members advocated for mechanisms to expedite bills garnering broad support, including a "consensus calendar" for non-controversial measures and protections against leadership overriding minority input on spending bills.[34] These proposals, detailed in a July 2018 package signed by 36 members, sought to reduce reliance on closed rules and empower rank-and-file lawmakers, marking the group's first structured push for procedural modernization since its founding.[35] Negotiations intensified in late 2018 following the midterm elections, culminating in the "Break the Gridlock" rules package agreed upon with incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Adopted on January 4, 2019, this reform established a discharge petition process allowing bills with at least 290 cosponsors—ensuring bipartisan backing equivalent to a House majority—to reach the floor without full committee approval, a mechanism not implemented since 1923.[34][36] Additional elements included enhanced minority party amendments on appropriations and regular order for budget resolutions, which the caucus credited with fostering subsequent bipartisan advancements, such as amendments to H.R. 1 in early 2019.[37] These changes represented the caucus's most tangible early success in reforming legislative processes to incentivize compromise over obstruction.Pandemic and Fiscal Response (2020–2022)
During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, the Problem Solvers Caucus endorsed initial federal relief measures, including the $8.3 billion enacted package on March 6 and the broader Families First Coronavirus Response Act passed by the House on March 14 and signed into law on March 18, as part of a timeline advocating for swift bipartisan action to address health and economic disruptions.[38] The caucus also released a "Reopening and Recovery Back to Work Checklist" on April 20, 2020, outlining bipartisan steps for safely resuming economic activity, such as enhanced testing, contact tracing, and workplace safety protocols to balance public health with economic recovery.[39] In September 2020, amid stalled negotiations between House Democrats and the Trump administration, the caucus unveiled the "March to Common Ground" framework for a targeted COVID-19 stimulus package, proposing $100 billion for testing and healthcare, $500 billion in direct assistance to individuals (including $1,200 payments), $290 billion for small business support via Paycheck Protection Program extensions, and $152 billion in state and local aid through the Coronavirus Relief Fund, deliberately excluding contentious elements like a national vaccine injury compensation program to foster compromise.[40] This $1.042 trillion proposal aimed to bridge partisan divides by prioritizing immediate crisis needs over broader infrastructure or unrelated spending.[41] By December 2020, as infections surged and unemployment persisted, the caucus collaborated with a bipartisan Senate group to release a $908 billion slimmed-down relief framework on December 1, followed by detailed legislative language on December 15, emphasizing unemployment benefits, vaccine distribution, education funding, and rental assistance while postponing debates over larger state aid or liability protections.[42][43] This effort pressured congressional leaders and contributed to the eventual passage of a $900 billion deal incorporated into the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, signed on December 27, 2020, averting a government shutdown and providing targeted pandemic aid.[44] The caucus's involvement highlighted its role in breaking deadlocks, though critics noted the final packages still ballooned the federal deficit without sufficient long-term fiscal offsets.[45] Into 2021, the caucus continued advocating for pandemic-specific measures, urging an immediate House vote on February 5 for a $160 billion "Defeating COVID-19" vaccine distribution and supply chain plan to accelerate inoculation efforts amid ongoing variants and economic strain.[46] Post-relief, members endorsed budget principles in 2021 to address the pandemic-induced deficit surge—estimated at over $3 trillion from cumulative COVID packages—calling for spending restraint, revenue enhancements via tax code reforms, and entitlement reforms to stabilize federal finances without reversing emergency supports.[47] This reflected the group's broader fiscal conservatism, prioritizing bipartisan deals that mitigated immediate harms while signaling concerns over unchecked borrowing, as federal debt approached 130% of GDP by mid-2021.[48] By 2022, with vaccination rates stabilizing and economic recovery underway, the caucus shifted focus from acute pandemic response to longer-term fiscal sustainability, though its pandemic-era negotiations were credited with facilitating over $5 trillion in total federal aid across multiple laws.[49]Post-Election Challenges (2023–2024)
Following the 2022 midterm elections, which yielded Republicans a narrow 222–213 majority in the House of Representatives for the 118th Congress, the Problem Solvers Caucus encountered significant obstacles in advancing bipartisan initiatives amid heightened partisan polarization and intra-party rebellions.[3] The caucus, comprising 50 members at the start of the session (24 new additions announced on March 8, 2023), sought to navigate fiscal deadlines but faced resistance from conservative hardliners demanding steeper spending cuts and Democrats wary of concessions without reciprocal Democratic priorities.[19] A primary challenge emerged during the debt ceiling impasse in early 2023, where the caucus proposed a framework on April 19 to suspend the limit through December 31, 2023, impose discretionary spending caps (1% growth for defense, flat for non-defense), reclaim unspent COVID-19 funds, and enhance permitting reforms for energy infrastructure.[28] [50] This built on earlier principles from their Debt and Deficit Working Group, emphasizing fiscal restraint to avert default while rejecting a "clean" increase favored by the Biden administration.[6] Republican co-chair Brian Fitzpatrick explicitly opposed unconditional hikes, arguing they ignored long-term entitlement spending drivers.[51] The caucus's efforts influenced the eventual Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, passed on May 31, though critics on the right viewed the compromises as insufficiently aggressive on deficits exceeding $30 trillion.[52] Subsequent government funding battles intensified pressures, particularly in September 2023, when the caucus endorsed a bipartisan framework on September 20 to prevent a shutdown by maintaining current spending levels, adding $6 billion in cuts via rescissions, and waiving the debt limit until January 2025.[21] This came amid far-right demands for deeper reductions beyond the summer's bipartisan deal, complicating Speaker Kevin McCarthy's negotiations.[53] Despite the proposal's fiscally responsible offsets, it failed to fully bridge divides, as eight Republicans joined Democrats to oust McCarthy on October 3, 2023, via a motion to vacate—highlighting the caucus's vulnerability to internal fractures.[8] The McCarthy removal exacerbated tensions within the caucus, with Republican members contemplating departure after Democrats declined to vote against the ouster, prompting fears of organizational collapse and underscoring the limits of bipartisanship in a slim-majority environment prone to procedural disruptions.[8] Several PSC Republicans, including Rep. Nancy Mace, supported the motion, reflecting frustrations over McCarthy's perceived breaches of spending commitments.[54] These events delayed House business for weeks, stalling caucus-endorsed bills on immigration, border security, and public safety—priorities the group had advanced a record 30 times in the session—while amplifying criticisms that moderate alliances struggled against base-driven extremism on both sides.[3] By late 2024, ongoing shutdown threats and rule change demands from conservatives further tested the caucus's cohesion, though it persisted in advocating fiscal health amid $1.8 trillion annual deficits.[9]119th Congress Initiatives (2025 Onward)
In January 2025, the Problem Solvers Caucus elected Representatives Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) and Tom Suozzi (D-NY) as co-chairs for the 119th Congress, alongside an executive council evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats to guide bipartisan efforts.[55] The caucus also endorsed legislation signed into law early in the session, including the Accelerating Appraisals and Conservation Transactions Act on January 4, aimed at expediting public land transactions for conservation and development, and the Social Security Fairness Act on January 8, which repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision and Government Pension Offset to expand benefits for certain public servants.[56] [57] On February 11, 2025, the caucus launched seven bipartisan working groups to identify policy solutions on pressing issues, with each group co-chaired by one Democrat and one Republican. These groups focus on developing proposals for congressional consideration, emphasizing areas like fiscal responsibility and national security. The working groups and their co-chairs are:| Working Group | Co-Chairs |
|---|---|
| Budget, Tax, Appropriations, Debt & Deficit | Ed Case (D-HI), Chuck Edwards (R-NC) |
| Immigration & Border Security | Jimmy Panetta (D-CA), Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ) |
| Mental Health & Substance Abuse | Brittany Pettersen (D-CO), Jen Kiggans (R-VA) |
| National Security | Donald Norcross (D-NJ), Don Bacon (R-NE) |
| Permitting, Energy & Environment | Scott Peters (D-CA), Gabe Evans (R-CO) |
| Tariffs, Trade & Strategic Competition | Emilia Sykes (D-OH), Young Kim (R-CA) |
| Workforce & Training | Steven Horsford (D-NV), James Moylan (R-GU) |
Key Achievements
Endorsed Legislation and Passed Bills
The Problem Solvers Caucus has endorsed dozens of bipartisan bills since its formation, with several advancing to passage in the House, Senate, or enactment into law, particularly emphasizing fiscal restraint, supply chain efficiency, and targeted reforms.[63] In the 118th Congress (2023–2025), the caucus endorsed a record 30 bills, five of which were signed into law, addressing issues from debt management to social equity adjustments.[64] These outcomes reflect the group's strategy of backing measures with broad cosponsorship and procedural innovations like the Consensus Calendar for high-support bills.[65] Key enacted legislation includes H.R. 3746, the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, endorsed by the caucus on May 31, 2023, which suspended the debt ceiling until January 2025, imposed discretionary spending caps saving approximately $1.5 trillion over a decade, and established mechanisms for permitting reforms and workforce development; it was signed into law on June 3, 2023.[27] [63] H.R. 82, the Social Security Fairness Act, endorsed and signed into law in 2024, repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision and Government Pension Offset, expanding benefits for over 2.8 million public sector retirees previously reduced due to non-Social Security pensions.[63] [66] Other 118th Congress successes encompassed H.R. 5443, the Accelerating Appraisals and Conservation Efforts (AACE) Act, which streamlined federal land appraisals to expedite conservation acquisitions and was enacted in 2024; H.R. 1831, awarding a Congressional Gold Medal to Billie Jean King for advancing women's tennis and gender equity, signed in 2023; and H.R. 670, the Think DIFFERENTLY Database Act, establishing a national online resource hub for individuals with intellectual disabilities, also signed in the 118th term.[63] In prior congresses, endorsements yielded additional laws, such as H.R. 4996, the Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 2022 (117th Congress), which enhanced Federal Maritime Commission enforcement against unfair carrier practices, imposed penalties for detrimental conduct, and was signed on June 16, 2022, to address supply chain disruptions amid post-pandemic backlogs.[63] [67] The caucus also backed S. 958, the Maximizing Opportunities for Veterans to Integrate in Learning by Bringing Science (MOBILE) Health Care Act, signed October 17, 2022, expanding mobile clinics for rural veterans' care.[68] Entering the 119th Congress (2025–2027), H.R. 633, the TAKE IT DOWN Act, endorsed for combating nonconsensual intimate imagery including deepfakes, rapidly progressed to enactment by mid-2025, mandating platforms to remove such content within 48 hours of victim requests.[63] [69]| Bill | Congress | Key Provisions | Outcome Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| H.R. 3746 (Fiscal Responsibility Act) | 118th | Debt limit suspension; spending caps; permitting/workforce reforms | Signed June 3, 2023[63] |
| H.R. 82 (Social Security Fairness Act) | 118th | Repeal of benefit offsets for public retirees | Signed 2024[63] |
| H.R. 4996 (Ocean Shipping Reform Act) | 117th | FMC enforcement; penalties on carriers | Signed June 16, 2022[63] |
| H.R. 633 (TAKE IT DOWN Act) | 119th | Platform removal of revenge porn/deepfakes | Became law mid-2025[63] |
| H.R. 5443 (AACE Act) | 118th | Federal appraisal streamlining for conservation | Signed 2024[63] |