Problem Solvers Caucus
The Problem Solvers Caucus is a group in the United States House of Representatives that has included members equally divided between Democrats and Republicans, with the Caucus' stated goal of fostering bipartisan cooperation on key policy issues. The group was created in January 2017 as an outgrowth of meetings held by political organization No Labels as early as 2014. It is co-chaired by Tom Suozzi and Brian Fitzpatrick as of 2025.
History
The Problem Solvers Caucus developed over time as an outgrowth of informal meetings organized by group No Labels. No Labels spent years on Capitol Hill working to get members in a room to talk with colleagues from the other party. These informal "get to know you" meetings led to more substantive cooperation across the aisle, including the introduction of nine bipartisan bills to reduce government waste and inefficiency, and the introduction of the No Budget, No Pay Act of 2013 and the Medicare "doc fix" in 2015.Over time, No Labels continued to organize members into a more cohesive group and eventually branded the group the "Problem Solvers" and recruited its first two co-chairs, Rep. Reid Ribble and Rep. Kurt Schrader. This group of members organized by No Labels also signed a resolution calling for both parties to unify behind a National Strategic Agenda with four goals: job creation, balancing the budget, securing Medicare and Social Security, and energy security.
Then co-chairs Reed and Gottheimer said in 2017, "We all knew the partisanship in Washington had gotten out of control and felt the need to create a bipartisan group committed to getting to 'yes' on important issues. We have agreed to vote together for any policy proposal that garners the support of 75 percent of the entire Problem Solvers Caucus, as well as 51 percent of both the Democrats and Republicans in the caucus." To ensure party balance, a new member can only join the caucus when a member of the opposing party joins at the same time.
Healthcare reform
During the week of August 4, 2017, the 43-member House Problem Solvers Caucus released a compromise to shore up the struggling insurance exchanges. The proposal focused on the skyrocketing cost of individual health insurance premiums. At the time, the Trump administration considered suspending cost-sharing payments that defray out-of-pocket payments like deductibles and co-payments, a move which insurers said could cause premiums to rise by 15 percent or more.The second part of the Problem Solvers plan would have provided relief to help states deal with the high cost of pre-existing and chronic conditions. The relief is provided through a dedicated stability fund that states could use to reduce premiums and limit losses for providing coverage for these high-cost patients. The third part of the plan provides relief to certain businesses from the mandate that they provide insurance to full-time employees. It also defines "full time" as a 40-hour workweek to discourage businesses from manipulating employees' weekly hours to skirt the mandate.
The plan would have also eliminated the Medical Device Tax, an excise charge of 2.3 percent, which opponents claim is passed onto consumers and reduces funds for research and development.
Congressional rules reform
After the 2018 midterm elections, the Problem Solvers Caucus and House Democratic Leadership negotiated a package that reformed the rules of the House. The Washington Posts Editorial Board predicted that those new rules should "ease consideration of bipartisan amendments, create a 'consensus calendar' to reserve time for bills with wide bipartisan support and make it harder for extremists on the House’s wings to threaten to oust the speaker." Some on the left argued against the changes saying they would essentially weaken Speaker Pelosi and the Democrats in the House.COVID-19 relief
In September 2020, the Problem Solvers released their "March to Common Ground" COVID-19 relief package, an outline for a Congressional bipartisan compromise that showed that members of both parties were willing to listen to each other in order to craft legislation.Capitol riot and reaction
On May 18, 2021, the Problem Solvers Caucus endorsed bipartisan legislation to investigate the attack on the Capitol. However, the next day only 18 of 28 Republican Problem Solvers voted in support of creating a bipartisan commission to lead the investigation.Ousting of McCarthy
After the 2023 October Continuing Resolution was passed on September 30, 2023, Congressman Matt Gaetz presented the motion to vacate against Speaker Kevin McCarthy on October 3, in which all Democrats voted to vacate alongside eight Republicans. Republican members of the Problem Solvers Caucus criticized their Democratic counterparts for not defending McCarthy after he passed a bipartisan bill, considering it an undermining of bipartisanship credibility, although Nancy Mace, a Republican member of the Problem Solvers Caucus herself, also voted alongside Democrats to remove McCarthy. Within the caucus, the Republican argument that defending the Speaker would protect the institution was met with the Democratic rebuttal that McCarthy refused to certify the 2020 election. The schism formed from this event persisted long after the vote, with the caucus acting only in small groups rather than as a 64-member bloc for bipartisan issues. Republican members were looking at removing Democratic members who did not cross the aisle often enough, while Democratic members believed the caucus were not doing enough to combat the far-right influence in the general GOP.119th Congress
After the results of the 2024 United States [House of Representatives elections] showed the 119th United States Congress will have an even narrower Republican majority than the 118th had, the group met as a whole for the first time in a year.Membership
This group includes 49 members as of March 6, 2025: 26 Democrats and 23 Republicans.Democrats
- Salud Carbajal of California
- Ed Case of Hawaii
- Jim Costa of California
- Angie Craig of Minnesota
- Henry Cuellar of Texas
- Don Davis of North Carolina
- Debbie Dingell of Michigan
- Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington
- Jared Golden of Maine
- Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey
- Josh Harder of California
- Steven Horsford of Nevada
- Chrissy Houlahan of Pennsylvania
- Greg Landsman of Ohio
- Susie Lee of Nevada
- Donald Norcross of New Jersey
- Jimmy Panetta of California
- Chris Pappas of New Hampshire
- Scott Peters of California
- Brittany Pettersen of Colorado
- Brad Schneider of Illinois
- Hillary Scholten of Michigan
- Darren Soto of Florida
- Haley Stevens of Michigan
- Tom Suozzi of New York
- Emilia Sykes of Ohio
Republicans
- Don Bacon of Nebraska
- Rob Bresnahan of Pennsylvania
- Juan Ciscomani of Arizona
- Ben Cline of Virginia
- Chuck Edwards of North Carolina
- Gabe Evans of Colorado
- Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania
- Andrew Garbarino of New York
- Jeff Hurd of Colorado
- Dusty Johnson of South Dakota
- David Joyce of Ohio
- Thomas Kean Jr. of New Jersey
- Jen Kiggans of Virginia
- Young Kim of California
- Nick LaLota of New York
- Mike Lawler of New York
- Nicole Malliotakis of New York
- Daniel Meuser of Pennsylvania
- Blake Moore of Utah
- James Moylan of Guam
- Maria Elvira Salazar of Florida
- Bryan Steil of Wisconsin
- David Valadao of California
Former members
Democrats
In office
- Lou Correa of California
- Vicente Gonzalez of Texas
- Mark Pocan of Wisconsin
No longer in the House of Representatives
- Anthony Brindisi of New York
- Carolyn Bourdeaux of Georgia
- Joe Cunningham of South Carolina
- Elizabeth Esty of Connecticut
- Kendra Horn of Oklahoma
- Conor Lamb of Pennsylvania
- Daniel Lipinski of Illinois
- Elaine Luria of Virginia
- Tom Malinowski of New Jersey
- Ben McAdams of Utah
- Stephanie Murphy of Florida
- Richard Nolan of Minnesota
- Tom O'Halleran of Arizona
- Jared Polis of Colorado
- Jacky Rosen of Nevada
- Max Rose of New York
- Kurt Schrader of Oregon
- Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona
- Peter Welch of Vermont
- Elissa Slotkin of Michigan
- Wiley Nickel of North Carolina
- Dean Phillips of Minnesota
- Mary Peltola of Alaska
- Abigail Spanberger of Virginia
- David Trone of Maryland
- Dan Kildee of Michigan
Republicans
In office
- Mark Amodei of Nevada
- Mike Bost of Illinois
- Pete Stauber of Minnesota
- Glenn Thompson of Pennsylvania
- Chris Smith of New Jersey
- Nancy Mace of South Carolina
- Lloyd Smucker of Pennsylvania
- Tony Gonzales of Texas
- John James of Michigan
No longer in the House of Representatives
- Mike Coffman of Colorado
- Ryan Costello of Pennsylvania
- Carlos Curbelo of Florida
- Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania
- John Faso of New York
- Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin
- Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio
- Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington
- Will Hurd of Texas
- Lynn Jenkins of Kansas
- Bill Johnson of Ohio
- John Katko of New York
- Tom MacArthur of New Jersey
- Patrick Meehan of Pennsylvania
- Peter Meijer of Michigan
- Tom Reed of New York
- Reid Ribble of Wisconsin
- Tom Rice of South Carolina
- Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida
- Van Taylor of Texas
- Dave Trott of Michigan
- Fred Upton of Michigan
- Steve Watkins of Kansas
- David Young of Iowa
- Brandon Williams of New York
- Lori Chavez-DeRemer of Oregon
- John Curtis of Utah
- Anthony D'Esposito of New York
- Jenniffer Gonzalez of Puerto Rico
- Marc Molinaro of New York
Media coverage
The New York Times reported in May 2023 that the Democratic wing of the caucus is in "open revolt" over No Labels' progress in pursuing a third-party presidential ticket for 2024.Tom Reed, former Republican co-chair said in 2019, "The Problem Solvers Caucus has been finding itself in the middle of several key battles and make common cause with its natural Senate allies".
Mark Pocan, a former caucus member and co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, a left-leaning organization, said in 2018 that he was "duped" by No Labels and the PSC, saying that rather than "breaking gridlock", it was "a fast track for special interests and lobbyists."