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Democracy Metrics

Executive Summary

This dashboard connects the Democracy requirements to public metrics, source definitions, legislation, and future congressional report card evidence. The current release is suitable for structured public display and review, but public scoring remains disabled until values, formulas, weights, evidence records, and scoring rules are formally approved.

This V19 page keeps the compact metric-first traceability view and clarifies period terminology. Each metric row shows value, unit, trend, measurement period, source, and compact review context for baseline group, period status, last refreshed date, and warnings where needed. The Requirement ID is a link to the detailed SMART-D requirements page.

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Overall Grade
Not Scored
Public scoring is disabled
Total Metrics
0
Candidate, active, and review metrics
Public Display
0
Approved for public display
Measured Display Values
0
External values with readable source text
Requirements Mapped
0
Requirement IDs connected to metrics
Domains
0
Public metric categories
Total Sources
0
Registry source rows
Source Mapping
0%
Source-defined and mapped review

System Score Summary

Overall ScoreNot calculatedGradeNot Scored
Dashboard StatusLoadingReadinessLoading
Public Display Metrics0Source Defined0
Measured Display Values0Scoring Approved0
Candidate Metrics0Active Metrics0
Last RefreshedNot availableScript VersionNot available
Baseline Alignment WindowNot availableBaseline Ready0
2026 Supplements0Needs Measurement-Period Review0

Measured Display Values

These are externally sourced metrics with readable source text visible on this page. Measurement Period means the source year, reporting year, election cycle, or Congress/session-year actually measured by the metric. Baseline Group means the dashboard comparison window used to organize values for review, such as the first 2024-2025 baseline. A metric can therefore have Measurement Period 2025 while belonging to the 2024-2025 Baseline Group. Congressional metrics may show Measurement Period Congress 119 / 2025 because the 119th Congress spans 2025-2026 and this value is the 2025 portion of that Congress. Internal readiness and Report Card support metrics are tracked in the readiness rollup and remain non-scoring.

Period terminology: Measurement Period = the actual source period measured. Baseline Group = the review/comparison window used to align different Democracy metrics. Period Status = whether the measurement period has been confirmed or still needs review.
MetricMeasurementRequirement
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Domain Summary

Domains group the Democracy metrics into understandable public categories. Domain scores remain disabled in this version.

DomainMetric Summary
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Metric Review Table

MetricMeasurementRequirement
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Diagnostics

This section is intentionally retained while Democracy Metrics are still under development. It confirms the dashboard is reading the correct JSON file.

Metrics file path
File exists
File bytes
File modified
Server load error
Client parse status
Metrics parsed
Sources parsed

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Definitions and Descriptions

This section explains how Voice to Congress uses top performing countries, benchmark sources, best-practice models, and display-only metrics. Users and reviewers are encouraged to suggest clearer wording, better sources, stronger examples, and improved descriptions for review.

TermPlain-Language DefinitionVoice to Congress UseExamplesReviewer Note
Top Performing Countries
Also called: Benchmark Countries; Reference Countries
Countries that consistently perform well across respected democracy, rule-of-law, transparency, anti-corruption, civic-freedom, and election-integrity measures.Used as reference cases to help citizens understand what better democratic outcomes can look like. They are not used as a claim that the United States should copy another country wholesale.Norway, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, New Zealand, and other countries that perform strongly across multiple credible benchmark sources.Examples should be reviewed periodically because country performance and source rankings change over time.
Benchmark Sources
Also called: Reference Sources; External Benchmark Indexes
Credible outside sources used to compare democratic systems, rule of law, corruption, transparency, and civil liberties.Used to prevent Voice to Congress from inventing its own unsupported definition of democracy performance.Freedom House, V-Dem, World Justice Project, Transparency International, OECD, International IDEA, and official election-administration sources.Each source requires a source-method review before it is used for public display or comparison.
Best-Practice Models
Also called: Best Practices; Common Features of Top Performing Countries
The institutional procedures, legal safeguards, civic habits, and accountability systems that help produce measurable democratic outcomes.Used to explain what top-performing systems have in common, such as independent election administration, transparent public records, low corruption, rule-of-law protections, civic education, and trusted public institutions.Independent election administration; transparent counting and audits; strong ethics rules; public disclosure; independent courts; free press; accessible voting; civic education.Best practices should be described as practices and safeguards, not as partisan claims.
Benchmark Source Coverage
Also called: DEM-MET-048
A readiness metric that shows whether the Democracy metrics system has mapped enough credible benchmark sources to support future comparison.Used to show whether the benchmark framework is ready. It does not score the United States, Congress, members, parties, states, or citizens.3/3 required benchmark source families mapped (100%).This is a source-readiness metric only. It is not a democracy performance score.
High-Performing Democracy
Also called: Strong Democracy; Top Performing Democracy
A democratic system that performs well across multiple measurable dimensions, including free and fair elections, rule of law, civil liberties, low corruption, transparency, public trust, and effective accountability.Used to help compare outcomes and practices, not to declare that any country is perfect.A country may be high-performing because it has free elections, trusted institutions, low corruption, independent courts, strong press freedom, and high civic participation.No country should be treated as perfect. Every comparison needs source notes and limitations.
Display-Only Metric
Also called: Active Display / Not Scored
A metric that can be shown to the public for information, but is not used for grades, report cards, leaderboards, rollups, letters, calls, or action tools.Used while metrics are being reviewed and before scoring is approved.Benchmark source coverage, vote data availability, internal QA readiness.Display-only status protects public trust while source methods are reviewed.
User and Reviewer Suggestions
Also called: Public Feedback; Reviewer Input
Suggestions from users, reviewers, researchers, and contributors about better sources, clearer language, stronger methods, or better examples.Used to improve requirements, metrics, definitions, sources, and public explanations through a controlled review process.A user suggests adding a better benchmark country, source, or procedure; reviewers evaluate and approve or reject the suggestion.Suggestions should be welcomed, documented, reviewed, and controlled before changing public metrics.

Control note: These definitions support public understanding. They do not enable scoring, grades, report cards, leaderboards, rollups, letters, calls, action tools, member scores, bill scores, or issue grades.

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