Know a team still tracking bills the hard way? Earn $250 per signup for one state, $499 for all 50 + Federal. Uncapped.
Get my referral link →Portals let your team publish a curated, branded view of the bills you're tracking, plus any hearing clips you've created, to coalition members, association members, clients, or the public. It stays live as those bills move, not a snapshot you have to re-send every time something changes. Your external audience sees exactly what you want them to see, without ever touching your internal USLege account.
If you track bills on behalf of clients, members, or leadership, you know the drill: someone asks for a status update, and you're screenshotting a bill tracker, pasting links into an email, or rebuilding the same summary you sent last week. Multiply that by every client, every committee, every member who wants to know what's moving, and it becomes a job in itself.
Portals give that audience a live, curated view instead. Publish the bills you're tracking and the hearing clips you've created once, keep it current as the session moves, and let the people who need to know go look for themselves, on a page that looks like yours.
Publish the bills your team is tracking, plus any hearing clips you've created, into a single page built for people outside your organization, without giving them a login to your internal account.
Choose exactly who sees a portal: private and visible only to its owner, shared with a specific group, or public at its own URL. Different portals can use different access levels at the same time.
Let external viewers comment directly on bills inside the portal if you choose to. Feedback stays in one place instead of scattered across separate email threads.
Post dated announcements and updates directly to the portal, written in Markdown, like a weekly status note to members or clients, right alongside the bills they're already watching.
For organizations that want a portal to look and feel like their own branded product, white-label styling is available so the page carries your name and look, not a visibly third-party tool.
Keep working in USLege the way you always have: tracking bills, tagging what matters, and creating hearing clips as they come up.
Spin up a portal from that tracking and choose who can see it: just you, a specific group, or the public at its own URL. Turn on commenting if you want viewers to weigh in on bills directly.
Post dated Markdown updates to keep members or clients current, and let white-label styling make the portal feel like your own, not a third-party tool bolted on.
A Texas state agency uses a portal today to give agency executives read access to the bills their team tracks. They pushed for the ability to comment directly on bills inside the portal instead of emailing feedback separately, and got it.
Portals are a shared bill-tracking and communication surface. They exist to publish a curated view of tracked bills and hearing clips to an external audience, and to let that audience comment on bills and read your updates in one place.
Portals are not a constituent case-management or "311-style" service-request system. They do not log, route, triage, or resolve individual constituent cases or service requests. If your team needs full constituent case management, that is a different kind of system than what portals do, and portals should not be described or sold as a substitute for one.
Bring the bills you're already tracking. In a short demo we'll show you how to publish a portal, set access to Owner, Group, or Public, turn on commenting, and apply white-label styling, all built on the tracking you already have in USLege.
A full AI-policy intelligence report across all 50 states: 241 curated bills, an AI-Friendliness Index for every state, verified legislative hearing clips in 39 states, and the sponsors driving both sides of the debate. This is the type of report USLege builds in minutes, not weeks.