Policy Intelligence Capabilities - 60+ AI-Native Tools for Legislative Teams | Apogee

60+ capabilities across legislation, hearings, lobbying, campaign finance, regulatory filings, and a 200K+ entity knowledge graph. Ask questions in plain language - no dashboards, no boolean search.

Intelligence Capabilities

See the interactive capabilities overview → with example queries for every capability.

Apogee is an AI-native policy intelligence platform. It connects real-time legislative, regulatory, financial, and media data to the AI tools your team already uses - Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, or the Apogee chat client. Instead of searching dashboards and cross-referencing databases, you ask questions in plain language and get grounded, cited answers.

60 capabilities across 10 categories. Every capability goes beyond data retrieval - combining structured data, graph analytics, and AI synthesis to produce actionable intelligence.

How it works: You ask a question in natural language. An AI research agent selects the right capabilities, queries across data sources, and returns synthesized intelligence with citations. You don't need to know which tool to use - the agent figures that out.


Who it's for

Government affairs teams tracking legislation, monitoring regulatory activity, and mapping the influence landscape around policy issues. Replace the 4-5 separate tools you currently juggle with a single conversation that pulls from all of them.

Advocacy organizations running legislative campaigns, tracking bill momentum, identifying coalition targets, and monitoring opposition activity. Get the competitive intelligence that used to require a full research staff.

Legislative staff who need fast answers about bill text, hearing testimony, cosponsor patterns, and related legislation - without leaving the tools they already work in.

Policy researchers and journalists investigating connections between money, lobbying, and legislative outcomes. The knowledge graph reveals relationships that are invisible in flat databases.


What makes Apogee different

Most legislative tracking platforms are built around dashboards, boolean search, and manual monitoring. You construct queries, check alert feeds, and cross-reference results across separate databases for bills, lobbying, campaign finance, and news.

Apogee works differently:

  • Conversational, not dashboard-based. Ask "who is lobbying on AI regulation and how much are they spending?" instead of constructing filters across three separate tools.
  • Graph-powered analytics. A knowledge graph with 200K+ entities and millions of relationships enables capabilities no flat database can match - influence ranking, voting bloc detection, coalition prediction, entity connection discovery, and funding anomaly detection.
  • Cross-source synthesis. Capabilities that span multiple data sources in a single query. "Tell me everything about this bill" returns sponsors, cosponsors, committee status, lobbying activity, news coverage, organizational stances, and hearing testimony - assembled from six different data sources in one response.
  • Works with your existing AI. Connect Apogee to Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or Copilot via MCP - a single config file, no integration work. Or use the Apogee chat client with everything pre-configured.

Capabilities by category

Legislative Intelligence

Bill search, text analysis, comparison, timeline tracking, momentum scoring, passage prediction, and cosponsor prediction - 10 capabilities covering every stage of the legislative process from introduction through enactment.

Committee & Hearing Intelligence

Hearing transcript search, witness testimony extraction, committee scheduling, and congressional calendar tracking. Full-text search across thousands of hearing transcripts with AI-generated summaries.

News & Media Intelligence

Policy news search across 40+ outlets, media surge detection, and attention trend analysis. Entity-linked coverage that connects articles to the members, bills, and organizations they mention.

Regulatory Intelligence

Federal Register monitoring, open comment period tracking, agency activity analysis, and regulatory outcome prediction. Track proposed rules, final rules, and notices across all federal agencies, and predict which proposed rules are most likely to be finalized.

Money & Influence Intelligence

PAC contributions, lobbying disclosure, revolving door tracking, funding anomaly detection, and network clustering. Follow the money from PACs to members to legislation using FEC and SOPR data.

Network & Relationship Intelligence

Graph-powered analytics: influence rankings, voting blocs, alliance detection, coalition prediction, entity connections, topic connection discovery, and committee power mapping. 16 capabilities built on a knowledge graph with 200K+ entities. This is Apogee's deepest differentiator - no other platform offers these analytics.

Cross-Source Intelligence

Capabilities that span multiple data sources: stance tracking across press releases and hearings, unified entity activity timelines, and position consistency analysis.

Strategic Intelligence

Higher-order analysis that combines multiple intelligence types: competitive landscape mapping, coalition building recommendations, early warning systems, and appropriations tracking.

Geographic & Demographic Intelligence

Census demographic and economic data overlaid onto congressional districts. District profiles with 35+ metrics, side-by-side district comparisons, and national rankings by any indicator - connecting local conditions to legislative behavior.

Research & Synthesis

Deep research pipelines, congressional floor speech search, and expanded report intelligence from GAO, CBO, and think tanks.


Data coverage

All capabilities currently cover federal legislation, hearings, regulations, and political activity. State and local coverage is on the roadmap.

JurisdictionStatus
Federal (Congress, agencies, FEC)Available
State legislaturesComing soon
Local governmentPlanned

Data is sourced from Congress.gov, the Government Publishing Office, the Federal Register, the Federal Election Commission, the Senate Office of Public Records, the Congressional Research Service, and 40+ policy news outlets. See Data Sources for the full list.


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