With just 188 seats, House Democrats may be deep in the minority. However, that doesn't make them insignificant. In the last Congress, Republican leaders struggled to quell internal revolts and depended on Democratic support to pass several must-pass pieces of legislation, making Democrats one of the most influential minority parties in a while. And although Democrats are more liberal than ever as a whole, they are far from monolithic. Two weeks ago, we took a look at the factions within the House GOP conference, using a rubric first developed by our National Editor Amy Walter in 2013. Using five major votes so far this year, we documented how the "Coalition of the Willing" - the Republicans likeliest to support Speaker John Boehner on contentious bipartisan pieces of legislation - had grown in the last two years, while the "Coalition of the Willing" had shrunk. As the opposition party in the House, Democrats are naturally a little less fractious. Rather than thinking about the caucus in terms of leadership loyalists versus rabble-rousing rebels, it's more appropriate to think about the Democratic

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