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Lauren Boebert official portrait

Lauren Boebert

R

house · CO-4

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Read the record. Not the rhetoric.

See how Lauren Boebert actually votes — against your values.

DeepSyte scores Lauren Boebert's record on the issues you care about — not party, not press releases. Take the 2-minute values quiz to see your personal alignment.

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Official websiteSee this seat's 2026 race

Alignment with your views

Sign in and take the values quiz to see how Lauren Boebert's votes line up with your views.

Prediction track record

How often we called Lauren Boebert's passage votes correctly, from their stated positions on each bill's tagged topics. Excludes “unclear” calls and abstentions.

3 predictions on record · none have been resolved by a passage vote yet. Check back as bills move.

  1. Pending vote119-hjres-172

    Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States to protect United States citizenship.

    Predicted YES
    Bill
  2. Pending vote119-s-2886

    America’s CHILDREN Act of 2025

    Predicted NO
    Bill
  3. Pending vote119-hr-1348

    Venezuelan Adjustment Act

    Predicted NO
    Bill

Consistency insights

No paired statements and votes yet for Lauren Boebert

We haven't yet found statement/vote pairs on the same topic for Lauren Boebert. This usually means either the rep hasn't taken public positions on bills that have come to a passage vote, or those bills haven't been tagged yet. The checker runs as new press releases and votes come in.

Pro analysis

AI rep analysis — Pro

Get an AI-narrated read on Lauren Boebert's full voting record against your stated values — aligned themes, conflicts, notable votes, and what to watch for.

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Campaign promises

We haven't extracted campaign positions for Lauren Boebert yet. Once their campaign website or position pages are processed, this card will track what they said vs how they voted.

Crossing the aisle

Passage votes where Lauren Boebert broke ranks with ≥75% of Republicans. Threshold catches substantively partisan splits; unanimous-ish or close votes are excluded.

45
Cross-aisle votes
  1. 119-hr-9238·Jun 11, 2026·91% of R voted YES

    To amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.

    Rep voted NO
    Bill
  2. 119-hr-2860·Jun 3, 2026·76% of R voted YES

    Northwest Straits Marine Conservation Initiative Reauthorization Act of 2025

    Rep voted NO
    Bill
  3. 119-s-4465·Apr 30, 2026·88% of R voted YES

    A bill to amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.

    Rep voted NO
    Bill
  4. 119-s-1318·Apr 29, 2026·90% of R voted YES

    Fallen Servicemembers Religious Heritage Restoration Act

    Rep voted NO
    Bill
  5. 119-s-723·Mar 4, 2026·82% of R voted YES

    Tribal Trust Land Homeownership Act of 2025

    Rep voted NO
    Bill
  6. 119-hr-2659·Nov 18, 2025·96% of R voted YES

    Strengthening Cyber Resilience Against State-Sponsored Threats Act

    Rep voted NO
    Bill

+ 39 more in the record

Recent votes

  • Nay
    To amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.
    119-hr-9238··June 11, 2026
  • Yea
    Condemning actors seeking to defraud the United States Government, and expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that governmentwide fraud and improper payment prevention reforms will meaningfully improve the financial prosperity of the United States, and that Federal program eligibility should be verified before payment.
    119-hres-1335··June 11, 2026
  • Nay
    To amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.
    119-hr-9238··June 11, 2026
  • Yea
    Fraud Prevention and Accountability Act
    119-hr-8312··June 10, 2026
  • Yea
    No Aid for Ghost Students Act of 2026
    119-hr-7892··June 10, 2026
  • Nay
    Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 5408) to accelerate workplace time-to-contract under the National Labor Relations Act.
    119-hres-1140·2 votes·Jun 9, 2026
    • ·June 9, 2026
    • ·June 9, 2026
  • Nay
    Faster Labor Contracts Act
    119-hr-5408··June 9, 2026
  • Yea
    Federal Fraud Prevention Workforce Training Act
    119-hr-8428··June 8, 2026
  • Nay
    Ukraine Support Act
    119-hr-2913··June 5, 2026
  • Yea
    Waiving a requirement of clause 6(a) of rule XIII with respect to consideration of certain resolutions reported from the Committee on Rules.
    119-hres-1336·2 votes·Jun 4, 2026
    • ·June 4, 2026
    • ·June 4, 2026
  • Not voting
    Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agency Appropriations Act, 2027
    119-hr-8646··June 4, 2026
  • Yea
    Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agency Appropriations Act, 2027
    119-hr-8646··June 4, 2026
  • Yea
    ARTIST Act
    119-s-254··June 3, 2026
  • Nay
    Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2913) to authorize support for Ukraine, and for other purposes.
    119-hres-518··June 3, 2026
  • Nay
    Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities with Iran.
    119-hconres-86··June 3, 2026
  • Yea
    Stop Child Care Scams Act of 2026
    119-hr-7726··June 3, 2026
  • Nay
    Northwest Straits Marine Conservation Initiative Reauthorization Act of 2025
    119-hr-2860··June 3, 2026
  • Nay
    Stop Child Care Scams Act of 2026
    119-hr-7726··June 3, 2026
  • Yea
    Fiscal Year 2025 Veterans Affairs Major Medical Facility Authorization Act
    119-s-2393··May 20, 2026
  • Yea
    Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025
    119-hr-2853··May 12, 2026
  • Yea
    Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026
    119-hr-7567··April 30, 2026
  • Nay
    A bill to amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes.
    119-s-4465··April 30, 2026
  • Nay
    Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026
    119-hr-7567··April 30, 2026

Recent statements

June 8, 2026press_release_house

REP. BOEBERT INTRODUCES LOCAL DATA FOR BETTER CONSERVATION ACT

Position: Rep. Boebert supports legislation requiring federal officials to incorporate state-collected wildlife data into Endangered Species Act listing and delisting decisions, arguing this promotes federalism and prevents selective use of science by the Department of the Interior.

Washington, D.C. – Today, Rep. Lauren Boebert announced the introduction of the Local Data for Better Conservation Act, the House companion to S. 4146 led by Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY). The legislation amends the Endangered Species Act (ESA) to require federal officials to accept and incorporate high-quality data collected by state wildlife agencies when making listing and delisting determinations for endangered and threatened species. “States are on the front lines of wildlife management and possess the most current, localized data on species populations,” said Rep. Boebert. “For too long, federal bureaucrats at the Department of the Interior have had the discretion to cherry-pick or outright ignore state-collected science to advance political agendas. This bill ensures that real, boots-on-the-ground data from state experts drives decisions and will lead to smarter, more effective conservation that actually works for both wildlife and the communities that live alongside it.” Background: Currently, federal listing decisions under the ESA often overlook or selectively use the extensive species data gathered by state agencies. Because the Department of the Interior can choose whether to accept or reject this information, the process has been vulnerable to manipulation. The Local Data for Better Conservation Act closes this loophole by mandating the incorporation of credible state data, promoting transparency, federalism, and better conservation outcomes. House Cosponsors: Rep. Jeff Crank (CO-05), Rep. Gabe Evans (CO-08), Rep. Mike Kennedy (UT-03), Rep. Jeff Hurd (CO-03), and Rep. Troy Downing (MT-02) Senate Cosponsors: Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-MT), Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-NE), Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT), Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL), and Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-AK). The bill is supported by the Wyoming Game & Fish Department and the National Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies. Read the full bill text HERE. Issues:Energy and Natural ResourcesAgricultureStanding up for Local Communities

environment
Source
May 20, 2026press_release_house

REP. BOEBERT INTRODUCES THE FREEDOM FROM TAXES ACT

Position: Rep. Boebert advocates for eliminating federal excise taxes on machine guns and destructive devices under the National Firearms Act, as well as the Special Occupational Tax on firearms licensees, arguing these taxes infringe on Second Amendment rights.

Washington, DC—Today, Rep. Lauren Boebert (CO-04) introduced the Freedom from Taxes Act, landmark legislation that fully repeals the remaining excise taxes imposed on machine guns and destructive devices under the National Firearms Act (NFA). The bill also eliminates the Special Occupational Tax (SOT) on Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs), delivering significant tax relief to law-abiding gun owners and America’s firearms industry. “Taxing our constitutional rights is unacceptable and unconstitutional,” said Rep. Boebert. “The Freedom from Taxes Act builds on the progress we made in the One big Beautiful Bill by completely eliminating the final NFA taxes on machine guns and destructive devices. My bill also eliminates the burdensome Special Occupational Tax that’s been crushing our small businesses and manufacturers. The government should not be imposing penalties on law-abiding citizens exercising their Second Amendment rights.” “The $200 NFA tax was never about public safety—it was designed to price ordinary Americans out of exercising their constitutional rights. That ends now. Representative Boebert’s bill would completely repeal this unconstitutional ‘sin tax,’ and Gun Owners of America is proud to endorse it,” said Senior Vice President for Gun Owners of America, Erich Pratt. “Congress recently eliminated the NFA tax on short-barreled firearms. Now it’s time to eliminate the rest of the NFA taxes once and for all. If Congress truly believes the Second Amendment means what it says, there is no excuse not to cosponsor this bill and send it to President Trump’s desk.” Background: Building directly on the successes of H.R. 1, which eliminated NFA taxes on suppressors, short-barreled rifles (SBRs), short-barreled shotguns (SBSs), and any other weapons (AOWs), the Freedom from Taxes Act removes the final two tax categories under the NFA. It also ends the Special Occupational Tax entirely, reducing the annual burden from $1,000 to $0 for importers and manufacturers and from $500 to $0 for dealers. This legislation provides meaningful relief to law-abiding American gun owners, small businesses in the firearms industry, and manufacturers while strengthening Second Amendment freedoms against federal overreach. The Freedom from Taxes Act is supported by the National Rifle Association and Gun Owners of America. Cosponsors of the Freedom From Taxes Act include: Rep. Scott DesJarlais (TN-04), Rep. Barry Moore (AL-01), Rep. Thomas Massie (KY-04), and Rep. Eric Burlison (MO-08) Bill text of the Freedom from Taxes Act can be accessed HERE Issues:Second AmendmentConstitutional Issues

gunstaxes
Source
May 14, 2026press_release_house

Boebert and Gray’s Rural Jobs and Hydropower Expansion Act Passes Natural Resources Committee

Position: The release advocates for streamlining federal permitting processes for non-federal hydropower development on Reclamation projects to reduce delays, lower energy costs, and create rural jobs.

Washington, DC—Today, Rep. Lauren Boebert (CO-04) and Rep. Adam Gray’s (CA-13) Rural Jobs and Hydropower Expansion Act passed the House Natural Resources Committee with a bipartisan vote. “I'm proud that my Rural Jobs and Hydropower Expansion Act passed out of Committee today with bipartisan support,” said Rep. Lauren Boebert (CO-04) “This is an important first step to get this vital legislation to the President’s desk. Cutting red tape and unleashing new hydropower development will create good-paying rural jobs, lower energy costs for families and businesses, and strengthen our energy independence.” “Hydropower is critical to both water storage and energy reliability in the Central Valley and across the West. If we are serious about increasing water supply and lowering energy costs, we cannot keep burying projects in red tape. The Rural Jobs and Hydropower Expansion Act will help cut through delays and create a faster, more predictable process to deliver water and generate power,” said Congressman Adam Gray (CA-13). Chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee Bruce Westerman said, “Hydropower is an important energy source for rural communities across the West. Rep. Boebert’s legislation encourages the development of non-federal hydropower projects and creates jobs for rural Americans. I applaud her for her commitment to ensuring that American families have affordable and reliable sources of energy.” Background: The Rural Jobs and Hydropower Expansion Act streamlines the permitting process and authorizes new non-federal hydropower development on Reclamation projects to include diversion dams and other facilities. Further expanding clean hydro will help lower energy costs for American families and small businesses and create jobs in rural America Current non-federal hydropower development on Reclamation projects and the associated permits can fall under both the Bureau of Reclamation and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) often requiring approvals from both agencies depending on the project. This fragmented system can lead to significant permitting delays, increased costs and other inefficiencies when seeking to develop new hydroelectric resources. This split-in-agency jurisdiction has led to nearly 70 non-federal projects being subject to a dual permitting process and a dozen projects requiring dual permits in the development stages. This legislation creates a one-stop shop to help solve these permitting issues by giving the Bureau of Reclamation exclusive authority to issue permits for hydropower development within Reclamation projects. Text of the bill as passed by committee can be accessed HERE Issues:Getting Things DoneEnergy and Natural ResourcesWaterInfrastructure and Transportation

infrastructureenvironmenteconomy
Source
April 30, 2026press_release_house

REP. BOEBERT APPLAUDS PASSAGE OF FARM BILL AND SECURES MAJOR WINS FOR COLORADO

Position: Rep. Boebert voted in favor of H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, after securing amendments including millet designation as a specialty crop, the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act for water infrastructure, and SNAP reforms, and will serve on the Farm Bill Conference Committee.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (CO-04) voted in favor of advancing the Farm Bill, delivering critical support for farmers and ranchers across Colorado’s Fourth Congressional District and the entire state. The House of Representatives passed H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026 with a bipartisan vote of 224-200. “I have always said I’m here to deliver results for the people of Colorado, and that’s exactly what I am doing today,” said Rep. Boebert. “After some hard-fought, good-faith negotiations with Speaker Johnson, Agriculture Committee Chairman GT Thompson, and Chairman of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture Andy Harris, I voted ‘YES’ to move the farm bill forward.” Rep. Boebert emphasized that her vote was secured only after she obtained significant victories for her district. She successfully included key amendments in the Agriculture Appropriations bill, most notably designating millet as a specialty crop—a major win for farmers on Colorado’s eastern plains. She also secured the inclusion of her Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act, which will finally deliver long-awaited clean, reliable water to communities in Southeastern Colorado. Additionally, Rep. Boebert has been promised a seat on the Farm Bill Conference Committee, where she will serve as a lead negotiator to ensure her CREP Improvement Act and other critical policies are incorporated into the final version of the bill. “I voted yes for our farmers, ranchers, and producers,” Rep. Boebert stated. “I have a significant seat at the table where I will work to secure massive wins for the 4th District and our entire state.” Background: H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, provides essential support for agriculture, conservation programs, and rural economies. Rep. Boebert’s vote reflects her continued commitment to fighting for Colorado’s hardworking farmers and ranchers, ensuring they have the resources and policy support needed to thrive. Congresswoman Boebert successfully advocated for key legislative wins that were included in H.R. 7567: The PRIME Act, which expands access to custom-exempt meat processing and gives farmers and ranchers more options to process and sell their livestock locally. A ban on CCP ownership of U.S. farmland, protecting American agricultural land from foreign adversaries and strengthening national and food security. Proactive forest management and wildfire prevention measures, including expanded active management of federal forests to reduce catastrophic wildfires. Responsible grazing access on federal lands, ensuring ranchers can continue sustainable livestock operations. Commonsense reforms to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) that save taxpayers nearly $200 billion over the next decade. These reforms include: Requiring states that fail to reduce their error rates to shoulder a share of SNAP benefit costs beginning in Fiscal Year 2028. Narrowing eligibility for waivers from the work requirement to areas with genuinely high unemployment, reasserting Congressional intent. Expanding the work requirement for able-bodied adults without dependents. Restricting SNAP eligibility for illegal aliens. Issues:Getting Things DoneInflation and the EconomyEnergy and Natural ResourcesAgricultureWaterStanding up for Local Communities

economy
Source
April 23, 2026press_release_house

REPRESENTATIVES MASSIE, BOEBERT INTRODUCE SURVEILLANCE ACCOUNTABILITY ACT TO PROTECT AMERICANS FROM WARRANTLESS GOVERNMENT SPYING

Position: Representatives Boebert and Massie introduced legislation requiring federal and local government agencies to obtain judicial warrants based on probable cause before conducting surveillance on Americans, including through facial recognition, license plate readers, and commercially purchased location data.

Washington, D.C.-- Today, Rep. Lauren Boebert (CO-04) and Rep. Thomas Massie (KY-04) introduced the Surveillance Accountability Act, landmark legislation that would require federal and local government agencies to obtain a warrant supported by probable cause before conducting surveillance on American citizens, in accordance with the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The legislation comes in response to the widespread use of warrantless surveillance technologies by government agencies, including facial recognition systems, automated license plate readers, and commercially purchased location data. According to the bill’s sponsors, these tools are currently being deployed without judicial oversight, building detailed databases of the movements and activities of law-abiding Americans. “For years, the federal government has treated the Fourth Amendment like a suggestion. They’ve built a massive surveillance machine that tracks, scans, and spies on law-abiding Americans without a warrant, without probable cause, and without any accountability. Enough is enough,” said Rep. Lauren Boebert. “The Surveillance Accountability Act puts the Constitution back in charge. It protects every American from an out-of-control federal government that thinks it owns your data, your movements, and your life. This is a true bipartisan issue for anyone who still believes in limited government and individual liberty.” "The Bill of Rights is not a suggestion, and Fourth Amendment protections against warrantless searches conducted by the government are not optional," said Rep. Thomas Massie. "The Surveillance Accountability Act requires government employees to first obtain a warrant based on probable cause before searching Americans' personal information even if the information sought is stored on a phone, in the cloud, or held by a third party. Warrantless searches are unconstitutional, and this does not change when the data the government seeks is in digital formats or held by a third party." The Surveillance Accountability Act would: Require all government-initiated searches and surveillance activities to be supported by a judicially issued warrant based on probable cause. Prohibit warrantless facial recognition scanning by federal and local law enforcement agencies in public spaces, including at schools and places of worship. Restrict the use of automated license plate readers (such as Flock cameras) to create persistent location databases of citizens without a court order. Ban federal agencies from purchasing commercially available location or movement data to circumvent warrant requirements. Prohibit federal pressure on local law enforcement agencies to share warrantlessly collected surveillance data. Sponsors of the legislation cited documented instances of government agencies utilizing surveillance technology against political figures, journalists, and ordinary citizens without obtaining proper judicial authorization, arguing that current oversight mechanisms are insufficient to protect constitutional rights. Full text of the Surveillance Accountability Act can be accessed HERE. Issues:Oversight and AccountabilityConstitutional Issues

criminal_justice
Source
March 5, 2026press_release_house

REP. LAUREN BOEBERT INTRODUCES THE NO FEDERAL TAXPAYER DOLLARS FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS HEALTH INSURANCE ACT

Position: Rep. Boebert introduced legislation to prohibit federal ACA funding from being used to provide health insurance coverage to undocumented immigrants, arguing that such funds should be reserved exclusively for U.S. citizens and lawfully present immigrants.

Today, Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (CO-04) introduced the No Federal Tax Dollars for Illegal Aliens Health Insurance Act of 2026, to ensure that federal taxpayer funds for health insurance coverage under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are reserved for American citizens. “American taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize health insurance for people who entered our country illegally,” said Rep. Lauren Boebert. “This bill closes loopholes that have allowed states to redirect federal health care dollars to illegal aliens and makes clear that these benefits are reserved for Americans.” “For years, sanctuary states like Colorado have deliberately exploited the system — using hardworking Coloradans’ taxpayer dollars to provide benefits to people illegally present in our country. This legislation puts a stop to that abuse and restores taxpayer-funded healthcare programs to their intended purpose: serving the Americans they were created to protect,” said Congressman Gabe Evans "Sanctuary states, like Colorado, prioritize the well-being of illegal aliens over their own constituents, and the people have noticed. Colorado has intentionally exploited a loophole to use federal dollars to provide illegal aliens with healthcare coverage. Federal dollars are for the benefit of law-abiding American citizens, not illegal aliens. I’m proud to work with my Colorado colleagues to close this loophole,” said Rep. Jeff Crank “American taxpayers expect their hard-earned dollars to support the citizens and lawful residents they were intended to serve. This legislation closes a loophole that allowed federal health care funds to be redirected in ways Congress never intended. By reinforcing clear eligibility standards, we can protect taxpayer resources while ensuring our health care system remains focused on those legally entitled to these benefits,” said Rep. Jeff Hurd. The No Federal Tax Dollars for Illegal Aliens Health Insurance Act of 2026 clarifies that states receiving federal funding through Affordable Care Act Section 1332 waivers may not use those funds to provide health coverage benefits to individuals who are not U.S. citizens, U.S. nationals, or lawfully present immigrants. The legislation also requires the Department of Health and Human Services to rescind any previously approved waivers that violate these restrictions. Background: Rep. Boebert’s No Federal Tax Dollars for Illegal Aliens Health Insurance Act of 2026 aims to ensure that federal taxpayer funds for health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) are reserved exclusively for Americans and lawfully present immigrants, not illegal aliens. This bill reinforces President Trump’s executive order directing federal agencies to prevent individuals who are in the country illegally from receiving federal benefits and closes loopholes that were exploited during the Biden Administration. The Affordable Care Act restricts federal health insurance subsidies to U.S. citizens, nationals, and lawfully present immigrants. However, some states, including Colorado, New York and Washington, have used Section 1332 waivers to create alternative coverage programs that may extend federally funded benefits to individuals who are not legally authorized to be in the country. Without clear statutory limits, these waivers can continue using federal taxpayer dollars for such coverage. Rep. Boebert’s legislation explicitly prohibits the use of federal ACA funds for such purposes and directs the termination of any noncompliant waivers. Cosponsors of the No Federal Tax Dollars for Illegal Aliens Health Insurance Act of 2026 include: Rep. Jeff Crank (CO-05), Rep. Gabe Evans (CO-08), Rep. Jeff Hurd (CO-03), Rep. Paul Gosar (AZ-09), Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (FL-13), Rep. Byron Donalds (FL-19), Rep. Troy Nehls (TX-22), Rep. Mike Kennedy (UT-02), Rep. Scott Perry (PA-10), and Rep. Jeff Van Drew (NJ-02). Full legislative text of the No Federal Tax Dollars for Illegal Aliens Health Insurance Act of 2026 can be read HERE Issues:Getting Things DoneBorder SecurityHealth

healthcareimmigration
Source

Recent news mentions

Articles from a curated list of national outlets that mention Lauren Boebert.

  • Washington Examiner·June 18, 2026
    Trump blamed MTG for death threats against son: 'You deserve it'
  • Fox News·June 15, 2026
    Federal judge sex chambers apologizes former clerk impeachment push ramps
  • The Denver Post·June 11, 2026
    Victor Marx’s atypical campaign for governor — and sometimes-incredible backstory — makes him a force in GOP primary
  • Orlando Sentinel·June 11, 2026
    Letters: State weakens home rule | Controlling cat population | Unwelcome tax shift
  • New Hampshire Union Leader·June 10, 2026
    Platner unscathed, Mace unsuccessful: June 9 election takeaways
  • New Hampshire Union Leader·June 10, 2026
    Article_721df4e8 63fc 503b 8eba 15e55570c883
  • Washington Examiner·June 8, 2026
    Lauren Boebert screams 'F--- you, first of all' to Fox News reporter
  • CBS News·June 4, 2026
    House Republicans seek DOJ probe of abuse allegations raised by Epstein
  • New Hampshire Union Leader·June 2, 2026
    Tina Peters released from Colorado prison after Gov. Jared Polis reduces her sentence
  • The Denver Post·June 1, 2026
    Two Aspen-area businessmen are taking on a low-key congressman, hoping to turn Western Slope blue
  • The Denver Post·June 1, 2026
    Tina Peters released from Colorado prison after Gov. Jared Polis reduces her sentence
  • The Boston Globe·May 31, 2026
    In UFO files, some Christians see vexing questions — and demons - The Boston Globe
  • The Denver Post·May 23, 2026
    Colorado Air National Guard members to remain in Greeley with new missions
  • Washington Examiner·May 21, 2026
    Trump's revenge tour could hurt his agenda in Congress
  • Washington Examiner·May 21, 2026
    Boebert last remaining Republican from Epstein files rebellion

Source: GDELT 2.0 GKG, filtered to a curated list of national outlets. Inclusion is not endorsement; opinion pieces and reported news are mixed.

Recent stock activity

Periodic transaction reports filed under the STOCK Act — disclosed by the rep, sourced from public filings.

No disclosed trades on record.

Source: open-data mirrors of the Senate eFD and House Clerk financial-disclosure systems. Disclosure within 30 days of trade is required by law (45 for spouse/dependent trades).

Top PAC donors · 2026 cycle

Political action committees that gave the most to this rep's principal campaign committee this cycle. PAC giving is direct organizational support — industry, ideological, or leadership.

  1. 1.HOUSE FREEDOM FUNDLeadership18 contributionsMember-of-Congress leadership PAC — supports conservative House candidates and Republican priorities aligned with fiscal and social conservative principles.AI$87,100
  2. 2.PROTECT THE HOUSE 2024Leadership3 contributionsMember-of-Congress leadership PAC — supports Democratic House candidates and coordinates party fundraising efforts.AI$29,848
  3. 3.PROJECT WEST POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE4 contributions$25,000
  4. 4.TAKE BACK THE HOUSE 2022Leadership3 contributionsMember-of-Congress leadership PAC — supports Republican candidates aligned with the party's House agenda.AI$23,299
  5. 5.THE EYE OF THE TIGER PACLeadership4 contributionsLeadership or single-issue PAC — specific positions and affiliations not inferable from the name.AI · low$20,000
  6. 6.FIRST IN FREEDOM PACIdeological3 contributionsIdeological PAC — specific policy positions not clearly signaled by the name alone.AI · low$15,000
  7. 7.406 PACOther3 contributionsPAC with unclear affiliation — name references Montana area code 406 but specific political focus or sponsorship is not evident from the name alone.AI · low$15,000
  8. 8.AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEAgriculture3 contributionsAgricultural processing PAC for American Crystal Sugar — backs candidates supporting farm subsidies, sugar price supports, and agricultural trade policies.AI$15,000
  9. 9.MAVERICK PAC USA2 contributions$10,500
  10. 10.FREEDOM FIRST PACIdeological2 contributionsIdeological PAC — supports candidates and causes aligned with individual liberty and limited-government principles.AI$10,000

Source: OpenFEC (api.open.fec.gov) Schedule A receipts where contributor type is “committee.” Aggregated by contributing committee. Self-transfers from joint-fundraising / victory committees are excluded.

Top individual contributors · 2026 cycle

Itemized individual contributions over $200 to this rep's campaign committee, aggregated by donor employer. PAC giving is shown above; this section is people, not organizations.

  1. 1.SELF$8,650
  2. 2.A10 ASSOCIATES$7,000
  3. 3.M.D.C. HOLDINGS INC.$7,000
  4. 4.HERRING NETWORKS$6,600
  5. 5.SPACEX$6,600
  6. 6.FIRST SOURCE ENTERPRISES$6,000
  7. 7.VELOCITY BIOGROUP CORP.$5,008
  8. 8.AXON$4,300
  9. 9.HELIX MWR$4,000
  10. 10.AK CRUST$3,555

Source: OpenFEC Schedule A receipts where contributor type is “individual,” aggregated by the donor's self-reported employer. This is a geographic / industry correlation, not a corporate endorsement.