
Jim Banks' fundraising profile is heavily weighted toward individual donors, who provided 74 percent of his $6.9 million total, with PACs and committees accounting for 26 percent. Industry-tied contributions show notable concentration in Securities & Investment (17 percent), Lawyers & Lobbyists (15 percent), and Health Services (9 percent), a pattern reflected in his individual donor base where these same sectors are prominently represented. He has filed five stock trades under STOCK Act disclosure requirements across 320 recorded votes.
FOLLOW THE MONEY
Left: who funds Banks (ribbon width = dollars) · right: their votes on bills classified as favoring vs limiting those sectors
“Favors / limits” is an AI classification of each bill's likely effect on the sector — a factual reading of the bill, not a claim about motive. Correlation, not causation. The named bills are in DOES THE MONEY MATCH THE VOTES? below.
DOES THE MONEY MATCH THE VOTES?
How Banks voted on bills touching their biggest donor sectors · 6 of 12 shown, ranked by sector money
Each dollar figure is Banks's total from that donor sector — shown on each related vote, not a per-vote amount. Correlation between funding and votes, not causation; many factors shape any single vote.
TOP SOURCES
CORNYN VICTORY COMMITTEE
PAC
TEAM BANKS
candidate's own committee
AMERICAN ISRAEL PUBLIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
PAC
OLD NATIONAL BANK
corporation
2024 REPUBLICAN SENATE VICTORY
PAC
ALIGNMENT SIGNALS
Jim Banks (R) voted YEA on 6 of 6 bills classified as favoring their donor sectors — #1 rate in the Senate
Rep. Banks voted yes on 6 of 6 bills (100%) classified as favoring his top donor sectors—Securities & Investment, Retail & Consumer, and Defense & Aerospace—the highest rate among 78 House members with sufficient tracked votes. He voted yes on HJRES25-119, a congressional disapproval resolution classified as favoring Securities & Investment, and voted yes on 1 of 1 bills classified as limiting those sectors.
Jim Banks (R) voted YEA sjres18-119; Commercial Banks is their largest tracked donor sector (11%) with 3524 active lobbying filings
This joint resolution would nullify a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule capping overdraft charges at $5 for Commercial Banks. Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN) voted YEA on sjres18-119. Commercial Banks represents 10.9% of his identifiable donor base ($1.90M), and companies in this industry filed 3,524 lobbying reports since 2022 related to this legislation.
Jim Banks (R) voted YEA sjres13-119; Commercial Banks is their largest tracked donor sector (11%) with 3524 active lobbying filings
The bill sjres13-119 would overturn a Treasury rule that removes automatic approvals and streamlines procedures for reviewing Commercial Banks mergers. Jim Banks voted YEA on sjres13-119. Commercial Banks contributed 10.9% of Banks' identifiable donor base ($1.90M), and companies in this industry filed 3,524 lobbying reports since 2022 related to this legislation.
LEGISLATION
1 sponsored
COMMITTEES
SIMILAR DONOR NETWORKS
Members funded by the same industries — overlapping donor networks may reflect shared policy interests.

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