
$2.6M
raised· #191 in party
0
votes recorded
0
SOONtrade disclosures
0%
votes with party· moderate
TRAIL AI
Greene's fundraising profile is primarily individual-donor based, with 68% of her $2.6M coming from individual contributors and 32% from PACs and committees, alongside $704K in party and single-issue political money. Among industry-tied contributions, her donor base shows concentration in Securities & Investment (16%), Retail & Consumer (10%), and Real Estate (10%), a pattern that aligns with the sectoral composition of her employed individual donors. She has filed 45 stock trades under the STOCK Act during her tenure in the House.
Based on FEC donor data and voting records. Statistical patterns only — does not imply causation.
DONOR MIX
Industry shares of CLASSIFIED contributions only · the long tail of small-dollar individual donors isn't tagged
$669K
tagged $
DATA SOURCES
Financial: FEC · 2022–2026 cycles
Profile: Congress.gov
Votes: House Clerk / Senate · 2021–present
Lobbying: Senate LDA · 2017–present
Trades: STOCK Act disclosures · live ingestion rebuilding
117th–119th Congress. Statistical patterns only.
+6 more
Live stock trade ingestion is being rebuilt.
We're migrating to a fresh data source for daily STOCK Act disclosures. Historical filings shown below are accurate but not currently refreshed nightly. Full real-time coverage returning shortly.
45
disclosures
0
purchases
0
sales
0
est. positions
DATA SOURCES
House: housestockwatcher.com · daily-refreshed PDF parses · 2013–present
Senate: senatestockwatcher.com · daily-refreshed PDF parses · 2013–present
Required under the STOCK Act of 2012. Disclosure regime reports amount ranges, not exact share counts.
WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING AT
Lobbying is when companies, unions, and trade associations pay firms to influence laws and regulations — and the law requires them to disclose it. Every quarter, registrants file a report with Congress detailing who hired them, how much they spent, and which issues they pushed.
This page filters those filings to the industries that also fund this member's campaign. If commercial banks gave 30% of this member's donations and also filed 5,000 lobbying reports on bank-related issues last year, that's a financial pattern worth knowing about. It does not mean the member is corrupt — it means the industries paying to elect them are also paying to influence the laws they vote on.
104,123
Lobbying filings
that overlap top donor industries
$17.7B
Reported spend
across those filings
8
Donor industries
tracked here
2017–2026
Years covered
10 years
LOBBYING BY DONOR INDUSTRY
Each row = an industry that donated to this member AND has lobbyists pushing on Congress. Bar width = reported lobbying spend.
TOP LOBBYING FIRMS
The firms doing the most spending in this member's donor industries
WASTE MANAGEMENT, INC.
12 filings
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OF THE U.S.A.
14 filings
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
12 filings
PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH AND MANUFACTURERS OF AMERICA
13 filings
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
14 filings
LOBBYING SPEND BY YEAR
How much lobbyists in this member's donor industries have reported spending each year
THE BUSINESS ROUNDTABLE, INC.
13 filings
GENERAL MOTORS COMPANY
15 filings
AMERICAN HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION
13 filings
SOURCES & CAVEATS
Data: LDA (Lobbying Disclosure Act) quarterly filings · 2017–present
Amounts are self-reported by registrants. Issue codes are mapped from the LDA's 80+ general issue codes to our 19-industry taxonomy.
An industry showing up here means it both (a) funds this member's campaign and (b) lobbies Congress on issues affecting it. That overlap is a factual pattern, not proof of any quid-pro-quo.