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WHERE

Where do Eleanor Norton's campaign contributions come from?

Funding summary

Total raised
$308K
Total spent
$312K
Cash on hand
$33K

Where the money came from

  • Individual donors$81K(26%)
  • PACs$157K(51%)
  • Political parties$0(0%)
  • Self-funding$0(0%)
  • Other receipts$70K(23%)

“Other receipts” in FEC candidate totals covers transfers from other committees the candidate controls, offsets to operating expenditures, refunded contributions, and interest — not itemized donor activity. FEC's itemized filings hold the detail.

Top industries

Of $10K in itemized individual donations where the donor listed an employer. This is only a slice of total fundraising — PACs, parties, small-dollar donors, and self-funding are not included here.

  • General Business$5K
  • Construction & Building$3K
  • Finance & Real Estate$2K
  • Government$250

An additional $63Kin itemized donations couldn't be classified — either the donor left the employer field blank or listed “retired”/“self-employed,” or the employer didn't match a known industry.

BASELINE

Vote-finance correlation

Data through Mar 2026 · Sources: 2FEC individual filings (2026 cycle), Congress.gov roll calls (119th Congress) [4]

Across 4 votes, Eleanor Norton voted yea 20.0% of the time on bills related to their donor industries (0 sectors with sufficient data).

This analysis shows factual patterns in public data. Campaign contributions are legal and do not indicate wrongdoing. Voting alignment with donor industries is common across all legislators. Correlation does not indicate causation or improper behavior.

Full methodology and academic citations

Campaign finance data from FEC.gov. Totals reflect the current two-year cycle. Industry breakdown covers only itemized individual donations where the donor listed an employer. Full methodology

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