WHERE
Where do Randy Weber's campaign contributions come from?
Funding summary
- Total raised
- $1.2M
- Total spent
- $1.0M
- Cash on hand
- $621K
Where the money came from
- Individual donors$654K(55%)
- PACs$498K(42%)
- Political parties$0(0%)
- Self-funding$0(0%)
- Other receipts$43K(4%)
Top industries
Of $116K 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$38K
- Transportation$16K
- Finance & Real Estate$14K
- Technology & Media$11K
- Energy & Natural Resources$9K
An additional $458Kin 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.
Vote-finance correlation
Data through Jul 2026 · Sources: 2 — FEC individual filings (2026 cycle), Congress.gov roll calls (119th Congress) [170]
This analysis covers 170 votes and $1,611,354.29 in donations for Randy Weber. There is a moderate negative pattern between donation amounts and yea rates. This means larger donations from a sector did not strongly align with a higher yea rate on bills from that sector. The largest donation sector was Finance/Insurance/Real Estate. Weber voted yea on 95.5% of bills from this sector. The Ideology/Single-Issue sector had the next highest yea rate at 81.8%.
Fewer than 5 other members of the TX House delegation have comparable data right now, so no peer comparison is shown.
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.
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