WHERE
Who lobbies House Committee on the Judiciary?
Lobbying analysis unavailable
No statistically meaningful lobbying pattern was found for the House Committee on the Judiciary (House) in current Senate LDA disclosures.
Why?
We only publish lobbying analysis when a committee is explicitly named in at least the minimum threshold of recent LDA filings. Many committees fall below this threshold because lobbying disclosures list jurisdictions broadly rather than by specific committee, or because this committee sees less direct lobbying activity than peer committees.
Committee jurisdiction
The House Committee on the Judiciary has jurisdiction over matters relating to the administration of justice in federal courts, administrative bodies, and law enforcement agencies. Its jurisdiction includes: The judiciary and judicial proceedings, civil and criminal; Administrative practice and procedure; Apportionment of Representatives; Bankruptcy, mutiny, espionage, and counterfeiting; Civil liberties; Constitutional amendments; Criminal law enforcement; Federal courts and judges, and local courts in the Territories and possessions; Immigration policy and non-border enforcement; Interstate compacts generally; Claims against the United States; Members of Congress, attendance of members, Delegates, and the Resident Commissioner; and their acceptance of incompatible offices; National penitentiaries; Patents, the Patent and Trademark Office, copyrights, and trademarks; Presidential succession; Protection of trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and monopolies; Revision and codification of the Statutes of the United States; State and territorial boundary lines; Subversive activities affecting the internal security of the United States.
Explore this committee
- Who sits on this committee?
Leadership, members, and subcommittees
- What is this committee working on?
Recent hearings and bills in committee
- Full committee profile
All committee data and activity
This analysis uses real lobbying disclosure data — no synthetic or placeholder values are shown. When fewer than the minimum threshold of filings reference a committee, we show this unavailable state rather than a misleading partial picture.
Data sources: Senate LDA disclosures and Congress.gov. Full methodology