WHY
Does Tony Wied's voting align with their donors?
Votes on donor-industry bills
Computing this representative's vote-finance analysis. This can take up to a minute the first time a page is visited.
WHY
Computing this representative's vote-finance analysis. This can take up to a minute the first time a page is visited.
Across 4 recorded votes on bills that touch an industry sector, this representative voted yea 100% of the time. The per-sector breakdown below narrows this to sectors that actually donated to them.
A yea vote isn't the same as a vote “for” an industry — a single bill can help or hurt a sector. This is the raw yea-rate, not a support score.
No donor sector has both recorded donations and 10 or more relevant votes to show a meaningful breakdown.
For every recorded vote we pulled, we check whether the bill touches specific industry sectors — using the bill's official policy area and the industries named in its summary. For each sector that donated to this representative, we count how often they voted yea on bills touching that sector.
Sectors with fewer than 10 recorded votes on sector-tagged bills are excluded, and the generic FEC “Other” bucket is not shown. A yea vote isn't inherently “for” an industry — individual bills can help or hurt a sector — so this is a raw yea-rate, not a support score.
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 (current two-year cycle). Voting records from Congress.gov (119th Congress). Full methodology