Corruption Risk · 4-Vector Breakdown
Corruption isn't just trade-based. Here's the four ways political pressure can flow, scored independently from the public record.
Vector 1 · Personal Enrichment trade-based
The politician's trading is dominated by a significant sector anomaly: an 83.3% win rate in energy on 79 trades, outperforming the overall 20% win rate by 63.3 points. This concentration aligns with committee jurisdictions, particularly Armed Services and Agriculture, where energy policy intersects. The trading style is high-frequency with 102 trades in the 5-year aggregate and 200 trades in the 5-year sponsor profile, characterized by small-lot activity (avg_position_size $0.01 in aggregate, but $4.02M total volume) and a 32% late filing rate with an 86-day average disclosure gap, indicating reactive disclosure. The portfolio is heavily focused on GE and its spinoffs (GEV, GEHC) across 22 combined trades, with primary sectors being energy, technology, and consumer cyclical.
Trades 5y200
Volume$2.3M
Late filing—
Trader typeActive self-dealer
Vector 2 · Donor Funding money in
PAC contributions dominate fundraising, with $34.87M total PAC direct dollars. Top industries are corporate_other (31.5%), agriculture (15.5%), and finance (11.2%). The donor-to-committee alignment score is 62, and lobbying-to-committee alignment is 100, indicating strong targeting of his committee jurisdictions. The industry_capture_signal is 'strong' per get_sponsor_profile.
PAC raised$40.7M
Individual—
Vector 3 · Committee Pressure lobbying around
Agriculture industry capture via $5.41M in PAC contributions (15.5% of total) and $1.17M lobbying from Hormel Foods, with the politician chairing the Agriculture Committee.
energy
83.3% win rate on 79 trades in energy vs 20% overall, with $856.5K lobbying spend targeting energy issues
↳ committee jurisdiction overlap with trading
aerospace/defense
22 trades in GE/GEV/GEHC while GE lobbies Armed Services
↳ Armed Services committee membership and trading in GE-family stocks
Top influence channels
PAC contributions
corporate_other PACs
$34.9M
Lobbying spend targeting committees
AMERICAN LEGION
$8.4M
Direct PAC contributions to politician
real_estate PACs
$5.8M
12 MONTHS PAST · 3 MONTHS FUTURE
Activity timeline · 29 votes (12mo) · 28 on passage · 100% with party on passage votes
Votes/wk (top band)
with party
against party
present / unknown
Vote markers (passage only)
yea (with party)
nay (with party)
against party
Trades
buy
sell
Bills sponsored
★ introduced
Predictions / pipeline
model fire
committee bill
🔮 GOVGREED FORECAST · 30-DAY WINDOW
Predicted next trades · 25 active
Recent Activity
📋 COMMITTEE BILL PIPELINE
Bills moving through their committees · 27 active
Each row links a bill in their committee jurisdiction to the public companies its passage would affect — the upstream signal for a future trade.
Recognizing Community Organizations for Veteran Engagement and Recovery Act
AI PLAN Act
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025
Justice for ALS Veterans Act of 2025
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Reauthorization Act of 2025
The U.S.-European Nuclear Energy Cooperation Act of 2025
Protect America’s Innovation and Economic Security from CCP Act of 2025
National Biotechnology Initiative Act of 2025
Rural Obstetrics Readiness Act
Purple Heart Veterans Education Act of 2025
Ensuring Veterans’ Final Resting Place Act of 2025
Voting Pattern
Voted yea on 59 of 75 total votes (78.7%) with 100% attendance. Recent high-profile votes include yea on HR.2493 and S.1020, and nay on HR.1689. The pattern shows consistent support for party-line motions, with occasional nays on procedural motions like recommit.
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