President of the United States
P40010902Different disclosure rules apply to the Executive Branch
The STOCK Act — which requires public reporting of individual stock trades within 45 days — applies to members of Congress only, not the President or executive branch officials.
Individual trades reported within 45 days. Each transaction is publicly visible with date, asset, and amount range.
Annual disclosure of assets and income ranges — but not individual trade dates or transaction-level detail.
What this means for Trump: Trump has reported thousands of trades — including positions in companies like NVIDIA weeks before major policy decisions — but these cannot be verified trade-by-trade through public APIs. OGE Form 278 filings are available at the Office of Government Ethics but lack the individual transaction granularity of STOCK Act disclosures.
This candidate served as President — executive office records are not tracked in congressional databases.
Based on FEC disclosures, STOCK Act filings & congressional record · Nonpartisan
No direct donor data yet
Mostly individuals
Minimal outside spending detected
No IEs found
Executive branch — business interests, not committees
OGE Form 278 required
Executive branch — different disclosure rules apply
OGE Form 278, not STOCK Act
Executive branch — no congressional voting record
Executive actions tracked separately
This measures what share of direct campaign donations came from corporations and PACs versus individual citizens. Higher corporate concentration means special interests have more access — and more leverage.
Independent expenditures (Super PAC spending) don't show up in a candidate's own fundraising — but they're still spent to elect them. High outside money means anonymous donors are bankrolling the campaign without any disclosure of who they are or what they want.
Congressional conflict scoring measures committee/donor overlaps — not applicable to presidents. Presidents must file OGE Form 278 disclosures listing all financial interests. Candidates with active businesses, stock holdings, or licensing deals may face conflicts when policies directly affect those industries.
The STOCK Act covers Congress only. Presidents file OGE Form 278 disclosures listing asset ranges and income — but not individual trade dates or amounts, making pattern analysis difficult. Known holdings and business interests should be assessed against executive policy decisions.
Presidents don't vote in Congress. Their record is measured through executive orders, vetoes, pardons, and legislation signed or blocked. This metric is neutral — assess presidential activity through executive action databases and congressional signing records.
No financial totals available.
No filing information found for this candidate.
Top donors to the principal campaign committee
No filing information found for this candidate.
Publicly disclosed FEC filings showing AIPAC-affiliated political spending
AIPAC is one of the most active political lobbying organizations in the US. These figures reflect publicly disclosed FEC filings.
No disbursement records available for this committee.
Source: FEC Open Data API · Updated within 48 hours of filing