U.S. Senate — WI
S0WI00197No financial totals available.
No filing information found for this candidate.
Top donors to the principal campaign committee
No filing information found for this candidate.
No disbursement records available for this committee.
Source: FEC Open Data API · Updated within 48 hours of filing
Outside groups that spent the most to support this candidate, and who funded them
What they want: Club for Growth wants to slash taxes for the wealthy, cut government programs like Medicare and Social Security, and remove regulations on businesses — even when those regulations protect workers or consumers.
What they want: The NRA spends to block any gun safety legislation — universal background checks, assault weapons limits, red flag laws — regardless of how much public support those measures have.
What they want: The NRA spends to block any gun safety legislation — universal background checks, assault weapons limits, red flag laws — regardless of how much public support those measures have.
Dark money is legal in U.S. elections. Organizations classified as 501(c)(4) nonprofits can spend unlimited amounts on elections without disclosing their donors. TrueVote flags all known dark money activity and exposes every traceable connection — but some funding sources remain legally hidden.
This amount moved through organizations not required to disclose their donors. The ultimate source of this money cannot be confirmed from public records.
Outside groups spending to support or oppose this candidate, uncoordinated with the campaign
No independent expenditure records found for this candidate.
Source: FEC Open Data API · Updated within 48 hours of filing
Based on FEC disclosures, STOCK Act filings & congressional record · Nonpartisan
No direct donor data yet
Mostly individuals
100% of total money is outside/Super PAC
$1.9M in Super PAC support
No committee/donor overlaps detected
Clean
No stock trades on record
Clean
No congressional record found
Presidential / no data
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.
A conflict of interest exists when a lawmaker sits on a committee that regulates the same industry that funds their campaign. When the regulator and the regulated are financially connected, voters should ask: whose interests come first?
Under the STOCK Act, members of Congress must publicly report all personal stock trades within 45 days. No disclosed trades were found for this member.
This candidate's legislative record is not tracked in congressional databases, likely because they sought or served in executive office rather than Congress.