Candidates / Abraham Hamadeh

Abraham Hamadeh

Abraham Hamadeh

R Incumbent · since 2025 Safe R Arizona · U.S. Representative · District 8
GovTrack FEC.gov Updated 1mo ago

Abraham Hamadeh is a Republican U.S. Representative representing Arizona's 8th District, in office since 2025, and is running for re-election in 2026. The primary is scheduled for July 21, 2026. Hamadeh has raised $652K this cycle, with 66% from individual donors, according to FEC filings. Forecasters rate the race Safe R.

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Fundraising Snapshot

$652K

Total Contributions

$663K

Spent

$387K

Cash on Hand

Where the money comes from

Individual $428K (66%)
PAC $224K (34%)

Donation sizes

$200 & under
$177K
$200–$499
$25K
$500–$999
$51K
$1K–$1,999
$120K
$2,000+
$554K
Small-dollar (≤$499): 22%Large-dollar (≥$1K): 73%

In-state vs out-of-state

In-state $367K (47%)
Out-of-state $419K (53%)
What do these terms mean?
  • Total Contributions — Money contributed directly by individuals, PACs, and party committees.
  • Individual — Contributions from individual people, including small-dollar donations under $200.
  • PAC — Contributions from Political Action Committees (organizations that pool donations).
  • Party — Contributions from Democratic or Republican party committees.
  • Other — Remaining contributions not categorized above.
  • Transfers In — Money moved from the candidate's other campaign committees (e.g., a House campaign fund transferred to a Senate campaign). Not a new contribution.
View on FEC.gov As of May 2026

Voting Scorecard

View full scorecard →

66%

Participation

96%

Party Loyalty

1

Broke with Party

100%

Bipartisan Rate

Based on 35 tracked bills, 23 votes cast

Yea 15/23|Nay 8/23

How They Voted (23) · view key votes

NAY

Authorizes continued U.S. support for Ukraine. Taken the day after the Iran war powers vote, it puts members on record on the other major foreign conflict heading into the primaries.

PassedForeign Policy6/4/2026

A companion measure directing the removal of U.S. forces from Lebanon, rejected the day after the Iran resolution passed.

FailedNational Security6/4/2026

Iran War Powers 2026

A series of votes over three months on whether to direct the President to end U.S. military involvement in hostilities with Iran. The House rejected the measure three times (March, April, May) before passing it in June; the Senate forced a companion resolution out of committee in May. The arc shows where each member stood as the conflict continued.

NAY

Directs the President to end U.S. military involvement in hostilities with Iran unless Congress votes to authorize them. The House passed it 215–208, with four Republicans joining all Democrats. This type of resolution does not go to the President's desk and is generally considered non-binding, but it puts every House member on the record about the war.

PassedNational Security6/3/2026

The second House attempt to direct an end to hostilities with Iran, which also failed. Together with the April and June votes, this creates a three-vote timeline of where each member stood as the war went on.

FailedNational Security5/14/2026

An earlier version directing the President to remove U.S. forces from hostilities with Iran. It failed in April before a later version passed in June — useful for showing which members changed their vote as the war continued.

FailedNational Security4/16/2026

This resolution invoked the War Powers Act of 1973 — a law passed after Vietnam specifically to prevent presidents from taking the country to war without Congress's approval. It was introduced by Rep. Ro Khanna (D) and Rep. Thomas Massie (R) — a rare bipartisan pairing — after President Trump authorized military strikes on Iran, including attacks on nuclear facilities, without a formal congressional declaration of war. Six U.S. service members were killed in a retaliatory drone strike in Kuwait. The resolution would have required Trump to halt further military action unless Congress formally authorized it. It failed 212–219, with four Democrats voting against it and only two Republicans voting for it. A YEA vote meant: Congress, not the President, decides when we go to war. A NAY vote meant: the President has the authority to continue without asking.

FailedNational Security3/5/2026

Increases certain veterans disability compensation payments.

PassedEconomy & Jobs5/21/2026

Prohibits the VA from reporting veterans to the federal gun background check system solely because a fiduciary manages their benefits, unless a judge rules they are a danger to themselves or others.

PassedGun Safety5/21/2026

A broadly bipartisan bill aimed at increasing the supply of housing in the U.S. The Senate passed it 89–10 in March; the House agreed with changes in May. One of the few major bipartisan economic bills of the year, at a time when housing costs are a top voter concern.

PassedEconomy & Jobs5/20/2026
PROTECT Kids Act(H.R. 2616)
YEA

Requires public elementary and middle schools that receive federal funds to get parental consent before changing a student's gender markers, pronouns, or preferred name on school forms, or changing sex-based accommodations such as locker rooms or bathrooms.

PassedEducation5/20/2026

Makes year-round sales of E15 ethanol-blend gasoline permanent.

PassedClimate & Energy5/13/2026

Creates a coordinated federal response to organized retail theft.

PassedPublic Safety5/12/2026

Extends the federal government's authority to collect communications of foreign targets without a warrant under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act — a program that can also sweep in Americans' communications. Signed into law (P.L. 119-87).

PassedTechnology & Privacy4/30/2026

A five-year renewal of farm and food programs, including crop supports and nutrition assistance.

PassedEconomy & Jobs4/30/2026
YEA

Sets Congress's overall budget plan for fiscal year 2026 and spending levels through 2035. A budget resolution is a blueprint, not a spending law, but it unlocks the reconciliation process that lets the majority pass certain bills with a simple Senate majority.

Concurrent Resolution Agreed toFiscal Policy4/29/2026

To require the Secretary of Homeland Security to designate Haiti for temporary protected status

PassedImmigration4/16/2026

Guarantees pay for DHS personnel during funding lapses.

PassedGovernment Funding3/26/2026

Makes non-citizens who have been convicted of defrauding the U.S. government or unlawfully receiving public benefits deportable and inadmissible.

PassedImmigration3/18/2026

A proposed constitutional amendment requiring the federal government to balance its budget each year. Constitutional amendments need a two-thirds vote in each chamber; this fell short.

FailedFiscal Policy3/18/2026

Epstein Files Transparency ActThis bill requires the Department of Justice (DOJ) to publish (in a searchable and downloadable format) all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in DOJ's possession that relate to the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein.This includes (1) materials that relate to Ghislaine Maxwell, (2) flight logs and travel records, and (3) individuals named or referenced (including government officials) in connection with the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein.DOJ is permitted to withhold certain information such as the personal information of victims and materials that would jeopardize an active federal investigation.Additionally, not later than 15 days after the required publication, DOJ must report to Congress (1) all categories of information released and withheld, (2) a summary of any redactions made, and (3) a list of all government officials and politically exposed individuals named or referenced in the published materials.

PassedCriminal Justice11/18/2025

Temporarily reopened the government after a 6-week shutdown in late 2025. Passed 217-212 in the House.

PassedFiscal Policy11/10/2025

Cut $9.4 billion in already-approved spending — $8.3B from foreign aid and $1.1B from public broadcasting. Codified DOGE's proposed cuts into law. Passed 214-212.

PassedFiscal Policy7/17/2025

Massive reconciliation bill making Trump-era tax cuts permanent, raising the debt ceiling by $5 trillion, and cutting Medicaid. Passed by 1 vote in both chambers (215-214 House, 51-50 Senate with VP tiebreaker).

PassedFiscal Policy7/1/2025

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