Candidates / Ashley Moody
Ashley Moody is a Republican attorney and politician from Florida who served as the state's 38th Attorney General from 2019 to 2025. Appointed to the U.S. Senate in January 2025 by Governor Ron DeSantis following Marco Rubio's resignation, she is running for election to the seat in 2026. Previously, she worked in civil litigation and as an assistant U.S. attorney, and served as a circuit court judge in Hillsborough County.
Fundraising Snapshot
$2.6M
Total Contributions
$699K
Spent
$0
Cash on Hand
Where the money comes from
Donation sizes
In-state vs out-of-state
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.
Outside spending
Independent expenditures by PACs and outside groups
Total: $186K in independent expenditures
Why this race matters: Special election after Marco Rubio resigned to become Secretary of State. Florida has trended Republican in recent cycles.
Voting Scorecard
View full scorecard →70%
Participation
100%
Party Loyalty
0
Broke with Party
0%
Bipartisan Rate
Based on 10 tracked bills, 7 votes cast
How They Voted (7) · view key votes
Temporarily reopened the government after a 6-week shutdown in late 2025. Passed 217-212 in the House.
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.
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).
Creates federal rules for stablecoins (crypto tokens pegged to the dollar). The only bipartisan bill in the package — but the President's family runs a stablecoin company that would be regulated under this law.
Kept the government funded temporarily after Congress couldn't agree on a full budget. Passed 217-213 in the House.
The Senate version of the House resolution, introduced by Sen. Tim Kaine (D) with Sen. Rand Paul (R) as an original co-sponsor. It was blocked on March 4, 2026, largely along party lines — with Rand Paul voting for it and Sen. John Fetterman voting against it. Because the resolution was stuck in committee, Kaine had to use a procedural "motion to discharge" to force it to the floor — and that motion itself failed, meaning the full Senate never even got a direct vote on the substance.
The full federal budget for 2026. Passed by razor-thin margins after months of shutdowns and stopgap bills. The full federal budget for 2026. Passed by razor-thin margins after months of shutdowns and stopgap bills.
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