Candidates / Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan
Fundraising Snapshot
$2.8M
Total Contributions
$2.3M
Spent
$5.8M
Cash on Hand
$1.8M
Transfers In
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: $15K in independent expenditures
Voting Scorecard
View full scorecard →100%
Participation
100%
Party Loyalty
0
Broke with Party
0%
Bipartisan Rate
Based on 10 tracked bills, 10 votes cast
How They Voted (10) · 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.
The second impeachment (2021): incitement of insurrection for his role in the January 6 Capitol attack. Passed with 10 Republican votes — the most bipartisan impeachment in history.
Second article from the first impeachment (2019): obstruction of Congress for blocking witnesses and documents from the investigation.
First article from the first impeachment (2019): abuse of power for pressuring Ukraine to investigate a political rival while withholding military aid.
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