
Foreign-lobby money compromises America First. The U.S. has no formal mutual-defense treaty with Israel; AIPAC operates a super-PAC (United Democracy Project) that spent over $100M during the 2024 cycle on independent expenditures against U.S. candidates who criticize Israeli government policy. A candidate who has accepted that money has, in their own revealed preference, accepted a foreign-policy filter on their congressional vote. The same logic covers China-linked donations, where federal law also prohibits CCP members from contributing.
For every candidate with a documented donor record, two things happen: (1) the specific category question is marked False (foreign_policy_restraint[q4] for AIPAC + China; economic_stewardship[q5] — the WEF/ESG/Davos capture question — for Soros-network donors), so the per-category subscore drops by 2 points; (2) an additional dollar-bracket adjustment is applied to the total, making the penalty proportional to the magnitude of the funding. Both impacts are visible on this page.
Reach out directly. Your voice matters. Proverbs 29:2 — When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice.
Cosponsored H.R. 431, the Life at Conception Act (118th Congress, 2023), asserting personhood and equal-protection rights for the unborn from the moment of fertilization.
His first bill as a congressman proposed a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and as House Freedom Caucus chairman (2021-2023) he consistently fought for spending cuts and against deficit-financed appropriations packages.
Voted against Speaker Johnson's April 2024 supplemental foreign-aid packages — including the $61B Ukraine tranche and combined Taiwan/Israel/Ukraine bills — arguing against open-ended overseas military commitments and Congress's failure to exercise war-funding restraint.
Bias ratings sourced from AllSides and Ad Fontes Media. Classifications for government, reference, and advocacy domains are maintained by U.S.M.C. Ministries; see source_bias.json.
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