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Valerie Hoyle

Val T. Hoyle

Representative · D-OR-4

OverviewMoney & Influence

26% of PAC money comes from industries Hoyle's committee regulates.

A significant share of funding is tied to this member's legislative authority.

$1.1M raised$437 avg donation56% from OR1 former staff → lobbyists

Key Findings

1 former staff now work as lobbyists

Former employees have transitioned to the lobbying industry.

26% of PAC money comes from regulated industries

Some funding comes from industries within this member's committee jurisdiction.

58% of money comes from large donors (>$1,000)

A significant share of funding comes from major individual donors.

56% of donations come from OR

The majority of funding comes from within the member's home state.

How Does Money Flow Through Congress?

An interactive guide to the influence pipeline

Show ↓Hide ↑

How It Works

The Influence Pipeline

How money flows to — and through — Val T. Hoyle's office.

01
The Company

The Company

A corporation wants a law passed or blocked.

02
The PAC

The PAC

Direct donations are illegal. So employees pool money into a Political Action Committee.

03
The Target

The Target

PACs fund members on committees that regulate their industry.

04
⚖️

The Committee

These committees write the laws that affect the donor's business.

07
🗳️

The Vote

Your representative votes — and the pattern is clear.

06
📋

The Lobbying

Those lobbyists push specific bills before their former colleagues.

05
🚪

The Revolving Door

Former staff become lobbyists for the same industries that fund their old boss.

The cycle repeats.

01
The Company

The Company

A corporation wants a law passed or blocked.

02
The PAC

The PAC

Direct donations are illegal. So employees pool money into a Political Action Committee.

03
The Target

The Target

PACs fund members on committees that regulate their industry.

04
⚖️

The Committee

These committees write the laws that affect the donor's business.

05
🚪

The Revolving Door

Former staff become lobbyists for the same industries that fund their old boss.

06
📋

The Lobbying

Those lobbyists push specific bills before their former colleagues.

07
🗳️

The Vote

Your representative votes — and the pattern is clear.

The cycle repeats.

Follow the Money

Labor is the largest PAC sector at $255K from 71 PACs.

Industry PACs

$754K

Which sectors fund this member

Labor↗$255K
71 PACs
Education↗$177K
51 PACs
Energy↗$161K
75 PACs
Transportation↗$161K
93 PACs

Leadership PACs

$155K

How much power this member brokers

Mckenzie River Pac
Raised: $80KSpent: $53K
Mckenzie River Pac
Raised: $75KSpent: $68K

Top Individual Donors

$1.5M

Named people writing checks

Coquille Indian Tribe↗$14K
OR · 5x
Wagner, Danton R.↗$14K
OR · Public Affairs Counsel · 4x
Emmerson, Mark D.↗$14K
CA · Chairman, Cfo · 5x
Confederated Tribes Of Siletz Indians↗$13K
OR · 4x
Alsop, Joseph↗$13K
MA · Alsop Louie Partners · 5x
Neal, Dan↗$13K
OR · Not Employed · 4x
Valerie Hoyle

Hoyle

Natural Resources, Transportation and Infrastructure

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Votes Cast by Policy Area

Economics and Public Finance
319
Congress
280
Armed Forces and National Security
154
Energy
139
International Affairs
135
Government Operations and Politics
88

The Revolving Door

Diego A. Sanchez — legislative assistant → The Raben Group; The Raben Group↗(55 filings)

Deep Dive

How we built this & what it doesn't prove
  • • Donor data from FEC filings (9.47M individual contributions)
  • • Voting records from Congress.gov roll call data
  • • Lobbying data from Senate LDA filings
  • • Staff employment from House disbursement records

Correlation between donations and votes does not prove causation. Members may vote in alignment with donors because they share genuine policy beliefs, not because of financial influence. We present the connections — you decide what they mean.