RepublicanArizona · U.S. Representative
Andy Biggs, official photograph

Andy
Biggs

U.S. Representative for Arizona

In office
9 yrsSince Jan 2017
Next election
2027Re-elected 2021
Age
67Born Nov 7, 1958
Party
Republican
What they stand for

Biggs has spent time focused on a few core fights. Each is tied to bills actually introduced or votes actually cast.

Keep scrolling for the record, votes, and contact info
CallD.C. office
EmailVia web form
VisitOfficial site
01 · Background

Who they are, where they came from

Andy Biggs represents Arizona's 5th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat he has held since January 2017. A lawyer by training, Biggs served in the Arizona state legislature for over a decade before his election to Congress, first as a member of the Arizona House of Representatives from 2003 to 2011 and then as a member of the Arizona Senate from 2011 to 2017, including four years as president of the Arizona Senate from 2013 to 2017. At the federal level, Biggs served as chairman of the House Freedom Caucus from 2019 to 2022. In the 118th Congress, his citable legislative record includes sponsorship of H.R.79, the WHO Withdrawal Act, which would direct U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization, and a pattern of votes against final passage on measures that became law, including continuing appropriations bills (H.R.5860, H.R.6363, H.R.2872, H.R.9747), the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (H.R.2670), and a range of other legislation spanning federal agency operations, water infrastructure, veterans benefits, and commemorative designations.

02 · Recent significant work

What they’ve done lately

Mar 17, 2026Voted no

(S.3971)

Summary not yet generated.

Dec 15, 2025Voted no

(S.284)

Summary not yet generated.

May 14, 2025Voted no

(HR.2215)

Summary not yet generated.

Dec 20, 2024Voted no

(HR.10545)

Summary not yet generated.

Dec 18, 2024Voted no

(S.1351)

Summary not yet generated.

03 · What's coming up

Bills they’ll vote on next

Bills that have cleared committee and are heading for a floor vote. See all upcoming votes →

House·HR.1071Reported to floor

No Censors on our Shores Act of 2025

Would bar entry and allow deportation of foreign officials who suppressed U.S. citizens' speech.

House·HR.151Reported to floor

Equal Representation Act of 2025

Would base House seat apportionment on citizen population rather than total population.

House·HR.2071Reported to floor

Save Our Shrimpers Act

Would bar U.S. funds to international institutions financing foreign shrimp operations.

House·HR.2076Reported to floor

Lulu’s Law

Would require the FCC to explicitly authorize wireless emergency alerts for shark attacks.

House·HR.2159Reported to floor

Count the Crimes to Cut Act

Would require public databases listing all federal criminal statutory and regulatory offenses.

04 · Money

Where the campaign funds come from

Biggs raised $28K this cycle, with 64.9% from individuals and 24.8% from PACs. Top PAC contributors include House Freedom Fund ($8,500) and Jim Jordan for Congress ($2,000). Unitemized contributions account for 54.3% of individual receipts. Club for Growth Action spent $230K supporting Biggs in independent expenditures, separate from contributions to his own campaign.

Total raised · 2026
$28K
Cash on hand
$364K
Spent
$123K
By source
  • Individuals$18K · 64.9%
  • PACs$7K · 24.8%
  • Other$1K · 5.1%
Individual donor mix
Small-donor share (under $200)54.3%
Top PAC contributors
Outside spending · 2016
Supporting Biggs

Independent expenditures from super PACs and other groups, separate from contributions to the candidate’s own campaign. These committees may not coordinate with the campaign.

See full filings on FEC.gov ↗

Every claim on this page links to a public source. We don’t tell you whether Andy Biggs is a good or bad official— that’s your call. We just make the facts easy to find.