RepublicanUtah · U.S. Representative
Blake Moore, official photograph

Blake
Moore

U.S. Representative for Utah

In office
5 yrsSince Jan 2021
Next election
2027Re-elected 2021
Age
45Born Jun 22, 1980
Party
Republican
What they stand for

Moore 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
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01 · Background

Who they are, where they came from

Blake D. Moore represents Utah's 1st congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat he has held since January 3, 2021. He is a former diplomat from Utah. Since November 8, 2023, Moore has served as vice chair of the House Republican Conference. In the 119th Congress, Moore sponsored the MAPWaters Act of 2025 (HR.187), which was enacted into law. He has also sponsored the Charitable Act (HR.801, HR.3435), legislation that has attracted between 50 and 99 cosponsors across multiple sessions, addressing charitable giving incentives. Moore has introduced the STAR Act of 2025 (HR.802) and the Health ACCESS Act (HR.6100), both in committee, as well as the Protecting Circuit Boards and Substrates Act (HR.3597), which addresses domestic electronics manufacturing supply chains. He has sponsored the Comprehensive Congressional Budget Act of 2026 (HR.7295), the Increasing Baseline Updates Act (HR.6470), and the Restoring Temporary to TANF Act (HR.2354) touching on federal budget and welfare policy. His sponsored bills also include the Small Business Growth Act (HR.354), the HOPE Act of 2025 (HR.955), the Low Income Housing for Defense Communities Act (HR.308), and the Hershel Woody Williams National Medal of Honor Monument Location Act (HR.186). Two of Moore's floor amendments in the 118th Congress were agreed to by voice vote (HAMDT.791, HAMDT.698). On final passage of the Social Security Fairness Act of 2023, Moore voted against the measure, a vote that was contrary to the majority of his party (HR.82).

02 · Recent significant work

What they’ve done lately

Jan 3, 2025Sponsored

MAPWaters Act of 2025

Summary not yet generated.

Jan 28, 2025Sponsored

Charitable Act

Summary not yet generated.

Nov 12, 2024Voted no

(HR.82)

Summary not yet generated.

May 17, 2023Sponsored

Charitable Act

Summary not yet generated.

Jan 30, 2026Sponsored

Comprehensive Congressional Budget Act of 2026

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

PAC contributions made up 58.3% of Moore's $2.0M in total receipts this cycle, with individual donors accounting for 39.5% — nearly all of it from itemized contributions. Top PAC contributors include Team Moore Joint Fundraising Committee, Engineering and Software Solutions Inc PAC, TTM Technologies Inc PAC, Chevron Employees PAC, and Cambia Health Solutions Inc. PAC. Top employer concentrations among individual donors include Sunrun, HealthEquity, Boyer Company, Goldenwest Credit Union, and Apollo Global Management. Unitemized contributions represented less than 1% of individual receipts.

Total raised · 2026
$2.0M
Cash on hand
$2.4M
Spent
$1.2M
By source
  • Individuals$798K · 39.5%
  • PACs$1.2M · 58.3%
  • Other$45K · 2.2%
Individual donor mix
Small-donor share (under $200)0.6%
Top PAC contributors
  • TEAM MOORE JOINT FUNDRAISING COMMITTEEFEC ↗$41K
  • ENGINEERING AND SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS INC PAC (ES3 PAC)FEC ↗$15K
  • TTM TECHNOLOGIES INC PACFEC ↗$15K
  • CHEVRON EMPLOYEES PAC - CHEVRON CORPORATIONFEC ↗$10K
  • CAMBIA HEALTH SOLUTIONS INC. PACFEC ↗$10K
  • THE HOME DEPOT INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$10K
  • UBS AMERICAS INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$10K
  • NUCOR CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$10K
  • THE GUIDEHOUSE INC. PAC (GUIDEHOUSE PAC)FEC ↗$10K
  • AMERICAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY ASSOCIATION PAC (SKINPAC)FEC ↗$10K
Top employer concentrations
  • SUNRUN$19K· 26 donors
  • INFORMATION REQUESTED$18K· 6 donors
  • HEALTHEQUITY$18K· 9 donors
  • BOYER COMPANY$16K· 6 donors
  • GOLDENWEST CREDIT UNION$15K· 7 donors
  • APOLLO GLOBAL MANAGEMENT$12K· 5 donors
  • AMERICA FIRST CREDIT UNION$12K· 4 donors
  • LAYTON CONSTRUCTION$11K· 3 donors
  • MEHLMAN CONSULTING$11K· 4 donors
  • KENLEY FORD$11K· 3 donors

Self-reported employer data. Categories like “Retired” and “Not Employed” are excluded — these reflect demographic patterns rather than industry concentrations.

See full filings on FEC.gov ↗

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